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Yahoo
3 days ago
- Health
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Red Alert: A refinery spilled toxic waste into the community and knew about it for months
The Atlantic Alumina, a.k.a. Atalco, bauxite refinery in Gramercy, Louisiana. (Wes Muller/Louisiana Illuminator) This article is the first in a series on the environmental costs of America's last remaining alumina refinery. GRAMERCY — For several months, a River Parishes refinery unlawfully discharged industrial toxic waste containing arsenic, cadmium, chromium and other toxic heavy metals into public areas and waterways, state records show. The company, Atlantic Alumina, also known as Atalco, has so far racked up 23 violation notices from the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality after inspectors first discovered the pollution in August. It involves a slurry of industrial 'red mud' byproduct that has eroded through the giant levees surrounding the facility's waste containment lakes and spilled onto public property. The toxic sludge has killed vegetation and contaminated the land along its path to a local drainage system that flows to the Blind River Swamp of Lake Maurepas, according to a 606-page LDEQ inspection report finalized in March. The incident marks the first known case of red mud levee breaches at an American bauxite refinery. When asked for details, LDEQ spokesman Gregory Langley had little information to share about the prolonged discharge other than to say it is currently under investigation with the agency's enforcement division. The only enforcement action taken as of May 29 is a warning letter LDEQ sent to Atalco. A review of thousands of pages of state and federal documents and interviews with scientists and area residents indicate that Atalco polluted public land and state waterways with the most toxic non-radioactive elements on the planet and allowed that pollution to continue for months — never notifying the outside community. Atalco's refinery occupies roughly 3 square miles of land where St. James and St. John the Baptist parishes meet on the Mississippi River's east bank. The site specializes in refining bauxite, a rust-colored powder of raw metals and minerals, into aluminum oxide or 'alumina' in the form of an ultra-fine white powder. Atalco sells the alumina to metal smelters that need it to make finished aluminum. Opened in 1958 as Kaiser Aluminum, the Gramercy facility is the only remaining bauxite refinery in the United States and therefore the nation's only domestic source of a critical metal feedstock. Atalco produced 669,261 metric tons of aluminum oxide last year, state records show. For every ton of aluminum produced from Atalco's work, bauxite refining generates an estimated 2.5 tons of waste byproduct, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. One of the main problems in refining bauxite is there are not many good options for what to do with all that waste, most of which takes the form of a thick red mud. The waste comes from a part of the process in which bauxite is heated in a pressurized vessel with sodium hydroxide, a highly caustic chemical. The alumina compounds are then filtered out and separated, while the toxic byproduct is stored in the facility's six red mud lakes. The lakes are open-air ponds, each roughly 150-200 acres in size surrounded by large earthen levees, some as high as 50 feet, meant to contain the thick liquid waste. Four of the lakes, including a 'surge' or overflow basin, were constructed in the early 1970s without any liners that would help prevent the heavy metals and chemicals from seeping into the soil below. 'It is very dangerous,' said Slawomir Lomnicki, an environmental scientist at LSU. 'There can be a lot of toxic metals leaching out of it and getting into the groundwater.' Groundwater contamination from leaching is a constant risk that exists when Atalco's systems are operating normally. The public drinking water system in St. James Parish regularly monitors for that kind of contamination, according to Parish President Peter Dufresne. Officials with the St. John Parish water system did not answer multiple phone calls last week. A greater risk to the community from bauxite refineries in general is the rare case of a levee breach at a red mud lake, which can cause toxic waste to directly contaminate public waters and soils, scientists said. Until this reporting, the last known breach at a bauxite refinery occurred in Hungary in 2010. The failure of a red mud reservoir sent 35 million cubic feet of waste into nearby villages, killing 10 people and injuring 150 others. In the wake of that incident, industry officials told the American public that a levee breach at Louisiana's bauxite refinery would be unlikely because the levees are 'periodically checked by state and federal regulators,' according to a news report from that time. That unlikely event has happened at Atalco. With a caustic level higher than drain cleaner and elevated concentrations of heavy metals, Atalco's waste slurry eroded through levees in multiple locations at multiple lakes, forming canyons as deep as 10 feet that allowed the toxic waste to escape, records show. A water sample LDEQ had tested from a public ditch outside the plant detected arsenic at a concentration nearly 1,400% higher than the level considered safe by state groundwater and EPA drinking water limits. The sample also contained cadmium at levels above those same limits. A soil sample taken from the same ditch contained mercury, beryllium, cadmium and chromium — all at concentrations above the average background levels found in U.S. soils. The cadmium was nearly 400% higher, and the chromium was 900% higher than LDEQ's standard limits for soil. Chromium is the most toxic non-radioactive element on earth and is about three times more poisonous than arsenic, according to EPA toxicity factors. Historic water quality data for the Blind River, recorded from 1979-99, show heavy metal concentrations nowhere near those levels. 'With this kind of facility, the worst major accident that can happen is a breach of the lake [levees],' said Corinne Gibb, a chemist who works with the environmental watchdog Louisiana Bucket Brigade. The group has monitored incidents at the alumina refinery for years. It is unknown when the mud lake levees first began to erode, but state and federal records show the pollution lasted for months and continued even after Atalco became aware of the problem. The company has not responded to the Illuminator's multiple requests for an interview. Federal inspectors with the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) documented several hazards at Atalco's levees last summer and voiced concerns about the risks they posed to the workers at the plant. 'There were several mud lakes at the facility that was (sic) not being maintained,' MSHA inspector Brandon Olivier wrote in a citation dated June 25, 2024. Trees and shrubs obscured sections of the levees, making thorough inspections impossible, Olivier added. A few weeks later, on Aug. 14, the MSHA issued Atalco another citation after inspectors discovered caustic waste 'seeping through various locations on the east and west side of Mud Lake #4' and flowing downhill 'into the roadway and ditches.' LDEQ later noted the Aug. 14 citation was the first formal written notice Atalco received about the levees having a breach with dangerous toxic waste escaping from its facility. Other dangers present at the Atalco plant had already drawn regulators' attention at that time. Just days prior, on Aug. 4, the public was reminded just how dangerous the chemicals at Atalco could be when 45-year-old Curtis Diggs, a contract worker from Waste-Pro USA, fell into a pit of sodium hydroxide at the plant because a grate that covered the pit was missing and the entire floor was flooded with several inches of the caustic cloudy liquid. The chemical, the same that is stored in the red mud lakes, left Diggs with severe burns from which he did not recover, according to LDEQ records. He died in a New Orleans hospital on Sept 2. MSHA investigated the fatality and learned that Atalco personnel had removed the grate on July 30, 2024, to try to pump out the flooded area and failed to put anything in its place or even a warning marker, creating a dangerous pitfall left open for five days and virtually invisible. MSHA charged Atalco with three regulatory violations and charged Waste-Pro USA with two, faulting both companies for 'aggravated conduct' that involved an extraordinary pattern of negligence, though it's unclear if any fines or penalties have been issued as of May 30, according to federal records. Atalco uses sodium hydroxide to refine bauxite into alumina. After the refinement process, it stores the used sodium hydroxide in the lakes with the other waste. Despite the heightened scrutiny from state and federal regulators at the time, by mid-September Atalco still had not repaired the levee breaches to Red Mud Lake 4 that federal inspectors cited the month before. Nor did the company thoroughly inspect its other lakes to look for similar breaches because, as the records indicate, similar breaches were there — if only the company had looked. On Sept. 17, MSHA inspectors found a breach in the levee around another lake, Red Mud Lake 1 East, with a stream of hazardous waste flowing freely across the roadway. 'The caustic was observed seeping through the side of the levee for approximately 50 yards across the roadway and to the ditch,' the citation states. 'The mud lake is access[ed] by the plant operators daily and contractors for service, and this condition exposes them to injuries if there is a dam failure due to the seepage.' Based on further inspections that same day, MSHA cited Atalco for a third levee break — at Red Mud Lake 2. On that single day, three of Atalco's six waste lakes had confirmed breaches with streams of poisonous chemicals flowing freely to areas they weren't permitted to go, including the Blind River Swamp — a popular recreational fishing spot in the Lake Maurepas backwaters. LDEQ officials first arrived at the plant Sept. 20 to initiate a routine compliance inspection. Agency records show state officials met with Atalco managers, conducted an interview and toured parts of the facility. However, they were unable to inspect some of the lakes and levees because the plant manager told them the access roads were too wet to travel on. LDEQ first documented the levee breaches five days later when they were contacted by the federal inspectors, according to state records. Atalco had still not officially notified LDEQ of the levee breaches — something the company should have done immediately upon learning of them in accordance with Atalco's permit requirements as well as state and federal laws. Local officials have also been kept in the dark. When asked about the events during an impromptu meeting with a reporter Thursday at the State Capitol, St. James Parish President Peter Dufresne said he was unaware of Atalco's levee breaks that contaminated neighboring land and drainage with toxic waste. Dufresne declined an interview but asked the Illuminator for copies of LDEQ's inspection reports. In October, the records show, state inspectors discovered erosion channels in the levee of a fourth lake, Red Mud Lake 3. They also saw for themselves the levee breaches that federal inspectors documented two months before. The erosion channels were still there, and the caustic waste was still escaping from those lakes. So much waste had escaped that it also overwhelmed the facility's secondary containment system, which is a network of interior ditches just outside of the levees used to catch any chemical spills or leaks from the lakes. The backup ditch at one location had overflowed, sending the toxic slurry across the highway just north of the Veterans Memorial Bridge. Atalco was also, as a matter of protocol, unlawfully using a stormwater ditch as a backup containment ditch. Three company officials, apparently unaware that they weren't permitted to use the ditch for toxic waste disposal, told LDEQ inspectors that they routinely used it for containment, according to the inspection files. In other areas, LDEQ inspectors saw that the waste slurry had accumulated to 'nearly the height of the levee' in some of the lakes, the agency's files note. The waste level in the lakes should never be allowed to rise higher than two feet from the top of the levee. Ultimately, in site visits over the next three months, LDEQ inspectors viewed and documented levee breaches at four of Atalco's six lakes, prompting the state agency to cite Atalco multiple times for failing to inspect and failing to repair the levees. Erosion of the levees was a very real possibility that Atalco had long known about. In its 2010 permit renewal applications with the state, the company had addressed the topic at length, promising to prevent erosion by conducting daily inspections of the levees and keeping written logs of those inspections. The state included those as specific ongoing requirements in the final permit issued to Atalco. At that time, the company was in the process of raising its levees from 30 feet to 50 feet high, according to the permit application. By the time state and federal officials began prodding the company last August, Atalco had not consistently inspected its lakes and levees in over three years and was missing hundreds of daily inspection records from July 30, 2021, to Dec. 18, 2024, according to LDEQ's summary of violations. On Oct. 23, state officials noted the company was constructing a new berm to contain the breach at Red Mud Lake 4, which Atalco had known about since at least Aug. 14. The breach at Red Mud Lake 3 continued until Dec. 4, according to the LDEQ file. On that day, Atalco managers accompanied state inspectors into the field when they noticed multiple streams emerging near an access road and traced it back to 'one erosion channel with an estimated depth of at least 10 feet.' You would definitely get injuries and skin burns from it. The plants and any fish in the area would die from that. You can't survive that high of a pH. – Corinne Gibb, chemist, Louisiana Bucket Brigade During their site visits in October, the state inspectors took pH readings from various pools of standing waste that had escaped from the lakes The pH scale ranges from 0 to 14, with water having a neutral pH of around 7. Lower values indicate acidity, while higher values indicate alkalinity. Substances at the extreme ends of the scale in either direction can eat through solid materials such as steel and concrete and are very dangerous to most life forms. The LDEQ detected high pH at every location, with one puddle logged at a high of 12.49 — the same alkalinity as most caustic drain clog removers and ammonia-based cleaners. The inspectors also photographed dead or dying vegetation, petrochemical sheens, and white and yellow chemical residues in many of the locations where the slurry had traveled. 'Just the pH by itself is concerning … That is very high,' Gibb, the chemist, said. 'You would definitely get injuries and skin burns from it. The plants and any fish in the area would die from that. You can't survive that high of a pH.' State inspectors had testing done on water and soil samples from off-site locations in the public drainage system and on-site locations near the erosion streams. Simultaneously, Atalco personnel collected their own batch of samples and sent them to a separate lab for independent testing. LDEQ's soil samples contained significantly elevated levels of cadmium, chromium and nickel — all toxic carcinogens. Atalco's samples reaffirmed the LDEQ's lab results and detected even higher levels at one location. The company's sample taken from public property outside the facility contained cadmium at roughly 1,000% higher than what the state considers safe for people. Additionally, the levels of chromium and nickel measured 1,700% and 300% above their respective state standards, the lab reports show. Gibb and Lomnicki, the LSU scientist, said these three heavy metals, along with arsenic, are among the most dangerous non-radioactive substances on the planet. Exposure to excessive levels can cause a range of serious health issues, including cancer and blood poisoning. Ganga Hettiarachchi, a Kansas State University professor of soil and environmental chemistry, said cadmium could pose the greatest long-term risk because it spreads easily and accumulates in living organisms over time. Enough small doses during a given time period can add up to a fatal dose, she said. Cadmium is highly toxic to humans in short- and long-term exposure settings. Small concentrations ingested or inhaled can cause gastrointestinal or respiratory illness, while higher concentrations can cause cancer, cell death, neurological damage and organ system failure, according to the National Institutes of Health. Increasing the risk from cadmium is that it can be easily spread across far distances and transfer from soil into crops, Hettiarachchi said, posing risks to humans and animals if they eat those crops. 'It could easily end up in our food,' she said. 'That has been historically the main pathway for cadmium.' If cadmium gets into surface water or groundwater, it can become an even bigger problem, especially if that water is used for irrigation, she added. 'The area of damage can expand further and further over time,' Hettiarachchi said. Cadmium was present at elevated levels in two of Atalco's water samples and four of LDEQ's. The highest concentration was 400% above the level considered safe in a water sample taken from an erosion channel within the perimeter of the facility. It also had high levels of chromium and lead. All seven water samples that LDEQ had tested contained elevated levels of arsenic. One of them taken from outside the levee of a red mud lake detected arsenic at a level 9,000% higher than state and federal safe limits, and it contained high levels of cadmium, nickel and thallium. Six out of the seven samples Atalco personnel collected contained arsenic at levels beyond what is considered safe. LDEQ has yet to address the risks Atalco's red mud runoff could pose to the community. Langley, the agency's spokesman, said it has yet to determine what the public impact might be. 'Obviously those are things we don't want going into state waterways,' Langley said. Part Two: For some nearby residents, the levee breaches at Atalco are just the latest incident in a familiar pattern. The second story in this series reveals why the incident at Atalco was foreseeable based on the history of the plant and the many accidents and environmental exposures to the nearby communities. 'They're turning a blind eye to it,' said Gail LeBouef, who's lived near the plant since 1999. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Yahoo
15-05-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Meet Courtney Burdette, new head of Louisiana Department Environmental Quality
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — Courtney J. Burdette was named the new secretary of the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) by Gov. Jeff Landry on May 2. Her background as a veteran attorney includes experience in environmental law and public administration, according to a news release from LDEQ. She joined the agency in 2014, serving as general counsel before serving as executive counsel from 2023. She made history at LDEQ, becoming the first Black woman to hold those positions. She earned a bachelor's degree from Howard University and a juris doctorate from LSU's Paul M. Hebert Law Center. Burdette's legal career includes working as an assistant attorney general with the Louisiana Department of Justice and judicial clerkships at the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana. 'Secretary Burdette's broad experience, professionalism, and long-standing dedication to public service make her uniquely qualified to lead LDEQ into its next chapter,' Landry said. 'She understands the critical importance of protecting our environment while fostering responsible economic development. We are proud to welcome her back to the agency in this leadership role.' Louisiana joins lawsuit against US nuclear commission, argues overstepping authority Burdette, a Baton Rouge native, described it as an honor to return to LDEQ to lead the agency in its mission to provide environmental protection services and compliance programs. Her goal is to strengthen the relationship with stakeholders, the industry, and the public while ensuring transparency. 'This is a full-circle moment for me, and I'm honored to return to LDEQ as Secretary,' Burdette said. 'I know the caliber of professionals that work here and the impact this agency can have on Louisiana's environment and the communities we serve. Together, we will uphold the highest standards of integrity and innovation as we tackle some of our state's most complex environmental challenges.' Son of singer Rick James sentenced for assaulting inmate in California prison Gov. Landry starts Operation GEAUX for immigration control in Louisiana Meet Courtney Burdette, new head of Louisiana Department Environmental Quality GOP lawmakers signal discomfort with Trump Qatar jet, Middle East diplomacy Free cancer screenings, music, food at Live Well Baton Rouge event this weekend Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
02-05-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Louisiana DEQ Secretary Aurelia Skipwith Giacometto leaving department, governor says
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — Governor Jeff Landry has announced a leadership change at the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ). Aurelia Skipwith Giacometto, who has served as secretary of the department, is stepping down to join Earth and Water Law, a law firm based in Washington, D.C. Giacometto led the modernization of LDEQ's operations, according to the governor's office. This included launching a new transparency dashboard and digitizing several internal processes. Landy said she also focused on fiscal discipline, achieving a 2.5% reduction in the department's FY 2026 budget, amounting to over $5 million in savings. 'I want to sincerely thank Aurelia for her dedicated service to our state and the Department of Environmental Quality,' said Landry. 'Aurelia prioritized environmental improvements to our air, land, and water, while also keeping a focus on the jobs and businesses that often suffer from red tape and overregulation. We are grateful for her actions to improve the department and wish her the best in her next endeavor.' Landry has appointed Courtney Burdette as the new secretary of LDEQ. 'Courtney has played a pivotal role at LDEQ for a decade, and it is exciting to bring her leadership and experience back to the department,' Landry said. 'I am confident that Courtney will continue to move the department in a direction that protects our environment while also fighting for Louisiana businesses over bureaucracy.' Louisiana whooping cough cases for 2025 higher than last year's total, LDH reports The governor's office said Burdette brings over 10 years of experience at LDEQ, having joined the agency in 2014 as part of its legal team. She later served as Permits Supervisor, General Counsel in 2020, and most recently, Executive Counsel. She holds a bachelor's degree in English from Howard University in Washington, D.C., and earned her Juris Doctorate from LSU. The Louisiana Illuminator reported that a survey revealed that many employees at LDEQ felt morale dropped during the first half of 2024, while Giacometto was in charge. The Louisiana Legislative Auditor's Office did the survey when lawmakers received complaints about resignations, harassment and low morale. Some workers said they were pushed to ignore regulations or keep quiet with outside groups. Giacometto questioned the survey's credibility. She said the report didn't meet proper standards. However, the auditor's office stated it used accepted methods for workplace surveys, according to the Louisiana Illuminator. Giacometto defended her leadership despite survey concerns. She said that a few unhappy employees shouldn't overshadow the agency's good work, according to the Louisiana Illuminator. Congress honors WWII's All-Black, All-female battalion with Gold Medal Lawmakers look into rising insurance costs Louisiana DEQ Secretary Aurelia Skipwith Giacometto leaving department, governor says Trump budget proposal calls for deep cuts to NIH Strong jobs report surprises economists Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
28-04-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
If Louisiana removes fluoride from water, officials should tackle ‘Cancer Alley' next
Getty Images State lawmakers took a step last week toward removing fluoride from public water supplies in Louisiana, despite health care professionals attesting to its time-proven effectiveness in limiting dental disease. Proponents of Senate Bill 2 from Sen. 'Big Mike' Fesi, R-Houma, leaned on data and research that blames fluoride for thyroid disorders and lowering the IQ of children (we'll circle back to that later). The proposal advanced last Wednesday from the Senate Committee of Health and Welfare in a 6-3 party line vote, with Republicans prevailing. The results were the same for another Fesi bill to authorize the over-the-counter sale of ivermectin at pharmacies without a doctor's prescription. As with the anti-fluoride bill, ivermectin supporters had ample info to support their viewpoint (we'll get back to this, too). Yet despite this apparent pro-science and pro-research mindset, overwhelming evidence of higher rates of cancer and other chronic ailments in communities along the Mississippi River's petrochemical corridor in Louisiana are routinely ignored – if not doubted – within conservative circles. SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE Just three years ago, a peer-reviewed Tulane Environmental Law Clinic study found the estimated cancer risk was highest in the River Parish communities right next to point sources of pollution. Most of these settlements are predominantly Black and low-income, inhabited in part by the descendants of slaves who toiled on the plantations where refineries and chemical plants now stand. The same study found the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) issued permits to allow industrial pollution emissions at rates 7 to 21 times higher among Black communities than in predominantly white ones. According to 2024 health data research from Human Rights Watch, people living in areas with the worst air pollution in Louisiana, including much of 'Cancer Alley,' had rates of low birthweight more than double the state average (11.3%) and more than triple the U.S. average (8.5%). Preterm births were nearly double the state average (13%) and nearly two-and-a-half times the national rate (10.5%). State officials are not willing to acknowledge the disparities. 'LDEQ does not use the term Cancer Alley,' a department spokesperson told Human Rights Watch last year. 'That term implies that there is a large geographic area that has higher cancer incidence than the state average. We have not seen higher cancer incidence over large areas of the industrial corridor between Baton Rouge and New Orleans.' Now let's go back to last week's Senate committee hearing to see if we can't connect that statement to why state officials can't – or won't – acknowledge verified scientific facts that are staring them in the face. That includes state Surgeon General Dr. Ralph Abraham, who was by Fesi's side to support both of his bills. Regarding the removal of fluoride from drinking water, Abraham said there 'probably is a direct correlation between fluoride intake in pregnant ladies and lower IQs in their babies.' Crowley chiropractor Sandra Marks, who also testified in favor of the bill, made the same claim and cited a Harvard School of Public Health study. What Abraham and Marks didn't share was that the Harvard study involved children in China with high overexposure to fluoride. They implied the lower IQs were tied to exposure to permissible levels of fluoride in the U.S. Jeanie Donovan, New Orleans deputy health department director, shared details on the Harvard research with lawmakers when testifying against Fesi's bill. She also pointed out the lack of any reliable scientific research that connects fluoride with thyroid disease. 'We have many, many health issues in our city and in our state that we should address and that we should be spending time and money to address,' Donovan told the committee, making it clear that fluoride overexposure was not one of them. Anne Jayes with the Louisiana Public Health Institute and Dr. Robert Delarosa, a Baton Rouge pediatric dentist for 41 years, both cited a University of Queensland study that found children with access to properly fluoridated water had higher IQs. Marks, who said her research was sourced through Meta AI, also sounded the alarm over skeletal fluorosis, which can result in bone density changes and an increased risk of fractures. What she failed to mention was the bone disorder involves exposure to excessive amounts of fluoride. Jayes later pointed out the potentially dangerous fluoride levels in the study Marks cited were 21 to 28 times the recommended amount for drinking water systems, and that skeletal fluorosis studies themselves have been 'widely challenged for their poor quality.' Annette Droddy, executive director of the 1,900-member Louisiana Dental Association, noted to the committee a trend of states reversing their bans on fluoridated drinking water, including Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota and Tennessee. Calgary, Alberta, removed fluoride from its water in 2011 but restored it in 2023, Droddy said. The reversal came after health officials noted a 700% increase in children hospitalized for dental inflections and abscesses. In Louisiana, only 39% of the population is provided fluoridated water through their public utility – well below the 72% national average, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. Removing fluoride will compound issues for the nearly 500,000 children in Louisiana who don't see a dentist regularly, even though they qualify for dental coverage through Medicaid, Droddy said. Without fluoridated water, she said the state will have to ask the federal government for more money to cover a likely increase in children's dental problems. 'Why would we take away the best public health measure of the 20th century?' Droddy said. Yet Fesi stuck to his guns in his closing statement for Senate Bill 2, doubling down on the debunked low IQ and thyroid claims — and adding autism for good measure without any supporting evidence. On Fesi's other bill, Abraham provided what he called a 'guesstimate,' saying 'a fairly large percentage of the population of the United States takes ivermectin on a daily basis.' The most recent number available for daily ivermectin use in the U.S. is 185,550 people, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, an arm of the U.S. Department of Health and Hospitals. That's only 0.05% of the national population; it's not nothing but certainly not 'a fairly large percentage' of Americans. That poor grasp of health data might be cause for concern among Abraham's patients – animal and human. The surgeon general and other backers of Fesi's bill frequently mentioned 'health freedom' during the Senate committee hearing. That concept apparently doesn't apply to neighbors of industrial facilities who no doubt would like freedom from toxic exposure linked to chronic ailments and a significantly lowered quality and length of life. Fesi also referred to fluoride as 'toxic waste,' something that communities along the river could probably help him better define. If Louisiana leaders are going to pull fluoride out of our drinking water, it stands to reason they should show equal concern for the health of residents in 'Cancer Alley.' SUPPORT: YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE
Yahoo
09-04-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Louisiana joins lawsuit against US nuclear commission, argues overstepping authority
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — Louisiana joined the national lawsuit against the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), accusing them of overstepping their authority over nuclear reactors. The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) announced it is taking part in the nuclear energy lawsuit alongside Texas, Utah, and private sector energy innovators. The lawsuit was filed on Dec. 29, 2024, arguing that the NRC subjected all nuclear reactors — regardless of size or risk profile — to the same licensing requirements. 'Louisiana's energy future demands innovation, not unnecessary red tape,' said Governor Jeff Landry. 'Joining this lawsuit is about defending our ability to pursue advanced energy solutions like SMRs — solutions that are reliable, clean, and essential for economic development in the State. This is part of our broader strategy to make Louisiana an energy leader in the 21st century.' 'The NRC's rule imposes sweeping regulations that fail to distinguish between emerging technologies and legacy reactors. That's not only inefficient — it's unlawful,' said Attorney General Liz Murrill. 'By joining this case, we're defending our State's right to tailor nuclear innovation to our unique needs, while pushing back on Federal overreach.' Louisiana was approved as an NRC Agreement State in 1967, giving the state the authority to regulate source, byproduct and nuclear materials in the state. The LDEQ holds authority over operations and preparedness, forcing Louisiana to support small modular reactors (SMRs). 'This lawsuit is about unlocking opportunity,' stated LDEQ Secretary Aurelia S. Giacometto. 'Louisiana is already an NRC Agreement State with robust regulatory experience in radiological licensing and emergency response. We are ready to take the next step and lead in the deployment and oversight of SMRs. This litigation ensures we are not left behind while other states set the pace for nuclear innovation.' The LDEQ's involvement reflects Gov. Landry's executive order, which instructs agencies to advance innovative environmental solutions. 'Shop in store only': Joann issues warning of fake websites Louisiana woman turns herself in, accused of stealing drugs from oral surgery clinic Human remains found in 1973 identified as missing Kansas teen Louisiana joins lawsuit against US nuclear commission, argues overstepping authority Check your change: Coin collector explains how to spot a pricey penny Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.