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Report Questions Ground Zero Air Quality
Mar 17, 2003 9:46
AM (ET)
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Ground Zero tests by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency in the days immediately after the World Trade Center collapse did not
support the agency's own statements the air around the site was safe to breathe,
a newspaper reported.
A report by the EPA's Office of Inspector General said the agency reached its
conclusion on the safety of the air using a cancer risk level 100 times greater
than what it normally considers acceptable for public exposure to toxic contaminants.
The status report, obtained by The Sacramento Bee, supports the views of some
doctors and public health advocates who evaluated thousands of firefighters,
volunteers, demolition workers and laborers working on the site.
"To say that it's safe, which suggests no risk, we just knew that was wrong,"
said Jonathan Bennett, a spokesman for the New York Committee for Occupational
Safety and Health.
The status report summarizes preliminary conclusions. It is expected to be published
in May and a spokesman for the inspector general said the findings could change
before publication. The Office of Inspector General is an independent investigative
office that reports directly to Congress. Of 3,500 Ground Zero workers screened
nearly a year after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, more than half continued to
suffer from lung, ear, nose and throat problems, according to a study released
in January by Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York.
About 40,000 workers were involved in the rescue, recovery and cleanup efforts
at the site.
The yearlong investigation by the Office of Inspector General will determine
whether air pollution monitoring data from the collapse site and surrounding
areas supports what the EPA told the public about the health risks. EPA officials
declined comment Friday.
"It is inappropriate for the EPA to be commenting on a document that is
not final and that is being done independently," said Lisa Harrison, the
agency's press secretary.
The EPA has come under criticism from inside and outside the agency over its
public pronouncements on air quality around Ground Zero.
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