E.P.A. Region Seven to Host News Conference Dec. 15 to Discuss Milestone in Cleanup of Residential Yards in Omaha, Neb.
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Category: Emergency ResponseType: News
Source: EPA
Date: Wednesday, December 14th, 2011
Environmental News
NEWS MEDIA ADVISORY
(Kansas City, Kan., Dec. 14, 2011) - E.P.A. Regional Administrator Karl Brooks will host a news conference on Thursday, Dec. 15, in Omaha, Neb., to discuss a recent milestone in the Agency's continuing efforts to clean up toxic lead from residential yards and properties in the city.
The news conference will be held at eleven a.m. on Thursday, Dec. 15, in the Jesse Lowe Conference Room on the 3rd Floor of the Omaha-Douglas Civic Center, 1819 Farnam Street. Omaha Mayor Jim Suttle, Nebraska State Senator Brenda J. Council and Douglas Co. Health Director Dr. Adi Pour are also scheduled to attend the event.
Since 1999, E.P.A. and its contractors have been working cooperatively with local officials, agencies, institutions, community organizations, residents and property owners to sample and remediate lead-contaminated soils from Omaha's residential yards, schools, day care facilities, parks and playgrounds. Addressed under EPA's Superfund program, the Omaha Lead Site, consisting of approximately 27 square miles of eastern Omaha, has been on the National Priorities List since 2003.
WHAT: News conference to discuss milestone in Omaha Lead Location cleanup
WHEN: eleven a.m. Thursday, December 15, 2011
WHERE: Jesse Lowe Conference Room, 3rd Floor of Omaha-Douglas Civic Center, 1819 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. 68183
WHO: E.P.A. Regional Administrator Karl Brooks, Omaha Mayor Jim Suttle, Nebraska State Senator Brenda Council and Douglas Co. Health Director Dr. Adi Pour
In 1998, the Omaha City Council solicited assistance from E.P.A. in addressing problems with lead contamination in area soils, prompted by cleanup activities at the former ASARCO lead processing facility along the west bank of the Missouri River in Omaha.
From the early 1870s until it closed in 1997, the ASARCO plant emitted lead and other heavy metals into the atmosphere from smoke stacks and fugitive emissions. Those pollutants were carried by wind and deposited on the ground across eastern Omaha for in excess of a century. Over time, soils around many residences have also been contaminated with lead from the flaking and deterioration of lead-based exterior paints.
Lead in surface soils poses a serious health risk to children 6 years of age and younger, and to pregnant women. Lead poisoning can result in learning and behavioral problems, hearing problems, diminished IQ, and kidney damage. E.P.A. also classifies lead as a possible cancer-causing agent.
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