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View Full Version : Swampy part of New Orleans turns into dumping ground



guiseppewv
10-31-2005, 01:36 PM
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (AP) -- A swampy section of the city is becoming a dumping ground for paint cans, broken furniture, insulation and whatever else is in the rubble.

From its beginnings, New Orleans has viewed the surrounding wetlands and Mississippi River as the logical places for its waste. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the city again is turning to the swamp.

East of the city's residential neighborhoods lies a large tract of swamp land that has been turned into an industrial corridor. Even before Katrina it was besmirched with scrap metal and used parts yards, rust-colored streams and dead cypress trees.

Making matters worse, environmentalists warn, is that the mounds of debris from Katrina also are winding up here.

Already, illegal dumping goes on in plain sight. On one road, a pile of paint cans, telephone poles, biological hazard bags and insulation reaches several feet high. Some of it has been pushed into the swamp next to the road.

A month after Katrina, the state Department of Environmental Quality also allowed the reopening of an old city-owned garbage landfill that had been closed down by federal regulators more than a decade ago.

The Sierra Club and Louisiana Environmental Action Network charge that the Old Gentilly Landfill should only be a repository for construction waste.

Instead, it has become one of the main drop-off spots for debris and trucks carrying furniture, mattresses and building materials. Dust is kicked up all day on the roads leading to it.

Environmentalists are considering filing a lawsuit to challenge the rebirth of the landfill.

"I understand that we need to get rid of the waste from the city of New Orleans, but we have to make sure that we are following the environmental laws," said Darryl Malek-Wiley of the Sierra Club's Delta Chapter.

Darin Mann, a spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Quality, said inspections have shown that the debris going into the landfill is in compliance with the state's plan to deal with the wreckage from the hurricane.

The fears over turning the Old Gentilly Landfill into a Superfund site are not without precedent.

When Hurricane Betsy flooded the city in 1965, much of the debris from that hurricane was dumped in the Agriculture Street Landfill. Homes and a school were built atop the landfill before it was found to be contaminated and declared a Superfund site.


:disa:

http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/10/31/katrina.dumping.ap/index.html

Houdini
10-31-2005, 09:32 PM
New Orleans is a strange place right now. Some parts of the city (Uptown and the Fr. Quarter) are lit up like they were before the storm, with clean tap water and working street lights, power, cable, internet, etc. Other parts only blocks away are in complete darkness. No traffic lights, only stop signs, etc. It's actually kind of creepy driving around a big city at night without any street lights! Many neighborhoods look pretty normal, except for the huge number of refrigerators in front of houses. Other parts of the city look like I'd imagine parts of Baghdad look from time to time. Lots of rubble, broken things, etc. The damage isn't as bad as the damage MS sustained, but things are still not normal.

About the refrigerators. Even I dragged mine downstairs from my apartment (after duct-taping it shut) and slapped a new one in its place. I have no idea what I left in that fridge, nor do I care. Maggots were covering it when I was "officially" allowed back into the city, and I figured the stench and, well, number of bugs in the insulation, etc., wouldn't be worth the trouble. I have no idea what the city or anyone will do with them. Right now, they're mostly ugly and stinky and visible. I just wish I had cleaned it out when I was first "unofficially" allowed back into the city ~1 wk after the storm. :(

An idea...the amount of freon in these old refrigerators isn't going to pose much of an environmental risk, so recapturing it (as the EPA requires) seems dumb. I say blow the freon out, torch them, and haul them out to sea as artificial reefs. So far, my idea hasn't caught on. :shrug: