Home

iWatch News by The Center for Public Integrity

Follow @iWatch.

Home

About the Center

ICIJ: Global investigations

Donate

Politics

Health

Environment

Accountability

National Security

Juvenile Justice

Environment

EPA declares emergency at Montana Superfund site

By Laura Dattaro

8:42 pm, June 18, 2009 Updated: 3:35 pm, March 28, 2011

Print
E-mail
Tweet

Two years ago, in its report on the Superfund program’s failures, The Center described the “misery in Montana” — the asbestos-related sickness and death that ravaged the small town of Libby, near an abandoned vermiculite mine. Now, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has taken the unprecedented step of declaring a public health emergency at the northwest Montana site — clearing the way for millions of dollars of federal medical care and research funds for the afflicted communities.

The mine, owned by W.R. Grace from 1963 until its closure in 1990, has been on the Superfund list of the nation’s worst abandoned hazardous waste sites since 2002. Documents released by Sen. Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, showed EPA officials were prepared to declare Libby a public health emergency that year, but backed down after meeting with the Bush White House. With 200 Libby residents now dead due to asbestos-related diseases resulting from exposure to vermiculite, which was used for home insulation, the Obama administration’s EPA declared the first public health emergency in the 29-year history of the Superfund program.

“We determined that we needed to step up our efforts,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced an $8 million, eight-year research program to assist the EPA in Libby, and detailed another grant expected to be finalized August 1. As for clean-up of the site, about $165 million has been spent so far, and the EPA estimates $25 million more will be required each year from now through 2013.

Gayla Benefield, a lifelong resident of Libby and founder of the now-disbanded Lincoln County Asbestos Victims Relief Organization, said in an interview with PaperTrail she was encouraged by the EPA’s actions. Benefield, who was featured in the Center’s award-winning Superfund report, Wasting Away, said her primary concern is medical research and assistance for the children in Libby who have been exposed.

“There’s so much, they’re never going to get all of it,” Benefield said of the contamination. “Absolutely never. It’s always going to be lurking, so to me it’s always made more sense to go into the medical research and make it as harmless as little kids eating dirt.”

Like our Environment coverage on Facebook and get the latest news instantly.
Advertisement

What we're working on

Projects, series, blogs and other investigations from the Center

Investigation

Consider the Source

Another Bain exec revealed as man behind corporate donor to pro-Romney super PAC

More stories ...

Investigation

Looting the Seas

'Free-for-all' decimates fish stocks in the southern Pacific

More stories ...

Investigation

Poisoned Places

Many Americans left behind in the quest for cleaner air

More stories ...

Investigation

The Great Mortgage Cover-Up

Countrywide protected fraudsters by silencing whistleblowers, say former employees

More stories ...

Investigation

Juvenile Justice

An epidemic of expulsions

More stories ...

Investigation

Raw Deal

Raging against the foreclosure machine

More stories ...

Popular on Facebook

You might also be interested in ...

Canada resists adding deadly asbestos to toxics blacklist

Pentagon balks at report about rare earth metal reliance on China

DuPont penalized for hiding chemical health risks — again

Powered by Calais
Advertisement

Donate

  • Make a donation online

  • Make a donation by mail

  • Make a contribution by fax or phone

  • Make a gift of stock

  • Rated 4-stars on Charity Navigator

Subscribe to our Weekly Watchdog email newsletter to find about our investigations.

What the Center investigates

About the Center

Center in the News

  • Politics

    • One Nation Under Debt
    • Consider the Source
    • Raw Deal
    • Congress
    • The White House
    • Elections
  • Health

    • Medicare
    • Public Health
    • Wendell Potter
    • Island of the Widows
    • Pushing Prescriptions
    • Genetics
  • Environment

    • Health and Safety
    • Energy
    • Pollution
    • Climate
    • Natural Resources
  • Accountability

    • Finance
    • Harmful Error
    • Morning Tip Sheet
    • Education
    • State Integrity Investigation
    • The Truth Left Behind
    • Global Muckraking
    • ICIJ Member Stories
    • Lobby Watch
    • Campaign Consultants
    • Iraq: The War Card
    • Well Connected
    • Waste, Fraud and Abuse
  • National Security

    • Homeland Security
    • The Military
    • Intelligence
    • Outsourcing the Pentagon
    • Windfalls of War
  • Juvenile Justice

    • About The Center for Public Integrity

    • Our Organization

    • Our People

    • Our Work

    • About the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists

    • Contact Us

    • Advertise

    • Privacy Policy and Terms of Use

    • Susan Ferriss discusses youth in prison with KQED

    • Weekly Watchdog 2/2/12

    • John Dunbar talks year-end super PAC disclosure on PBS NewsHour

    • Center, NPR finalist for Goldsmith journalism prize

    • Weekly Watchdog 1/26/12

    • John Dunbar discusses super PACs on PBS NewsHour

    • International Consortium Adds 41 Investigative Journalists

    • The weekly watchdog: Dec. 12 - Dec. 16

    Copyright 2012 The Center for Public Integrity

    Supported by: