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EPA Inspector General Finds 100 U.S. Superfund Sites Vulnerable to Flooding, Wildfires
About 100 Superfund sites face flooding and wildfire risks, threatening millions nearby and revealing gaps in climate risk planning, EPA Inspector General reports.
- The Environmental Protection Agency's Office of Inspector General issued reports last week assessing 157 federal Superfund sites, finding nearly 100 toxic waste sites face significant threats from flooding and wildfires.
- Five-Year plans governing expensive cleanups often fail to account for damage from sea-level rise and frequent storms, the review found; Betsy Southerland, a former EPA water protection director, called this a major planning failure.
- About 3 million Americans live within 1 mile of a Superfund site, while 13 million reside within 3 miles; 49 coastal sites face storm surge risk, 47 inland sites flood risk, and 31 face wildfire threats.
- President Donald Trump fired Inspector General Donnell last year, and the administration has scrubbed 'climate change' from federal websites, limiting the IG's ability to address climate risks in cleanup planning.
- Researcher Lara Cushing at University of California, Los Angeles called the reports 'noteworthy and important,' noting they echo a 2017 Associated Press investigation that found 327 vulnerable Superfund sites following Hurricane Harvey.
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The Independent (US)
Watchdog group finds US’ most hazardous waste sites are vulnerable to flooding, fires
Many Superfund sites face multiple disaster threats: 49 coastal sites are vulnerable to sea-level rise or hurricane storm surges, often near populated areas and ecological zones like Chesapeake Bay
·London, United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleEPA watchdog finds nation’s most contaminated sites are vulnerable to flooding, wildfires | 100.1 FM and AM 1020 KDKA
w n weather government-programs public-health wildfires climate-and-environment climate-change health u-s-news general-news washington-news | 100.1 FM and AM 1020 KDKA
·Philadelphia, United States
Read Full Article+23 Reposted by 23 other sources
EPA watchdog finds nation’s most contaminated sites are vulnerable to flooding, wildfires
About 100 of the nation’s most contaminated toxic waste sites are in areas prone to flooding and wildfires, a potential public health threat to millions of Americans.
·United States
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources43
Leaning Left14Leaning Right1Center25Last UpdatedBias Distribution63% Center
Bias Distribution
- 63% of the sources are Center
63% Center
L 35%
C 63%
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