Sludge Watch ==> Synagro - sludge dryer plant - The Bronx is Choking
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Fri May 9 16:33:04 EDT 2008
http://www.nypress.com/21/19/news&columns/feature.cfm
LADIES AND GENTLEMEN,THE BRONX IS CHOKING
One in four children in Hunts Point has asthmaâan epidemic GABRIELE
STEINHAUSER blames on environmental racism.
By Gabriele Steinhauser
May 6, 2008
At first Tanya Fields thought it was just a regular cold.
For three days in November of 2004, her 5-month-old daughter, Trist-Ann, had
been wheezing and coughing. It seemed like she was choking. Eventually the
coughing fits became so bad that the little girl was vomiting; she
couldnât hold anything down. When her doctor failed to get Trist-Ann to
breathe more easily, he told the young mother to take her to the emergency
room. By the time they reached St. Lukeâs Hospital in Manhattan, Trist-Ann
had fluid in her lungs. The diagnosis: pneumonia.
The doctors told Fields that her daughter could have drowned from the
inside. The next four days and five nights, she did not leave her
Trist-Annâs side at the hospital, while her other daughter Taylor, who was
two years old at the time, stayed with her parents in Harlem. It was the
first of many trips to the emergency room for Fields, a 27-year-old office
worker.
A few months later, Trist-Ann was back in the hospital, again with
pneumonia.
At the age of 1, she was diagnosed with asthma.
In other parts of New York City, such a diagnosis might have been a
surprise, but not where Tanya Fields and her two children live. In their
neighborhood of Hunts Point, a small peninsula on the southeastern tip of
the Bronx, one in four elementary-school children suffers from asthma.
Three decades after President Jimmy Carterâs famous walk past the
abandoned buildings on Charlotte Street, a new epidemic has taken hold of
the South Bronx. Public schools have their own asthma clinics, nebulizers
ready to help students breathe when they start gasping for air in class.
And while urban planners and public health specialists are still struggling
to find the cause for the communityâs disturbingly high asthma rates, for
parents like Tanya Fields there is no question that itâs the air they
breathe that makes their children wheeze.
Every week, according to citizensâ groups that monitor the site, up to
60,000 trucks take a turn off Bruckner Expressway and cut through the
neighborhoodâs small residential section (its current population is
47,000) to reach Hunts Pointâs industrial sector, an area that plays a
crucial role in New York Cityâs metabolism. On the peninsulaâs 690 acres
sit the worldâs biggest food market, at least four private waste-transfer
stations, a wastewater treatment plant and the New York Organic Fertilizer
Company: a plant that turns half of New York Cityâs sludge (the solid
material that is extracted from wastewater before it flows back into the
cityâs waterways) into fertilizer pellets.
Sometimes, residents say, they can smell the odors emerging from the plant
at a distance of almost two miles.
Hunts Point represents an often-ignored dilemma of urban life: Where large
numbers of people live together, they produce wasteâwaste that needs to be
collected, transported, reused, recycled or disposed of. All too often that
happens in poor communities of colorâthat is, communities like Hunts
Point, where, in 1999, 97 percent of residents were Hispanic or African
American and the median household income was $17,612 (less than half that of
New York City as a whole). In September 2005, the Associated Press, in an
analysis of data from the Environmental Protection Agency, found that
African-Americans were 79 percent more likely to live in a neighborhood
where industrial pollution is suspected of posing the greatest health risk.
In many places, Hispanic and Asian minorities also suffered disproportionate
impacts.
For activists around the country, this unequal distribution of
waste-processing facilities has a name: environmental racism.
It was to achieve a measure of environmental justice that the New York City
Planning Commission passed the so-called Fair Share Criteria in 1991, which
stipulated that the benefits and burdens of municipal facilities should be
allocated equally across neighborhoods. Three years later, in February 1994,
President Bill Clinton issued an executive order demanding that all federal
agencies make environmental justice part of their mission.
And yet, 13 years later, at a time celebrities drive hybrid cars and talk of
global warming and sustainability has won Oscars and Nobel Prizes, the
struggle for environmental justice is far from over. Instead it continues,
largely unnoticed, in places like Hunts Point, where the stage is much less
glamorous. Here, the scene is set by a city that wastes, a neighborhood
where people tend to mind their own business and a system of asymmetric
political powers, where the theory of laws and regulations sometimes remains
at a great remove from everyday practice.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
It was in the summer of 2003, a few months after she had moved into her
small, one-bedroom apartment on Fox Street, that Tanya Fields first noticed
the smell. Heavy and inescapable, like a mix of chicken manure and rotting
meat, it hung in the air, seeping through the cracks between window and air
conditioner, forcing her and her little daughter to sit inside on hot summer
days.
Her neighbors knew nothing about the odorâs origins. âThe community had
internalized the smell,â Fields recalled. âWhen it happened they covered
their noses and their mouths and waited for it to pass.â What they did
know was that the pungent smells gave them headaches and made them feel
nauseous. On particularly bad days, the odor could even trigger asthma
attacks.
In recent years, urban planners and public health specialists have tried to
discover why, according to figures from the Department of Health, a child
under 14 from Hunts Point and the neighboring district Mott Haven was more
than three times as likely to be hospitalized for asthma than a child from
the Upper East Side. For adults, who generally have lower asthma rates than
children, the discrepancies in hospitalization rates between the two
neighborhoods had a ratio of more than 10 to one.
In October 2006, a team of researchers from New York University reported
that asthma symptoms spiked for South Bronx schoolchildrenâincluding those
from Hunts Pointâwhenever there was an increase in the number of diesel
trucks spewing soot particles into the air. The study also found that a
child from the South Bronx was twice as likely to attend a school near a
highway than other children in New York City.
Public School 48, right on the border between Hunts Pointâs residential
and industrial sections, is one of these schools. One morning last fall, a
slightly chubby boy with a blue polo shirt and glasses was sitting in a
small room next to the gym, pressing a transparent plastic mask over his
nose and mouth. He was 8 years old and should have been in a classroom with
the other third-graders. Instead, he was in the schoolâs clinic, inhaling
medicine from a nebulizer to open up his airways while listening to the
muffled screams and laughter of playing children.
âThey do miss out on a lot because of asthma,â said Christina Pizarro,
the schoolâs parent coordinator. âOur chronic asthma children miss two,
possibly three days of school per week.â Of the ones that make it to
school, she added, two to three end up in the schoolâs clinic at some
point during the school day.
Yet in spite of such indicators, to date thereâs no conclusive scientific
proof that air pollution does indeed produce asthma.
âThere is no smoking gun, showing this is whatâs causing all this,â
said Juliana Maantay, an associate professor of Urban Environmental
Geography at Lehman College. Maantay has spent years researching the
spatial relationship between air pollution, race and asthma in the Bronx,
using data from the New York City Department of Health, the census and the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). What she found reaffirmed her
suspicions: Bronx residents who live within walking distance of a pollution
source are not only 30 percent more likely to be hospitalized for asthma,
they are also poorer and more likely to be minorities.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
âToday is not a good day,â said the receptionist in the lobby of the New
York Organic Fertilizer Company (NYOFCo), as she lit two scented candles on
top of her heavy wooden desk. Outside on the streets of Hunts Point, the
smell had already been difficult to ignore; but as soon as the first of two
sets of heavy glass doors fell shut, the odor hit like a warm and heavy
wall. Inside the plant, a complex system of machines with names like
triple-pass rotary dryers and venturi scrubbers turn the moist remnants of
human feces into mothball-sized organic fertilizer pellets. The candles did
not stand a chance of bringing even temporary reprieve.
âYou never really get used to it,â the receptionist said.
Synagro, NYOFCoâs parent company, bills itself the largest recycler of
organic residual in the United States, and its Hunts Point plant processes
half of New York Cityâs sludgeâenough to cover an entire football field
with a three-inch-thick layer every day.
Since its opening on May 18, 1993, NYOFCo has processed over three million
tons of sanitary sewage sludgeâa service for which the DEP says it pays
$30 million per year. Last April, The Carlyle Group, one of the worldâs
biggest private equity firms, bought Synagro for $772 million.
When John Kopec, plant manager of NYOFCo, took a recent group of visitors
through his workplace, they could choose between a short and a long tour.
Those who chose the short tour observed the drying process through a large
window in the facilityâs conference room. The ones who chose the long tour
were in for a more memorable experience. Within minutes of passing through
the door that separates the plantâs offices from its large, dusty factory
floor, where dark, almost black sewage sludge runs on conveyer belts and
emerges as fertilizer, the odor soaks itself into hair, skin and clothes.
Six weeks after the tour, a reporterâs notebook would still carry a faint,
but distinctive smell.
At the tipping area at the other side of the factory floor, a truck dumped
its load of black sludge, while a worker hosed down the vehicle with water.
Every day, 20 to 30 of these trucks arrive at the plant from all over the
city. Because the number of trucks varies from day to day, Kopec explained,
the sludge sometimes sits and waits for several hours until it can be
processed. This waiting period, he said, was responsible for much of the
smell that emerged into the neighborhood.
>From the tipping area, Kopec led the way outside. Near the entrance of the
building, eight white storage silos house the finished fertilizer pellets
until they are loaded on train carts and taken to Florida and Ohioâwhere
they end up on citrus groves and in fields growing soybeans and corn.
On September 4, 2003, fertilizer dust in one of these silos ignited, causing
a blast that catapulted the siloâs roof into the air and set the silo on
fire. Although no one was hurt, the explosion frightened residents and
sparked worries about similar incidents. In the past 15 years, there have
been at least seven fires and explosions in the plant, according to a
facility report prepared by NYOFCo.
âAnything with this kind of material is going to be dangerous,â Kopec
said at the end of his tour. The first attack on the World Trade Center in
1993 as well as the Oklahoma City bombing two years later used fertilizer as
an explosive.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
On a late Saturday morning in November, the Hunts Point offices of Mothers
on the Move were deserted, as was the dry patch of green on the other side
of Intervale Avenue. From time to time, a car drove by, seemingly taking
little notice of the bright graffiti decorating the ground-floor office. The
only thing interrupting the silence were the roaring jets of passenger
planes taking off from nearby LaGuardia airport every few minutes.
Tanya Fields was late. The night before, her parents had picked up Trist-Ann
and Taylor for the weekend, and she had taken the opportunity for a night
out with her girlfriends, she said as she arrived. Her black dreadlocks
pulled back from her face, Fields had donned a big pair of sunglasses to
keep out the bright sunshine, while a black down jacket protected her from
the chilly November wind and hid the growing bump on her stomach. Sometime
in May, Trist-Ann and Taylor will have a little brother. Rather than
relishing the remaining hours of a free weekend, Fields was eager to show
off her neighborhood. However, the 35-minute walk to the lawns and
basketball hoops of Barretto Point Park at the tip of the peninsula was
hardly a scenic weekend stroll. Instead, it went past a plethora of
auto-body shops, several waste-transfer stations, a cruise-ship-sized prison
barge that sits in the East River, the Hunts Point wastewater treatment
plant and the New York Organic Fertilizer Company.
Tanya Fields arrived in Hunts Point in 2003. Taylor was 4 months old, and
the young mother was desperate to move out of her parentsâ crowded home in
Harlem. Stuck in a complicated relationship with her daughterâs father and
in the middle of her studies at Baruch College, she knew that the South
Bronx was one of the few places she could afford. As Fields passed rows of
warehouses and auto-body shops, where piles of rusty carcasses peeked over
walls and water puddles sparkled with the rainbows of spilled motor oil,
street names like Leggette, Tiffany and Casanova evoked Hunts Pointâs
prosperous past, when wealthy landowners and entrepreneurs lived and did
business in the neighborhood.
In the 19th century, large estates dominated the western part of the
peninsula, while the east was left to sand and shrubbery. Then, in 1904, the
extension of the subway line from Manhattan opened the area to industrial
development. It was the first of many instances when the fortunes of the
South Bronx changed in reaction to developments beyond the boroughâs
borders. Before long, factories and other manufacturing businesses being
crowded out of an increasingly residential Manhattan started to appear in
Hunts Point. In the 1920s, Con Edison built large storage tanks for
manufactured gas, used for heating and cooking, on the eastern side of the
peninsula that now hosts the Fulton Fish Market. With the new industries
came the people that worked there, mainly Jews from Eastern Europe, who
built their homes and synagogues in the neighborhood.
The next big transformation came during the two decades after Word War II.
White working-class residents became more affluent and moved to the cityâs
northern suburbs, the Hunts Point wastewater treatment plant went into
operation and the neighborhood gained its current demographic composition.
In a dynamic that was not so different from Tanya Fieldsâ move five
decades later, African-Americans and Puerto Ricans, forced out of
overcrowded tenements in Harlem, moved into apartment buildings vacated by
the white exodus to the suburbs.
In the 1960s, when the congestion caused by delivery trucks had become too
much of a strain on traffic in downtown Manhattan, the city relocated its
produce market to Hunts Point, and the cityâs other big food markets soon
followed. However, at the same time a larger trend was unfolding: The new
residents were not only poorer but also arrived at a time when the economic
base of their predecessors was slowly but steadily fading. New Yorkâs
manufacturing industry was leaving the city, taking with it the jobs that
for decades had provided a living for its working classes.
The result is well-documented history. In the 1970s and 1980s, violence,
arson and abandonment made living conditions so difficult that some 60,000
residents, almost two-thirds of the population of Hunts Point, left the
neighborhood. Today, although crime rates are dropping and apartments are
quickly filling up, Hunts Point still grapples with the legacy of the last
century. The past shows itself in a few rows of pretty brownstones in the
residential section of the district and in the high brick chimneys of an old
money-printing factory, but nowhere is it more evident than in local zoning
regulations that make it easy for polluting facilities to move to or remain
in the area.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Every day, New York Cityâs eight million residents and businesses produce
1.4 billion gallons of wastewaterâthe equivalent of about 28 million full
bathtubsâand 50,000 tons of garbage. Municipal agencies like the DEP and
the Department of Sanitation work together with private businesses to
collect, treat, recycle and ultimately dispose of the cityâs waste. Few
people know more about the role of Hunts Point in this system than Ruben
Diaz Jr., who represents the residential section of the neighborhood in the
New York State Assembly in Albany.
Sitting in his office in Soundview, the neighborhood just north of Hunts
Point, Diaz was angry.
âWe got screwed,â said Diaz, his feet propped up on his desk. âWe
really got screwed.â
Ever since he was first elected in 1997, at the age of 23, environmental
issues have been high on his list of priorities. Yet all too often his
efforts have run into dead ends. Because there are no waste transfer
stations in Manhattan, said Diaz, every year, 1.1 million trucks drive an
extra 6.1 million miles to take garbage from Manhattan to the South Bronx,
where it is processed and stored before trains, trucks and barges take it to
landfills out of state.
In 2006, the City Council passed the Department of Sanitationâs solid
waste management plan, under which every borough is meant to collect and
process its own waste locally. But parts of the plan are currently stuck in
the committee stage in the State Assembly. The new garbage strategy
envisioned the revival of a marine waste transfer station on the Gansevoort
Pier in Manhattanâs fashionable Meatpacking District. Because the pier is
part of the Hudson River Park, which falls under the responsibility of
Albany, three local assembly members, with the help of the speaker of the
house, Sheldon Silver, are keeping the bill from moving to the floor to get
a vote. They maintain that the city has not properly considered their
alternative proposal: putting the marine transfer station at another pier
about 20 blocks to the north.
âTheyâre saying ânot in my backyard,â when in the meantime the
garbage is coming into our backyard,â said Diaz. âWeâre guilty of
that, too. But the problem is, we never win.â
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tanya Fields pulled out her cell phone and keys from the pockets of her
jacket and placed them into a small plastic tray before walking through the
metal detector. On this Tuesday morning in mid-March, she was on her way to
meet Joanne Goubourn, the principal of HYDE Leadership Charter School in
Hunts Point. Much had changed since Fieldsâ walking tour through Hunts
Point last November. Her gray coat could no longer hide the fact that she
was seven monthsâ pregnant. Taylor and Trist-Ann were already counting
down the days until her delivery date in eight weeks. In December, Fields
had quit her job at American Express and in February she started a new,
full-time position as community-outreach coordinator for Sustainable South
Bronx, one of the other environmental-justice groups in Hunts Point.
Today, Fields had come to ask Goubourn to let Sustainable South Bronx start
an afternoon program at her school, which would give students what Fields
called âa hands-on approach on what it means to build a green
community.â As she was rattling off the names of facilities and her
organizationâs programs, Goubourn, who had moved from Washington D.C. to
the South Bronx a little over a year ago, was nodding her head.
âThe thing that is so sad for me is that there is no awareness,â said
Goubourn, recalling her experiences with her studentsâ parents. âThey
donât even know how to be angry.â
The window of her small, cramped office was open only a few inches, but the
sharp whiff of exhaust fumes was hard to ignore. Edgewater Road, the main
truck route leading to the Hunts Point Terminal Market, was a mere three
blocks away.
âThis is turning into a civil rights issue,â Fields said before she
left. âThey start to internalize a certain kind of oppression.â
For Tanya Fields, the struggle to break this circle began three-and-a-half
years ago, when she watched her daughter desperately gasping for air at a
Manhattan hospital. Before she found her way into the offices of Mothers on
the Move to join a small but growing group of community activists, she had
to make a decision. Hunts Point had to become her homeâa place where she
would stay even if her own fortunes changed. Now, as her third child was
about to be born, she was trying to find a bigger apartment in the
neighborhood, hoping that by the time her son was grown, he would be able to
look out over his surroundings with prideâa child of Hunts Point, the
Bronx.
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