Scientists are claiming that federal officials suppressed a report about health risks in the Great Lakes region traced to toxins in the environmental.
The report includes information about PCB contamination in the Fox River, according to The Washington Post.
The story had been circulating in regional newspapers, but now that it's in the Post, expect more national media and perhaps a better explanation from the feds about why they wouldn't release the report.
Would't you know Wisconsin's own Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner is on the subcommittee investigating this incident. Because the Bush administration has a long record of suppressing or distorting environmental and public health information, we at the ACLU of Wisconsin thought he might need a little encouragement to use his influence for the good.
ReplyDeleteThe ACLU/WI issued the following release:
ACLU of Wisconsin
207 East Buffalo Street, Suite 325
Milwaukee, WI 53202-5774
www.aclu-wi.org
MEDIA RELEASE
ACLU of Wisconsin Calls on Congressman Sensenbrenner to Protect Scientific Inquiry and Public Health of Great Lakes Basin Residents
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 18, 2008
MILWAUKEE, WI -- Today, the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin called on Congressman F. James Sensenbrenner to use his influence to protect scientific inquiry and the public health. Sensenbrenner serves on the House Committee on Science and Technology which is reviewing allegations that the administration has suppressed publication of a scientific report regarding health conditions and environmental pollution in the Great Lakes Basin.
An article Monday, in the online version of The Washington Post entitled “Delay of Report is Blamed on Politics” says that, “The lead author and peer reviewers of a government report raising the possibility of public health threats from industrial contamination throughout the Great Lakes region are charging that the report is being suppressed because of the questions it raises.”
Since 2002 scientists at the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATDRS) have been preparing a study entitled: “Public Health Implications of Hazardous Substances in the Twenty-six U.S. Great Lakes Areas of Concern.” As of today the agency has not released it. Among the areas of concern included in the study are the Milwaukee Estuary, the Sheboygan River, and Lower Green Bay and the Fox River.
In a letter emailed to Congressman Sensenbrenner, the Chris Ahmuty, executive director of the ACLU of Wisconsin, wrote that this controversy, “relates significantly to civil liberties because if appears to be another instance where the administration has muzzled government scientists for no apparent scientific reason.” Ahmuty wrote that Sensenbrenner’s “influence is particularly important because of the administration’s record of suppressing and distorting environmental and public health information.”
Ahmuty also said today, “The areas of concern under study include Wisconsin communities where people of color and low income live. Congressman Sensenbrenner needs to protect the health of these people from the administration’s interference in scientific inquiry.” Ahmuty concluded, “I believe that the congressman and the ACLU agree that governmental accountability at least to the Congress is essential. Hopefully, the ATDRS will be forthcoming in its respond to the Congress’s requests.”
The American Civil Liberties Union is a membership organization dedicated to defending the civil liberties and rights of all Wisconsin residents in a nonpartisan manner. See www.aclu-wi.org
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