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Will Trump dismantle the new EPA rule limiting a Cancer Alley pollutant? • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Safura Syed, Verite – 2025-01-31 10:44:00

Will Trump dismantle the new EPA rule limiting a Cancer Alley pollutant?

by Safura Syed, Verite, Louisiana Illuminator
January 31, 2025

Kaitlyn Joshua is ready to move out of Geismar. The community organizer has lived in the Ascension Parish community for the past four years, but her and her children’s asthma, along with the high levels of toxic air pollutants in the area, have pushed her to the brink.

“I’m pretty staunch in my decision to put my family first to make sure their health comes first and put them in an area that doesn’t necessarily have such inundation of industry and such polluted air,” she said.

Located in “Cancer Alley,” an industrial corridor that spans from New Orleans to Baton Rouge and is known for its high rates of cancer and air pollution, Geismar is home to 42 industrial facilities listed on the Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxics Release Inventory because they emit harmful chemicals above a certain threshold. At least three emit ethylene oxide, a small molecule that can cause cancer at low concentrations in people who are exposed to it over their lifetimes, Johns Hopkins University environmental health and engineering professor Peter DeCarlo told Verite News.

Last June, DeCarlo and his team released a study showing that ethylene oxide levels in Cancer Alley are above limits that are safe for long-term exposure. Some of the highest levels of exposure were found in Ascension Parish, where Joshua lives. Most hazards that come from air pollutants can be attributed to ethylene oxide, according to the paper.

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The EPA started to tighten rules to limit community and worker exposure to ethylene oxide last year by requiring fenceline monitoring in some plants and strengthening emissions standards. In its most recent decision, released earlier this month, the agency is requiring facilities to lower the amount of ethylene oxide workers are exposed to from 1 part per million (ppm) to 0.5 ppm by 2028 and to 0.1 ppm by 2035. The new rule also calls for continuous monitoring of ethylene oxide in facilities that use and store it.

But environmental researchers and advocates like Joshua and DeCarlo don’t think the new rules will eliminate the hazard of ethylene oxide exposure. It’s unclear, too, whether the Trump administration will keep the rules or roll them back. During Trump’s first term, he rolled back more than 100 environmental rules, most of them dealing with air pollution and emissions.

“Even though the rules are there — [I’m] hoping that scales down some of the pollution — it would take years to pull back the amount of pollution that is currently being emitted into the environment,” Joshua said.

The EPA requires industries to self-monitor their toxic air releases, which could also lead to the use of measurement techniques that may not be fully accurate, DeCarlo said. In the rules created last year, the EPA required industries to share their fenceline monitoring with communities. Verite News contacted to the EPA to ask about how chemicals will be continuously monitored and whether the new rules may change under the Trump administration, but no one from the agency responded in time for publication.

How will the EPA enforce the new ethylene oxide rule?

DeCarlo said the laws are well-intended, but he is hesitant to say they will bring about actual change in ethylene oxide levels in the area, given that monitoring and emission control may not be as effective at bringing down levels as regulators hope.

“I think that rules that we write and specifications on paper are often more optimistic than the situation in the real world,” DeCarlo said.

Joshua said she doesn’t believe that the rules go far enough. But Joshua said it is important stricter rules still exist at the federal level, even if they don’t change her mind about staying in Geismar.

“Under Louisiana’s political infrastructure, we do not have lawmakers that push back or advocate for these rules,” Joshua said. “And so that would have to be something that the industry themselves are looking to do.”

The EPA’s decision also includes increased protections for workers who may be exposed to ethylene oxide, including required use of respirators in areas with high levels of ethylene oxide and separate HVAC systems in areas where the chemical is used.

Gov. Landry accuses EPA of trying to close Denka plant in LaPlace

Shamell Lavigne, the chief operating officer of environmental advocacy group Rise St. James and a resident of Ascension Parish, said she is thankful that the rules target worker exposure. Lavigne, too, believes that rules limiting pollution should go further and said that ethylene oxide is a chemical that Rise St. James is “always concerned about.”

“In addition to lowering standards for existing plants, we need to make sure that new plants are not built that will further increase the emissions,” Lavigne said.

Environmental advocates in Cancer Alley are keeping a close eye on existing and upcoming plants. Petrochemical manufacturing accounts for the majority of ethylene oxide emissions. Lavigne said she is concerned about ethylene oxide pollution from a proposed Formosa plastics plant in St. James that could emit up to 7.7 tons of the chemical every year. Formosa has already begun construction after being locked in legal battles over air permits with environmental activist groups, including Lavigne’s.

In a written statement to Verite News, Formosa said it does not expect actual emissions to reach the levels specified in the permits. The company said the project will not produce or store ethylene oxide as a product and will work to vent any leftover chemical through emission control equipment.

Even though rules surrounding emissions have gotten stricter, Sharon Lavigne, the founder of Rise St. James and Shamell Lavigne’s mother, said she thinks the polluting industries will violate the rules. Last October, the DuPont chemical plant in Reserve was fined $480,000 for emitting levels of cancer-causing benzene higher than federal rules allowed.

“I don’t care if they put it on paper, these industries are going to go over the limit,” Sharon Lavigne said. “Industries don’t care, as long as they make that money.”

Shamell Lavigne said she is worried about how new regulations may hold up now that Trump is in office. Trump has already pulled the United States out of the Paris Climate Agreement for a second time and reversed Biden-era orders that were aimed at improving the environment in low-income communities and communities of color. These rules were meant to target decades of discriminatory permitting practices that have placed polluting industries in minority communities. Now, officials will not be required to consider how new facilities will impact historically overburdened and disadvantaged residents already living alongside polluters.

“These are serious concerns for us living here in Cancer Alley,” Shamell Lavigne said. “There were some things that were put in place, and there are some things that are being dismantled, and our overall protections are at risk.”

Sharon Lavigne said she is also worried about rules being rolled back, but thinks that Congress should do more to protect communities.

“The Democrats and the Republicans need to get together and try to work on these issues,” Sharon Lavigne said, “and not let Trump do whatever he wants to do.”

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This article first appeared on Verite News New Orleans and is republished here under a Creative Commons license. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://veritenews.org/2025/01/31/ethylene-oxide-trump-epa-cancer-alley/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

News from the South - Louisiana News Feed

Concealed carry allowed in safe zone

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www.youtube.com – WDSU News – 2025-01-31 20:06:43

SUMMARY: As the Super Bowl approaches in New Orleans, security concerns are being addressed, especially in the French Quarter. An enhanced security zone, stretching from Canal Street to Saint Ann, will prohibit large bags and coolers, with additional screenings in place. One unresolved issue is concealed carry; while concealed weapons are prohibited in certain areas, enforcement in large crowds may be difficult. Local leaders, including the French Quarter’s Citizens President Clay Bilby, suggest that state laws could complicate restrictions. Local artist Christian Peterson hopes more safeguards will be considered, with feedback from residents and workers in the area.

Concealed carry allowed in safe zone during Super Bowl

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Neville Junior High Tigerline coach competes in Ciara's Dance Icon competition

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www.youtube.com – KTVE – 2025-01-31 17:24:11

SUMMARY: Kennedy Wood, a local dance coach for the Neville Junior Hot Tiger Line, is competing to become a featured dancer in a music video with Grammy-winning artist Siera, with a chance to win a $20,000 prize. Wood aims to use the money to open a dance studio for underprivileged kids in her community. She believes this opportunity will highlight local talent and inspire young dancers, impacting their pursuit of dance careers. Currently, she is in the second phase of auditions and needs community votes from February 3rd to 13th to advance to the final stages.

Neville Junior High Tigerline coach competes in Ciara’s Dance Icon competition

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Judge blocks enforcement of Louisiana’s 25-foot buffer zone for police • Louisiana Illuminator

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lailluminator.com – Charles Maldonado – 2025-01-31 16:57:00

Judge blocks enforcement of Louisiana’s 25-foot buffer zone for police

by Charles Maldonado, Louisiana Illuminator
January 31, 2025

NEW ORLEANS – A federal judge has temporarily blocked enforcement of a state law, approved last year, that creates a buffer zone around police, making it a criminal offense to come within 25 feet of a working officer after being ordered to step back.

The preliminary injunction was issued Friday in response to a lawsuit filed in July by six media companies, including Verite News’ parent company Deep South Today, asking for the law to be blocked.

The media groups — represented by the Washington-based Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Louisiana attorneys Scott Sternberg and Marcia Suzanne Montero — say the law could interfere with journalists’ First Amendment rights to cover police actions and expose police misconduct. They also argue the law is unconstitutionally vague, allowing police to invoke the buffer arbitrarily.

Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill, who is a defendant in the suit, contends that the law is a common-sense public safety measure that will protect police officers while they are on the job. In a December court hearing, attorneys representing Murrill also argued that the media groups’ suit is based on purely hypothetical grounds, as the law has yet to be enforced since it took effect in August.

But in his ruling, Judge John deGravelles of Louisiana’s Middle District, said the threat to newsgathering warrants immediate action.

“Plaintiffs’ journalists are regularly within 25 feet of peace officers, and now face the threat of arrest and prosecution if an order to retreat is given,” deGravelles wrote. “The distance required is likely to impede Plaintiffs’ non-obstructive newsgathering. … Therefore, the Act has a chilling effect on Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights,” even if it has not yet been enforced.”

DeGravelles, a federal court appointee of former President Barack Obama, also agreed with the plaintiffs that the law is overly vague.

“Here, while the Act clearly states that an officer can enforce a 25-foot buffer zone, it lacks any standard by which an officer may issue an order to stand back or retreat,” the judge wrote.

Louisiana is one of several states that have passed police buffer zone laws. Similar laws in Arizona and Indiana have faced legal challenges on constitutional grounds. The Arizona law was struck down in 2022. The Indiana law has faced two separate challenges. In one case, the law was upheld. In another, it was struck down.

The  preliminary injunction will be effective while the case is pending. The plaintiffs’ ultimate goal is a permanent block on the law.

In a statement, Murrill said she had not seen the ruling yet but would “continue to defend the law.”

“We think it is a reasonable time, place and manner restriction from obstructing and interfering with working police,” Murrill said. “We are trying to protect the public. This is a reasonable law.”

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This article first appeared on Verite News New Orleans and is republished here under a Creative Commons license. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://veritenews.org/2025/01/31/injunction-police-buffer-zone-25-feet/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }

Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.

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