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NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

At Memphis open house, Velsicol can't hide from truth

Memphis, Tenn.—Last month Velsicol Chemical Corporation held an open house at the Douglass Community Center here to try to convince area residents that continuing to operate their hazardous waste incinerator would not harm them. A compliant community organization was there to tout the "shelter in place" plan, that is, the next time there's an explosion at the plant, stay in your house, close the windows and ignore the toxic chemicals.

Velsicol tried to exclude Balinda Moore, a founding member of Concerned Citizens of Crump, who has been fighting toxic pollution caused by Velsicol and other chemical plants to her all-Black neighborhood since 1992. Moore, along with Rita Harris, environmental justice coordinator for the Sierra Club, and over 25 community residents and their supporters, crashed Velsicol's toxic whitewash to hold their own meeting and press conference. Parts of their statements are here:

Balinda Moore: On Sept. 20 Velsicol said they conducted a telephone survey to make the community aware that should there be another February 2001, when there was a huge explosion at the plant, there would be an automatic system that would phone every resident in the area to let them know what's going on.

I told them on Sept. 21 that there were at least seven people I knew that the emergency phone test didn't reach. They still claimed it was successful and didn't get back to me until January 2002.

A lot of dead people are listed on this report. Even Velsicol said only 16% were contacted. Now, should there be a disaster, and there's more than a thousand homes in this neighborhood, and you've only contacted 16%, there's a potential for a lot of deaths when the great explosion comes. If Dr. King was yet living, he could not help but be concerned about the safety and  health conditions of the people in all neighborhoods—especially the poor African-American neighborhoods of Douglass, Bungalow, and Crump.

I also want to talk about Velsicol's refusal to allow the environmentally informed to have an exhibit at this open house. I asked directly: What about me? They said, I'll think about it and we'll get back to you.

It took a week till the safety officer called and said no, it would not be good, that would be a conflict. The information I'm willing to give out is said to be in conflict. What they're giving out is a Velsicol horse and pony show tonight.

Retha Winfield: There was an explosion at Velsicol last year (see March 2001 N&L). My father has since died from leukemia and multiple myeloma. I was a nurse at Baptist Hospital for 21 years, and I did a survey of people in my neighborhood who have died from catastrophic diseases. There has been crippling arthritis, cancers, lung diseases. Out of only two streets I bet I can count 30 people who have died from those diseases.

Jennifer Warren: Since moving to this area last year I had to come under the care of an allergy and asthma specialist and have incurred numerous medical bills. In less than a year I have been diagnosed with asthma, experienced my eyes watering all through the night and then being swollen in the mornings. I suffer from recurring nosebleeds, shortness of breath and sinus infections every other month. I have been prescribed six different medications ranging from $20-$40 each and I have insurance. Minorities and low-income citizens have the inalienable right to breathe the same unpolluted air that the rich neighborhoods enjoy. 

Vera Corley: Of the five of us born to my mother and father, my brother and my sister both died in this neighborhood from cancer, heart disease and tuberculosis; so did my mother, my aunt, my uncle, and several cousins. We have a family plagued by cancer that we believe is coming from these chemical companies that surround us—especially from Velsicol. Breast cancer and lung cancer run rampant here. If we do nothing else tonight we want to make that abundantly clear and bring it to everyone's attention.

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