Polluter Responsible for Contamination Establishes Greenwashing Website to “Protect Santa Susana” from Being Cleaned Up

HAS BOEING ABSOLUTELY NO SHAME?

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: September 26, 2017
Contact:
Denise Duffield, 213-689-9170 office, 310-339-9676 cell, dduffield@psr-la.org
Marie Mason 805-279-0356 mariejmason@roadrunner.com
Dan Hirsch, 831-336-8003 office, or 831-332-3099 cell, dhirsch1@cruzio.com

Counter Website Launched — Protect Santa Susana from Boeing

Community organizations working for the long-promised full cleanup of the Santa Susana Field Laboratory (SSFL) have launched a new campaign to bring attention to the Boeing Company’s unscrupulous efforts to walk away from cleaning up most of its nuclear and chemical contamination at SSFL by claiming it wants to “protect” the polluted site. The groups also decry the state toxic department’s newly released draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for breaking the agency’s previous commitments to a full cleanup.

Protect Santa Susana from Boeing,” a new website launched today by cleanup advocates, reveals Boeing’s underhanded efforts to get out of cleaning up its SSFL contamination. It counters Boeing’s propaganda site “ProtectSantaSusana” which lobbies to “protect” Santa Susana from being cleaned up, not protect it from the radioactive and toxic chemical contamination for which Boeing is responsible.

“Boeing doesn’t want to protect Santa Susana,” said Denise Duffield, associate director of Physicians for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles. “Boeing wants to protect its bottom line by getting out of paying to clean up its toxic mess. Boeing’s website is an Orwellian scheme in which a polluter tries to convinces the public to lobby on its behalf, against their own interests, by not cleaning up contamination that could harm them – and all in the name of ‘protecting’ the environment which they and their predecessors destroyed. It’s scandalous.”

Boeing began this PR push in 2012, when it hired a firm to created a secret media campaign to “shift discussions from a site with a sordid past to one with potential.” In April 2017, as the Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) was nearing release of its EIR for SSFL, Boeing ramped up the effort with the release of its website which urges people to submit public comments to DTSC and elected officials to let Boeing off the hook for cleaning up the great majority of its radioactive and hazardous chemical contamination.
In 2010, DTSC committed that Boeing would have to clean up all of its contamination. And for years, Boeing promised a cleanup to at least suburban residential standards to provide assurance for the people who live nearby. But Boeing has now broken that commitment; its website argues that SSFL should only have to cleanup to recreational standards. Recreation standards are extremely weak, as they are based upon people being on the site infrequently. But people live near SSFL 24/7, and if most of the contamination is left behind, it will continue to migrate offsite and threaten their health.

Boeing’s own risk assessment reports show that the contamination is so high in some parts of the property that if people were to live on it, 96% of them would get a cancer from the contamination. Even with some dilution in migrating offsite, the risk would remain high for people living nearby. Ironically, Boeing’s own reports also indicate that the levels of contamination it wants to leave behind pose serious risks to the very wildlife it claims it wants to protect by getting out of its cleanup obligations.

“Boeing’s website only shows photos of rolling green hills and wildlife,” said Marie Mason, co-founder of Rocketdyne Cleanup Coalition. “They don’t show melted nuclear fuel rods, or burn pits, or people with cancer. Telling people that Santa Susana needs to be protected from a toxic cleanup is like telling people in a burning building that they need to be protected from firefighters. But what Santa Susana actually needs protection from is Boeing!”

Community members are also outraged that DTSC’s draft EIR breaches the commitments it had made to require a full cleanup. The EIR includes proposals that would violate the cleanup agreements it signed with DOE and NASA. Those agreements bar consideration of “leave in place” alternatives, yet DTSC now proposes to leave in place vast amounts of contamination.  And for Boeing’s part of SSFL, the EIR blocks from even being considered cleanup to the standards DTSC had long promised. Instead, it says the best that would be done would be cleanup standards nearly thirty times less protective than DTSC’s own official residential cleanup levels, and far less than the promised cleanup to agricultural/rural residential and background standards.

That leaves an EIR with a thousand pages of all the supposed negative impacts of doing a cleanup, but nothing on the negative impacts of the contamination and the health and environmental harm that would occur if the pollution weren’t cleaned up. By omitting cancer risk information and hyping potential negative impacts of the cleanup, the EIR presents a biased and inaccurate assessment of the SSFL cleanup. It is essentially a PR attack on the cleanup commitments DTSC itself had made.

“If it seems like DTSC’s EIR was written by Boeing, it’s because it large part it was. Boeing’s contractor prepared the EIR, and Boeing wrote and edited much of it,” said Mason.  “Between Boeing’s propaganda and DTSC’s broken promises, if the community doesn’t fight back, we’ll have no cleanup at all. We urge everyone to visit our website. www.protectsantasusanafromboeing.com, and submit EIR comments to DTSC telling it to keep its word and clean up all of the contamination as promised. People’s lives are at stake.”

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