Home About Us News Companies Proxy Voting Contact Us
 
Issue Summary
Fact Sheet
  • Is Dioxin Dow's Next Asbestos?
Issue Analysis

Dioxin Risks and Information Not Provided to Shareholders

Links
Dioxin and International Treaties

Michigan Contamination Issues

Articles
Filer & Company Info
Filer & Company Info
 
For more information contact:
 
Michael Passoff
As You Sow Foundation
San Francisco, CA 94104
Phone: (415) 391-3212, extension 32
email:
michael@asyousow.org
 
 

Article - Michigan and Dow Drop Dioxin Pact
State Backs Away from Plan to Relax Pollution Standards

Tuesday, December 31, 2002; Page A02

The Washington Post


By Eric Pianin
Washington Post Staff Writer

Michigan Gov. John Engler's administration has abandoned efforts to significantly ease state standards for toxic dioxin pollution that would likely have allowed Dow Chemical Co. to avoid huge cleanup costs near its Midland, Mich., plant.

The proposed rule change, negotiated by the outgoing Republican governor's Department of Environmental Quality and Dow officials, had drawn fire from Gov.-elect Jennifer M. Granholm (D) and regional officials of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and was the subject of a lawsuit filed earlier this month by a coalition of environmental groups.

The proposed deal -- a consent order -- fell apart last Friday when Dow rejected language demanded by the state attorney general's office.

"While it continues to be my belief that a consent order to address the dioxin contamination in Midland is the appropriate solution, it has become impossible at this late date to prepare a final document that not only complies with the environmental statute, but also reflects the substantive comments received from all parties," said Russell Harding, director of the state's Department of Environmental Quality.

Chris Bzdok, a Traverse City attorney who represented the environmental groups, said that while he would drop the suit, "We're still going to keep a careful eye on the process and the dioxin in Midland."

Earlier this month, The Washington Post reported on the controversy, in which environmental groups charged that Engler was handing Dow a "sweetheart deal" that would essentially relieve the company of a large part of its liability for contamination of a major watershed in the Great Lakes.

Dioxin is a potent toxin that can cause cancer and disrupt the immune and reproductive systems. Experts say that elevated levels of dioxin found in Midland soil likely came from the burning of chlorinated compounds, while the dioxin in the Tittabawassee flood plain likely came from Dow waste ponds that overflowed in a 1986 flood.

The proposed rule change would have increased by more than ninefold the amount of dioxin allowed in Midland's soil. Some environmentalists said that if the rule change had prevailed, it would become the de facto standard for the state -- an assumption that state and Dow officials disputed.


© 2002 The Washington Post Company

FAIR USE NOTICE. This document contains copyrighted material whose use has
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner.
Proxyinformation.com is making this information available in our efforts to
advance understanding of social and environmental issues. We believe that
this constitutes a `fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in
section 107 of the US Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted
material for purposes of your own that go beyond `fair use', you must obtain
permission from the copyright owner.