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Cancer-causing chrome 6 detected in Portland steel foundrie's air pollution
In the movie “Erin Brockovich,” a UCLA chemistry professor tells Julia Roberts, playing the title role, that there are three kinds of chromium. One form is necessary for good health, a second form, trivalent chromium, is relatively benign, and a third form, hexavalent chromium, also known as chromium 6, is a dangerous carcinogen.
In real life, as in the 2000 movie, Brockovich, a legal researcher, discovered that Hinkley, Calif., a small town near Barstow, in the Mojave desert, had a hexavalent chromium problem. She found that it was being used as an anti-corrosive agent by a local utility, Pacific Gas & Electric. Hundreds of residents filed suit after discovering that it had contaminated drinking water and was causing cancers and other health problems.
Thanks to Brockovich, they won a $333 million court settlement from PG&E, and brought a halt to the pollution.
Hexavalent chromium is used in the production of stainless steel, one of ESCO’s products.
Like Hinkley Calif., Northwest Portland also has an hexavalent chromium problem, although as of yet there is no evidence it is present in large enough concentrations to cause cancers or other health problems.
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Examining ESCO's 'no harm' claims'
Carter Webb, manager of safety and environment for ESCO Inc., the corporation that owns two steel foundries at the northern edge of the Northwest neighborhood, acknowledges that his company’s air emissions have created some enemies as well as some alleged misery among its neighbors.
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Drill, Baby, Drill
All the easy places on Earth to find oil have been explored. The most fragile environments have been left for last.
There's no place more challenging for oil exploration than the Arctic Ocean's continental shelf. Companies have drilled virtually every other likely deposit on Earth, but the expense, frigid weather and the lack of technology have kept them away.
Until now.
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Reinventing what it means to be Inuit: Indigenous peoples adapt to climate change
By Paul Koberstien

Inuit leader Jose A. Kusugak said that to address the impacts of climate change, it makes sense to consult with those most affected: the indigenous peoples who live in the Arctic.
“Our millennia-old traditions are already being altered because of the warming Arctic, and we face the possibility of having to completely reinvent what it means to be Inuit. This is the prospect that we fear,” he was quoted as saying in an 2005 Inuit publication, Unikkaaqatigiit:Putting the Human Face on Climate Change.
About four million people live in the Arctic. Indigenous peoples include the Inupiat of Alaska, the Inuit of Canada, Greenland and Russia; the Saami of Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia; the Athabascan of Alaska and Canada; the Aleut of Alaska and Russia; and numerous other groups as shown on the map below.
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Arctic Meltdown
By Paul Koberstien
Dramatic climate changes in the Arctic are sending an unmistakable signal that global warming is advancing much more rapidly on Earth than scientists thought. Many now say that the time to deal with the crisis is rapidly running short.
The Arctic, which plays a vital role in keeping the Earth cool, is having trouble keeping its own cool. Scientists have assembled a mountain of incontrovertible evidence that warming is fundamentally, rapidly changing the Arctic, none clearer than the retreat of its late-summer sea ice, triggered by air temperatures that have been rising at twice the rate as the rest of the planet. And the retreat is accelerating.
Until recently, climate models published by the U.N. International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have predicted a complete retreat of the late- summer sea ice by the end of this century. But the IPCC’s models may need drastic revision, as a number of scientists now think the ice could disappear as soon as the next decade. Species that depend on the ice for their subsistence and survival — including humans, polar bears, walruses and ice seals — are facing significant disruptions in their lives.
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The owl’s stunning reprieve
Citizens stand up to Bush in defense of ancient forests
By Paul Koberstein
History is certain to judge the Bush years as a disaster for the nation's and the planet's environment. But as his second term winds down, it's worth noting that ancient forests in the Pacific Northwest are still standing, despite the administration's vigorous efforts to help timber companies cut them down, and thanks to countless citizens who stood in the way.
The administration's approach to nature has been driven by two myths: what's good for industry is good for the environment, and the extent of our resources is without limit. But there is much work to do. For the last eight years, Bush has been at war with the planet's complex and fragile life-sustaining systems in his rush to aid industry.
Aside from a last-gasp attempt to gut the house on his way out, Bush has lost his war on the environment. Witness the fact that the ancient forests are still standing, despite almost eight years of concerted efforts to liquidate them. A broad campaign to suppress science and intimidate scientists has been exposed, and administration officials have been forced to reverse several unlawful decisions. Many more decisions are under investigation by Congress, the courts and independent government watchdogs. The clock will soon run out, leaving behind a mangled mess that the next president should be able to fix ..
However, if the next president wants to avoid lasting damage, he must get on this right way, and he must do more than just dispel myths. He must also weed out Bush’s true believers from the bureaucracy, and identify language now embedded in rules and regulations that would undermine conservation and delete it.
The next president must also contemplate how to restore wildlife and ecosystems damaged by Bush's assault and neglect, and avoid the catastrophic climate disruptions that he failed to address.
Bush was stopped by combatants whom the administration considered to be enemies. Citizens, communities, conservationists and scientists all helped to deliver a final, crushing blow.
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The fallen lieutenant
Disgraced ex-Interior official Julie MacDonald ran broad
scheme to suppress science
In Bush's war against the environment, Julie MacDonald, a deputy assistant Interior secretary, cast herself as the loyal lieutenant who led his fierce campaign to blunt efforts to recover imperiled species in favor of more grazing, timber production and fossil fuel extraction across the country.
The manipulation and suppression of science “is rampant” throughout the process of listing and recovering endangered species, said Dr. Francesca T. Grifo, senior scientist with the Union of Concerned Scientists, at a congressional hearing in May 2008.
Bush allowed political appointees “to interfere with individual species decisions and propagate policies that reduce the role of science in endangered species decision making,” Grifo said.
MacDonald worked at Interior from 2002 to 2007, and during that time some 200 listing, delisting and critical habitat rules came across her desk. As a deputy assistant secretary at Interior, she oversaw fish, wildlife and parks, focusing on implementing Endangered Species Act, which requires agencies to base decisions on the “best available science.” As we’ll see, MacDonald often employed the “worst available politics” as her standard.
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Truth and other casualties from the war on science
Where political meddling is routine,
and scientific integrity is discouraged,
how can you tell what to believe?
Julie MacDonald's shocking behavior creates a credibility problem for federal environmental agencies, and raises significant questions for the public. Who would believe anything that's been tainted with MacDonald's fingerprints? Who else has poisoned the science with politics? How can you tell what to believe?
No one understands this credibility gap better than the scientists who work for the government. The Bush administration seems, however, to be in denial. When asked about overwhelmingly negative comments in a recent survey scientists who for the EPA, agency spokesman Jonathan Shradar attributed some of the discontent to the “passion” scientists have toward their work, CNN reported. He dismissed the scientists' concern about the EPA's lack of scientific integrity.
More than half of 1,586 EPA staff scientists who responded online to a 44-question online survey reported they had experienced incidents of political interference in their work in the last five years, according to a Union of Concerned Scientists survey released in April 2008.
In the last three years, the Union of Concerned Scientists has surveyed three environmental agencies about questions of political inference and scientific integrity, including the EPA, the Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service (part of the Department of Commerce) were the others. It has also surveyed federal climate scientists who work for a variety of agencies, including NOAA and NASA. Two other non-profit groups participated in the survey, the Government Accountability Project and Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.
By law, the work of all these agencies is supposed to be fueled by science, but under Bush, politicians have interfered to an alarming degree, according to detailed accounts provided to Congress.
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Fixing Bush’s Mangled Mess
100 things President Obama can do right away
By Paul Koberstein
It is said there are no permanent victories in the war to save the planet, only temporary reprieves and permanent losses.
Put it this way: You can clearcut the forest only once. Species that go extinct don’t come back.
That is why conservation scientists warn us to err on the side of caution whenever we make a decision with significant impacts, and to embrace what they call the “precautionary principle.”
The precautionary principle means, according to the internationally recognized “Wingspread Statement on the Precautionary Principle:”
“When an activity raises threats of harm to human health or the environment, precautionary measures should be taken even if some cause and effect relationships are not fully established scientifically.
“The process of applying the Precautionary Principle must be open, informed and democratic and must include potentially affected parties.”
The Bush administration did the opposite, playing a game of Russian roulette with nature. The administration hid or changed facts, acted in closed, secretive ways, and included only corporate interests in its decision-making process.
Here are 100 things President Obama can do right now (some of which will require cooperation from Congress):
1) Obama should appoint, as a member of his Cabinet, a chief science advisor who, among other things, must ensure the scientific integrity of his administration as well as iunderstand and implement the Precautionary Principle.
2) Second, he should reverse every environmental decision made under Bush that violates this principle. A review of every significant environmental action taken during the last eight years is in order.
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