Biomass Battle Casts Spotlight on Environmental Justice

Some­times what seems like defeat in the short term can actu­al­ly turn out to be vic­to­ry in the long run. One such case involves the oppo­si­tion to the con­struc­tion of Seneca Sawmill’s bio­mass pow­er incin­er­a­tor in Eugene, Ore­gon. While the facil­i­ty fired up its smoke­stacks for the first time in 2011, the effort to edu­cate neigh­bor­hood res­i­dents about the health threats of the indus­tri­al pol­luter mor­phed into a pow­er­ful envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice move­ment in the low-income com­mu­ni­ty sur­round­ing the facility.

When Eugene-based Beyond Tox­i­cs (for­mer­ly Ore­gon Tox­i­cs Alliance) set out to ques­tion the “green” cre­den­tials of Seneca Sawmill’s bio­mass pow­er plant in 2010—an 18.8 megawatt facil­i­ty adja­cent to the tim­ber corporation’s exist­ing lum­ber mill—they knew the deck was stacked against them. In a state where the tim­ber indus­try still com­mands a great (some say dis­pro­por­tion­ate) amount of polit­i­cal influ­ence, the orga­ni­za­tion wasn’t under any illu­sions that the cor­po­ra­tion would vol­un­tar­i­ly scrap its plans to prof­it off the sale of excess elec­tric­i­ty to Eugene Water and Elec­tric Board.

Sur­pris­ing­ly, despite Seneca Jones Tim­ber Com­pa­ny’s dis­mal track record of clearcut­ting hun­dreds of thou­sands of acres of Ore­gon forests—including old growth—and dous­ing them with tox­ic herbicides—including in Eugene’s drink­ing watershed—few local or state envi­ron­men­tal groups spoke out against the bio­mass incinerator.

In 2009, the Lane Coun­ty Health Advi­so­ry Com­mit­tee conclud­ed that “bio­mass plants would add to our already over­bur­dened air pol­lu­tion prob­lem in Eugene,” in a coun­ty that had been stuck with a “D” in air qual­i­ty from the Amer­i­can Lung Asso­ci­a­tion. This real­i­ty encour­aged Beyond Tox­i­cs to zero in on the air pol­lu­tion impacts of the pro­posed facil­i­ty to the local community. 

In 2010, Beyond Tox­i­cs hired Ali­son Guz­man as a com­mu­ni­ty orga­niz­er. West Eugene was already suf­fer­ing from the pol­lu­tion of a rail yard, a wood treat­ment plant, and sev­er­al oth­er sources of tox­ic con­t­a­m­i­na­tion. Most indus­tri­al facil­i­ties emit a stew of poi­sons in the form of volatile organ­ic com­pounds, sul­fur diox­ide and nitro­gen oxides, accord­ing to Guz­man, which the Amer­i­can Lung Asso­ci­a­tion has linked to can­cer, heart attacks, strokes, and birth defects. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, Lane Region­al Air Pro­tec­tion Agency (LRAPA), a state agency with the mis­sion to “pro­tect pub­lic health, com­mu­ni­ty well-being and the envi­ron­ment as a leader and advo­cate for the improve­ment and main­te­nance of air qual­i­ty,” refused to acknowl­edge West Eugene as an envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice community.

“That’s when we got togeth­er to do can­vass­ing to get an idea of health, income sta­tus and demo­graph­ics and per­spec­tives about qual­i­ty of air” in the neigh­bor­hood, said Guzman.

Guz­man and her col­leagues learned that the hybrid industrial/residential neigh­bor­hood of West Eugene con­sist­ed of many low income res­i­dents and peo­ple of col­or—an 11 to 31 per­cent minor­i­ty pop­u­la­tion, with Eugene’s aver­age minor­i­ty pop­u­la­tion at only 5 percent.

Beyond Tox­i­cs teamed up with Cen­tro Lati­no Amer­i­cano, a Eugene-based orga­ni­za­tion that advo­cates for mem­bers of the Lati­no com­mu­ni­ty, to launch a can­vass in West Eugene to build aware­ness and get the per­spec­tive of res­i­dents on the new pol­luter on the block. The can­vass revealed that the major­i­ty of West Eugene res­i­dents had not been noti­fied that the incin­er­a­tor had been per­mit­ted and was under con­struc­tion at the time. 

Of the com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers who were aware of the impend­ing facil­i­ty, some were con­cerned about expo­sure to par­tic­u­late mat­ter from wood burning—invisible par­ti­cles that are so small they can be inhaled deep into the lungs and enter the blood­stream and inter­nal organs—causing asth­ma and oth­er seri­ous health impacts. Even those Euge­neans most famil­iar with bio­mass health threats had been kept in the dark in regards to bio­mass incin­er­a­tor emis­sions of car­cino­genic acrolein, styrene, formalde­hyde and heavy met­als, none of which are report­ed in air pol­lu­tion permits.

Six­ty per­cent of the 350 res­i­dents can­vassed had already detect­ed air pol­lu­tion issues and report­ed a high rate of self-report­ed asthma—thirty per­cent. Beyond Tox­i­cs con­tact­ed neigh­bor­hood schools and cal­cu­lat­ed an asth­ma rate of over thir­teen per­cent, “sig­nif­i­cant­ly high­er than the rest of the coun­ty and nation,” said Guz­man. Accord­ing to Guz­man, the clos­est homes sit only 1,500 feet away from Seneca’s smoke­stack, the near­est ele­men­tary school is 1.5 miles away.

Using GIS to map indus­tries, schools, health clin­ics, and access to ser­vices in West Eugene, Beyond Tox­i­cs found “cor­re­la­tions to health impacts with income sta­tus with that of per­cent­age of minori­ties and where indus­tries are located.”

Guz­man finds it iron­ic how on a bad air day in Eugene, indi­vid­u­als are banned from using their wood­stoves to heat their homes, while cor­po­ra­tions like Seneca Sawmill can burn what­ev­er they want. “We’re all shar­ing the same air­shed,” reminds Guz­man. “Nobody is mea­sur­ing the cumu­la­tive impacts.”

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Info­graph­ic by Eugene Weekly

While pol­lu­tion isn’t at “the top of the list” for most peo­ple under­stand­ably focused on pay­ing bills and feed­ing their kids, Guz­man points out how “expo­sure to tox­i­cs leads to chron­ic health effects which come up lat­er in life.” And it’s the fam­i­lies that end up foot­ing the bills for these pol­lu­tion-relat­ed health problems.

In April 2012, Beyond Tox­i­cs took two bus­loads of peo­ple, includ­ing Eugene May­or Kit­ty Pier­cy, employ­ees of the Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency and Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Qual­i­ty, jour­nal­ists, stu­dents and con­cerned cit­i­zens on a guid­ed tour through West Eugene. The bus stopped at “sig­nif­i­cant indus­tri­al sources,” includ­ing the oper­at­ing Seneca Sawmill bio­mass incin­er­a­tor, with Arkin list­ing off the chem­i­cals released from each of the facilities.

“Just because an indus­try has a per­mit that doesn’t mean they’re not pol­lut­ing,” Arkin remind­ed the pas­sen­gers. 3,313,000 pounds of air toxics—96% of all air tox­i­cs in Eugene—were released in the zip code, accord­ing to Arkin, cit­ing “dis­pro­por­tion­ate impacts” on the West Eugene community.

Oth­er stops fea­tured res­i­dents talk­ing about their trou­bling expe­ri­ences with their indus­tri­al neigh­bors. Arce­nia, a West Eugene res­i­dent of ten years, told how her child has suf­fered from asth­ma since birth and how she can’t open the win­dows some days. Anoth­er local, Jose­fi­na, said “some­times we’d like to go for a walk with our fam­i­lies, but we can’t because the stink is just so bad.” When Mari­na moved to the neigh­bor­hood two years pri­or, on the very first day her thir­teen year old daugh­ter felt “nau­seous and dizzy,” which she links to local air pollution. 

While the Seneca Sawmill bio­mass facil­i­ty fired up in 2011—only to prompt­ly fail its first air pol­lu­tion test—the bio­mass resis­tance in Eugene isn’t over. 

Beyond Tox­i­cs is work­ing on a GIS sys­tem to plot loca­tions to con­duct their own test­ing of Seneca’s incin­er­a­tor emis­sions. The orga­ni­za­tion is also team­ing up with Ore­gon State Uni­ver­si­ty on a pilot project to dis­trib­ute a bracelet which can be worn by neigh­bor­hood res­i­dents to mea­sure lev­els of expo­sure to tox­ic air pol­lu­tion. The hope is that the data gleaned from these stud­ies can be used to make the case against the con­struc­tion of new bio­mass incin­er­a­tors elsewhere.

Extend­ing beyond the bio­mass issue, the com­mu­ni­ty orga­niz­ing efforts have cre­at­ed a “broad­er dis­course under the frame­work of envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice,” said Guz­man. “How can com­mu­ni­ties in the future be a part of the deci­sion mak­ing process?” Beyond Tox­i­cs con­tin­ues to work with res­i­dents to ensure that West Eugene’s indus­tri­al cor­ri­dor doesn’t keep recruit­ing the same sort of pol­lut­ing indus­tries that have been set­ting shop over the decades.

The envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice spot­light has already helped spur the cleanup of a pond where tox­ic cre­osote logs had been dumped by Pacif­ic Rail­way years before, as well as move a pro­posed hous­ing devel­op­ment to a site fur­ther from sources of local pol­lu­tion. Oth­er rip­ples include increased dis­course on the access to health care in the neigh­bor­hood and the cre­ation of com­mu­ni­ty gardens.

“We are the guinea pigs,” said Guz­man, “in terms of being small enough to make a change and big enough to make an impact,” not just in Ore­gon but the rest of the nation, and pos­si­bly the world.


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