Published on Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Activist energizes landfill fight
By Jennifer Calhoun
Staff writer
LAUREL HILL About 50 environmentalists from Scotland and
Richmond counties gathered at the Laurel Hill Community Center on
Tuesday night to listen to the activist who brought national
attention to Love Canal, a toxic waste dump in Niagara Falls,
N.Y.
The event was part of the eight-county tour called Dont
Dump on Us: Keep North Carolina Healthy.
The tour, which is sponsored by a coalition of local, state and
national environmental protection groups, calls on lawmakers to
keep large, commercial landfill companies out of the state and
establish a statewide solid waste policy that includes recycling
programs.
It began in Winston-Salem on Monday and ends with a rally in
Raleigh on Aug. 20.
Lois Gibbs, the former stay-at-home mom who discovered that her
Niagara Falls neighborhood was built near 20,000 tons of chemical
waste in 1978, spoke at the event.
Gibbs, who is the founder and executive director of Center for
Health, Environment & Justice in Falls Church, Va.,
encouraged attendees to keep out landfills by staying politically
active.
The only way to stop them is to get political, Gibbs
said.
Its important to take part in the democratic process.
These decisions are almost always a political decision.
The tour began two weeks after state legislators passed a law
that would make it harder and more expensive for landfill
companies to build in the state.
The bill adds a statewide disposal tax and increases the number
of hoops a waste management company has to jump through to obtain
permits.
The decision was important to Scotland County environmental
activists, who had been battling to keep out a large commercial
landfill since 2005.
Earlier that year, the countys Board of Commissioners had
been approached by a solid waste company wanting to build a 400-
to 500-acre solid waste dump that could have brought the county
about $4 million in annual revenue.
Bob Davis, co-chairman of the environmental group Scotland County
of Tomorrow, said he was pleased with the General Assemblys
decision.
However, he said, the fight is not over.
Our goal is going to be to keep folks aware, he said.
Staff writer Jennifer Calhoun can be reached at calhounj@fayobserver.com
or 486-3595.
Copyright 2007 - The Fayetteville (NC) Observer
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