ABOUT
Smart discussion of the latest science and news on toxins in your food, water, and air, and what government agencies should be doing to protect public health. Enviroblog is a project of EWG Action Fund.
FEED

An EWG podcast for environmental health news on the go.
TIPS
Did we miss something? Email Enviroblg.
BLOGROLL
STAY CONNECTED
Get our monthly eNewsletter, action alerts, & environmental tips. [Privacy policy, About EWG]
Eco-nomics, the new kind of economics
Please don't disrupt my endocrines!
FEATURED
Please don't disrupt my endocrines!
Consumers to FDA: Be there or be square
Lead: Celebrate its ban, but don't cross it off your list
7 ways to reduce your exposure to PBDEs
Ask EWG
What can I do about fluoride in my water?
What is new carpet treated with? What can I do?
Are stainless steel water bottles safe?
Is mineral-based makeup safer?
SEARCH
« Ever wonder what would happen if you tried to test soil in Jersey? | Main | Which is the real Chevron? »
No, no, our asbestos is the safe kind
Over two decades, W.R. Grace & Co. slowly killed hundreds of workers at its Libby, Mont. asbestos mine. It's one of the most notorious cases in the annals of environmental crime – but Grace may escape punishment through loopholes opened by the same justice system that's trying to convict the company.
In 1969, Peter Grace, president of the company, received an internal memo directly stating that asbestos "is definitely a health hazard," but waited 21 years to close the mine. Hundreds of former workers or their family members have died of asbestos-related disease, and 1,300 are sick today.
Yet while common sense convicts Grace the law may not. The Justice Department's attempt to try Grace and 7 of its executives fizzled last year, because controversial lower court decisions forbid the most damning evidence from being presented. Peer-reviewed government studies? Not to be considered by a jury. Grace’s never-released internal study revealing a third of its workers had abnormal chest X-rays? Not admissible. The lower court also threw out the most serious charges of "knowing endangerment." (Guess the judge forgot about the memo.) And most outrageous to Libby residents, the lower court swallowed Grace's claim that the type of asbestos fibers in the ore from the mine are not regulated under the Clean Air Act.
EWG's asbestos work is here.
« Ever wonder what would happen if you tried to test soil in Jersey? |