The New Wave of Border Activism              
                              Social Movements Crossing Frontiers              
by Kent Paterson"....
                 Reality Tourists in a Border City               
                              Another highlight of the BSF was a "reality tour" of low-income Ciudad Juarez  neighborhoods and industrial sites. Halting on the banks of the Rio Grande in  the Felipe Angeles  colonia, reality tour guests peered directly across the river at the mothballed Asarco  copper smelter located in El Paso but also only a couple of miles from the  southern New Mexico city of Sunland Park. The old smelter is a rusting emblem  of how environmental issues affect communities on both sides of the border.                                 
                              Shut down in 1999, the plant is at the center of a fight between Asarco's owner,  Grupo Mexico, and environmental groups and political leaders from Mexico and  the United States over the company's plans to renew its Texas state  environmental permit and restart production. The Carlyle Group associated with  George Herbert Walker Bush is a principal investor in Grupo Mexico.                                 
                              Asarco opponents maintain that a revived smelter will degrade an already  polluted binational airshed, and they blame the transnational company for  decades of lead, arsenic and other heavy metals contamination of neighborhoods  in El Paso, Ciudad Juarez and Sunland Park  — a problem the company denies was its fault. Immediately preceding the BSF, the  Sierra Club [well, it was a Sierra Club member, but the actual news came from EPGTLO and SPEG] released a memo from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)  it obtained through the Freedom of Information Act that reported Asarco had  been illegally incinerating hazardous wastes during the 1990s. The document did  not spell out exactly what Asarco burned.                                 
                              Mariana Chew, the Sierra Club's El Paso–Ciudad Juarez field organizer, retorted during the reality tour that the  environmental organization wants answers about what was burned and why the  information was concealed from the public. "They knew it and they didn't tell  us," Chew affirmed, adding that the Sierra Club demands the permanent closure  of the Asarco site and the cleanup of its environs. 
                              
                              In a press statement, Asarco minimized the incineration revelation, contending  that the company had merely recycled materials and had cleared up the matter  with the EPA years ago. But Jacqueline Barragan, a member of the Students  Against Asarco group at the University of Texas El Paso, which is situated  behind the old plant and afflicted with "hot spots" of lead contamination, was  aghast at the news of the EPA memo. "I felt violated, and actually it wasn't a  surprise either that the city has covered this up and that these environmental  agencies that are supposedly out there to watch out for our health aided in  covering up this terrible secret," Barragan fumed....."             
see:
http://newspapertree.com/politics/1094-epa-memo-adds-fuel-to-asarco-fire
 
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