EL PASO, TX – March 23, 2011 – This Saturday, former employees of       the ASARCO El Paso plant, as part of the Ex-ASARCO Workers       coalition, will identify five unlined dumpsites on the ASARCO       property that continue to contaminate the area and pose serious       risks to the public health.  Representatives from the       Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Texas Commission on       Environmental Quality (TCEQ), and a Trustee in charge of       remediating the site will be present.
     The EPA has informed the Ex-ASARCO Workers that the media will       not be allowed to participate in the site visit.  As a result, a         press briefing will be held at the ASARCO site on Saturday,         March 26 starting at 1:00 pm. 
     “When we first told the EPA about the hidden dumpsite in       November, we thought they would be on the next plane to El Paso to       investigate,” said Carlos Rodriguez, lead organizer of the       Ex-ASARCO Workers. “We were wrong. Clearly, the continued       contamination of this property is not a high priority.”
     The unlined dumpsites sit on the El Paso property where ASARCO       operated a copper smelter and handled military hazardous waste for       more than 100 years. The former workers contend that they were       instructed to dig pits on the property and bury contaminated       materials throughout their employment.  They did not place any       lining that would prevent the contaminants from leaching into       groundwater sources. Current plans for the property call for       covering up the areas where the sites are located, rather than       sampling and remediating them.
     Recently the Ex-ASARCO Workers have also raised concerns that the       future of the site includes plans to sell land where known ASARCO       dumpsites exist, including an area east of I-10, for use as       residences.
     “We cannot believe that this land is going to be sold and turned       into a residential area and a hiking trail. We know this area has       been contaminated and there is no proof that the site is clean       enough for families to live there and for children to play there,”       said Mario Navarez, a member of the Ex-ASARCO Workers.
     The Ex-ASARCO Workers are asking other former ASARCO employees       and their spouses to contact them if they have information that       would help protect the community from continued environmental       pollution. Individuals can contact Veronica Carbajal, attorney       with Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, at (915) 585-5107.
     Established in 1970, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Inc. (TRLA) is a       nonprofit organization that provides free civil legal services to       low-income and disadvantaged clients in a 68-county service area.       TRLA’s mission is to promote the dignity, self-sufficiency, safety       and stability of low-income Texas residents by providing       high-quality civil legal assistance and related educational       services.  For more information on Texas RioGrande Legal Aid, Inc.       and this story visit www.trla.org.
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