Search OCA:
Get Local!

Find Local News, Events,
and Green Businesses on
OCA's New State Pages:

OCA News Sections:
Orgánicos al DíaNoticias y campañas de la OCA en español
Intern with OCA!
SUPPORT OUR
SPONSORS

Intelligent Nutrients

Intelligent Nutrients

The Organic Harmonic Science of Health and Beauty

Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps

Dr. Bronner's
Magic Soaps

Best Selling Organic Soap in the US

Botani Organic

Botani Organic

Organic, Naturally Occurring Vitamins & Supplements

Aloha Bay

Aloha Bay

Organic Palm Wax Candles and Himalayan Salts

Working Assets

Working Assets

Making it easy to make a difference

Eden Organics

Eden Foods

Nurturing more than 350 North American organic family farms

Ode Magazine

Ode Magazine

Smile, Laugh and Cry with Ode

Frey Vineyards

Frey Vineyards

America's Oldest Organic Winery

Organic Valley

Organic Valley

Co-op of Family Farmers Providing Organic Dairy

Keep New Schools From Tainted Sites, Corzine is Urged

Environmentalists, concerned about public schools built on or near polluted property, asked Gov. Corzine today to make a $3.9 billion fund off-limits for such projects.

"Because there are no state laws that prohibit schools from being built on contaminated sites, the health and safety of schoolchildren are severely threatened," said Bill Wolfe, director of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility.

Jim Gardner, a spokesman for Corzine, said the governor signed the so-called Kiddie Kollege law in 2007 to prevent such construction, and other authority lies within the Department of Environmental Protection and the Schools Development Corporation.

"The DEP has clear and stringent clean-up standards," Gardner said. "The SDA is required to ensure that all school construction sites met DEP standards."

Last month, The Record reported how Clifton voters agreed to borrow $11 million to convert an industrial building into classrooms, yet they were unaware that the property contained arsenic, pesticides and other dangerous compounds. State officials acknowledged that local authorities are not required to run soil and other tests on such properties before they ask voters to approve acquiring them.

In Union City, authorities abandoned plans for a four-story high school in 2006, after The Record reported the property - once a key location for the Manhattan Project - was polluted with radioactive uranium and other toxics, none of them disclosed to residents.

On Monday, the Senate and Assembly approved borrowing $3.9 billion to help overhaul decrepit schools, some of them dating to the 19th century...

Full Story: http://www.northjersey.com/environment/environmentnews
/Advocates_urge_NJ_to_keep_new_schools_from_tainted_sites.html

For more information on this topic or related issues you can search the thousands of archived articles on the OCA website using keywords:

Become an OCA Member! Sign up below:

First Name
Last Name
Email
Email Preference
Phone
Street
Street 2
City
State
Zip
Country