Earth Day is Friday, April 22. What will you do or have done for the earth?
In 1990, the Navy sent me to a five-day course titled "Environmental Law for Non-Lawyers." The Admiral I worked for had over 30 sites under him and we had environmental issues at about ten of them. I had already taken Environmental Chemistry courses on my own.
I was assigned to accompany the EPA when they made their periodic visits so see what progress had been made in cleaning up some of these messes. My role as a senior Naval Officer was to ensure that the sites cooperated with the EPA.
We had LUST (Leaking underground storage tanks), oil releases/overflows into wetlands from a few of our larger power plants, and places where toxic chemicals had simply been dumped on the ground instead of being properly disposed of. The level of denial at some of these sites was unbelievable:
- A clear trail of oil/fuel leakage from one of our larger power plants directly into an adjacent wetland was adamantly denied despite the clear evidence. Furthermore, that same site had done it again because the EPA had documented the first time. (I had many nasty conversations at this site and was despised by the time I left, and yes heads did roll, but not as many as should have.)
- One site was too lazy to properly dispose of toxic chemicals and they just dumped them on the ground fairly close to an on-base elementary school. The EPA found it in an earlier visit and forced the site to build a chain link fence around the area. On our visit, the EPA thought that they would only have to test for the breakdown of one toxic chemical, but what they found was that the site, still being lazy, concluded that since the site was already polluted, they would just dump different toxic chemicals there on top of what already existed. So now, the EPA had to check for multiple toxic wastes in addition to the original one. (More very, very nasty conversations, heads rolled again. I was getting to be a very unpopular person on the Admiral's staff.)
- One site had polluted toxic chemicals running into a small stream that ran across the corner of one of our bases from a poorly designed and managed civilian dump. The EPA people went bonkers over this one and I witnessed an astonishing level of denial.
My hopes that we would wise up and learn have been smashed again and again. Greed and laziness are major factors.
Here it is over thirty years, and I am sitting here getting very angry again just thinking about our stupidity and arrogance.