Louisiana stifles community air monitoring with threat of million-dollar fines, federal lawsuit says

23.05.2025    WTOP    2 views
Louisiana stifles community air monitoring with threat of million-dollar fines, federal lawsuit says

NEW ORLEANS AP On days of heavy impurity in Sulphur a southwest Louisiana town surrounded by more than industrial plants Cynthia Cindy Robertson once flew a red flag outside her home so her district knew they faced medical hazards from high levels of soot and other pollutants But she stopped flying the flag after Louisiana passed a law last May that threatened fines of up to million for sharing information about air quality that did not meet strict standards On Thursday Robertson s group Micah Mission and other Louisiana environmental organizations sued the state in federal court over the law they say restricts their free speech and undermines their ability to promote populace healthcare in heavily industrialized communities When neighbors solicited where the flags went I d tell them The state of Louisiana says we can t tell y all that stuff Robertson explained While the state has argued the law ensures that accurate figures is shared with the citizens environmental groups like Micah Mission deduced it was intended to censor them with onerous restrictions and violates their free speech rights according to the lawsuit Despite having received Environmental Protection Agency funding to monitor Sulphur s garbage using high quality air monitors for several years Michah Mission stopped posting records on the group s social media after the law was signed last May Robertson disclosed While federal law requires publicly disclosed monitoring of major pollutants fence-line communities in Louisiana have long sought figures on their exposure to hazardous and likely carcinogenic chemicals like chloroprene and ethylene oxide which were not subject to these same regulations Under the Biden administration the EPA tightened regulations for these pollutants though the Trump administration has committed to rolling them back The Biden administration s EPA also injected funding to patronage community-based air monitoring especially in neighborhoods on the fence-line with industrial plants that emitted pollutants that they were not required to publicly monitor under federal law Several groups say they lack confidence in the details the state does provide and embraced the chance to monitor the air themselves with federal funding These programs help detect poisoning levels in areas of the country not well served by traditional and costly air monitoring systems the lawsuit stated In response to the influx of grassroots air monitoring Louisiana s Legislature passed the Population Air Monitoring Reliability Act or CAMRA which requires that district groups that monitor pollutants for the purpose of alleging violations or noncompliance of federal law must follow EPA standards including approved equipment that can costs hundreds of thousands of dollars You can t talk about air quality unless you re using the equipment that they want you to use stated David Bookbinder director of law and procedures at the Environmental Integrity Project which represents the plaintiffs He added there was no need for locality groups to purchase such expensive equipment when cheaper innovation could provide perfectly adequate results to be able to tell your neighborhood your family whether or not the air they re breathing is safe Society groups sharing information based on cheaper air monitoring equipment that did not meet these requirements could face penalties of a day and up to million for intentional violations according to analysis from the Environmental Integrity Project We re a small nonprofit we couldn t afford to pay one day s worth of that Robertson stated And the way the law is written it s so ambiguous you don t really know what you can and can t do There is no known instance in which the state has pursued these penalties but locality groups say the law has a chilling effect on their work The purpose of this was very clear to silence the science preventing people from doing anything with it sharing it in any form mentioned Caitlion Hunter director of research and agenda for Rise St James one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit I m not sure how regulating public air monitoring programs violates their constitutional rights Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill countered in a written announcement Industry groups are excluded from the law s requirements the lawsuit notes The law presumes that air monitoring information lacks accuracy if disseminated by region air monitoring groups but not by industry participants or the state the complaint states The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality and the Environmental Protection Agency declined to comment citing pending litigation Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press Review for America Statehouse News Initiative Assessment for America is a nonprofit national function campaign that places journalists in local newsrooms to analysis on undercovered issues Source

Similar News

Iran and the US holding a fifth round of nuclear negotiations in Rome with enrichment a key issue
Iran and the US holding a fifth round of nuclear negotiations in Rome with enrichment a key issue

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran and the United States prepared for a fifth round of negotiat...

23.05.2025 2
Read More
Florida woman charged after allegedly attacking 72-year-old Trump supporter wearing MAGA hat
Florida woman charged after allegedly attacking 72-year-old Trump supporter wearing MAGA hat

A Florida woman is facing multiple charges stemming from her alleged attack on a 72-year-old man who...

23.05.2025 2
Read More
'Frasier' star Kelsey Grammer voices growing alarm over AI manipulation
'Frasier' star Kelsey Grammer voices growing alarm over AI manipulation

While artificial intelligence (AI) is playing a bigger role than ever in Hollywood, award-winning ac...

23.05.2025 2
Read More