logo Standing Up To Powerful Interests

Cleaning Up Hazardous Waste

 

What's New

One in four Americans live within four miles of a Superfund toxic waste site. The major polluters that create these toxic sites are not only jeopardizing the health of millions, they are also sticking American taxpayers with the cleanup bill. As a result, Americans are paying for toxic waste sites twice, with our health and our tax dollars. Rep. Hinchey (D-NY) and Sen. Casey (D-PA) recently introduced legislation that would make polluters pay to clean up this toxic waste. 

 

How You Can Help

Tell Congress To Support Polluter Pays Law

Ask your representative to help protect public health and make polluters, not taxpayers, pay to clean up Superfund toxic waste sites.



Overview

Toxic substances contaminate the land, air, surface waters and groundwater in communities across the country. In 1987, Congress created the Superfund to clean the nation’s worst toxic sites.

Insufficient funding jeopardizes existing Superfund cleanups and hinders the identification and assessment of new sites. In 1995, the Superfund “polluter pays” fees that once compelled large-scale polluters to provide money for Superfund cleanups expired. Lacking ample cleanup money, the EPA must prolong existing site cleanups and postpone cleanups at new sites.

In 2005, Hurricane Katrina damaged chemical facilities and churned up toxic waste at Superfund sites across the Gulf region. Unfortunately, the funding shortfalls that plague the Superfund program may hinder its ability to respond to the toxic pollution left in the hurricane's wake.

TexPIRG is calling on Congress to restore the “polluter pays” fees and provide full funding for the Superfund Program.


Industrial facilities like this one can leave a legacy of toxic pollution. TexPIRG is working to ensure that polluters pay to clean up this toxic waste. 

 

SEARCH THIS SITE