East Chicago Residents ‘Worried About Everything’ Despite Progress – WFYI

Posted: May 6, 2017 at 3:30 am

Keesha Daniels advocates for Calumet residents with state and national NAACP leaders the day EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt visted East Chicago. Pruitt was invited to the NAACP meeting, but declined to attend.

Keesha Daniels just moved from one lead contaminated neighborhood to another.

Both her new house and her old West Calumet Housing Complex apartment sit within East Chicagos USS Lead Superfund site. The city is tearing down her old home because of extremely high levels of lead in the soil. So she had to move.

Daniels is still unpacking. Most rooms have a pile of boxes stacked tidily in a corner. Two heavy dressers sit in one otherwise empty room her sons are coming later to move them. As Daniels takes me on a tour of her new house, she offers me some water.

Its bottled water, she says with a laugh. A water filter hangs pointedly from her kitchen faucet.

Despite progress at the state and federal levels, many East Chicago residents, such as Daniels, are frustrated with the public officials in charge of cleaning up the lead contaminated neighborhood.

The Environmental Protection Agency told Daniels and her sons that her new front yard is lead free. The government offered to move the family off the superfund site, to Chicago, but Daniels didnt like that option.

Im still worried about everything; were still doing the bottled water a lot, Daniels says. I just feel safer in East Chicago. I was born and raised here, so Ive been here 40 plus years, so Im kind of nervous about going some place else.

Like Daniels, most West Calumet residents have moved now. Thats Zone 1 of the Superfund, it tested for the highest lead levels. But she also says residents in the other two zones have a lot left to fight for, even though they arent being relocated.

So now, the struggle still continues, because I still have family in [Zone] 2 and I live in [Zone] 3, says Daniels. Its not going to stop just because I moved out of Zone 1.

Daniels really hasnt stopped. In the past month shes had her bones tested for lead (she doesnt know results yet), she traveled to Washington, D.C. to advocate for lead-free housing, and she met with state leaders and EPA Chief Scott Pruitt.

Hours before that meeting, Tyra Taylor stands on her porch, watching a group of activists march for clean air and water in East Chicago.

Hours before that meeting, Tyra Taylor stands on her porch, watching a group of activists march for clean air and water in East Chicago.

Taylors yard, running down the side of her house, laid in disarray that day. Bushes and mounds of dirt surround the excavator, which digs out contaminated soil and replaces it with clean soil.

So todays my day to get dug up, Taylor says. See they even brought a whole machine in here, I didnt even notice that.

A letter sent to her by the EPA explains that sampling results from her yard showed lead or arsenic concentrations above the limit the federal government considers safe.

Taylor says shes grateful her yard is being remediated, but shes far from satisfied. She says more crews are needed to do the work faster.

While residents who met with Pruitt that day say officials didnt relay specific plans for the future, it does sound like Taylors wish might come true.

Speaking with reporters after Pruitts press conference Pruitt only gave a brief statement; no questions Regional EPA Administrator Robert Kaplan said they would be doing more work, faster.

So the most important aspect is getting out into the field earlier, and thats what we did, and committing to more residents being done, and thats what we did as well, says Kaplan.

Officials are continuing to make progress:

On the other hand, an investigationby the Northwest Indiana Times found evidence that theres lead paint dust surrounding homes reserved for people moving out of lead contaminated Zone 1.

Both Keesha Daniels and Tyra Taylor say the Calumet neighborhood used to be a tight-knit community. But they feel isolated now, like their lives have been turned upside down. Daniels says $1,000 and a Section 8 voucher arent enough to replace family.

And Taylor says she continues to be frustrated because residents have to deal with lead contamination every hour of every day, and theyve been doing it for decades.

You know, theyre having meetings and people coming in from out of town, senators, you know, whatever thats fine, Taylor says. But then you go on, you have to go back to the rest of whats on your desk. You know, we are just in a pile. We are a pile of paperwork.

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East Chicago Residents 'Worried About Everything' Despite Progress - WFYI

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