Did Louisiana Attorney General Caldwell Miss the CDC Memo That Incineration Kills Ebola?

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Louisianaย Attorney General Buddy Caldwell got a temporary restraining orderย to stop the incinerated remains of Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncanโ€™s belongings from being disposed of in Louisiana. Caldwellโ€™s headline grabbing move wasย mocked byย Mother Jones writer Tim Murphy who bestowed Louisiana with the โ€œPrize for Ebola Fearmongering.โ€ย 

โ€œThere are too many unknowns at this point, and it is absurd to transport potentially hazardous Ebola waste across state lines. We just can’t afford to take any risks when it comes to this deadly virus,โ€ Caldwell told the New Orleans Times Picayune.ย 

Science be damned when it comes to public health in Louisiana. It would seem so if you pay attention to the statement issued by the Centers for Disease Control: โ€œWe certainly know how to inactivate and destroy the Ebola virus. It’sย readily destroyed by incineration, destroyed by chemical means,โ€ Dr. Thomas Frieden, the CDC director stated during a press conference.ย 

Yet Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell got a temporary restraining order to stop the incinerated remains of Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncanโ€™s belongings from being disposed of in Louisiana. Caldwellโ€™s headline grabbing move wasย mocked by Mother Jones writer Tim Murphy who bestowed on Louisiana the โ€œPrize for Ebola Fearmongering.โ€ย ย ย 

Caldwell’s move is in contradiction to Louisiana’s standard practice of accepting toxic industrial waste from other states.

The Lake Charles hazardous waste facility โ€” where the incinerated remains were destined for disposal โ€” is no stranger to outย of state toxic material. Ten hazardous materials the waste facility previously accepted from out of state include arsenic, asbestos, cadmium, dioxin, mercury, hydrogen fluoride, bromine, lead, barium and manganese, according to a report obtained by Theย New Orleans Times ย Picayune from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxics Release Inventoryย Program.

โ€œIt is impossible that the incinerated waste will spread infectious disease,โ€ Dr. Brobson Lutz, a New Orleans specialist in infectious diseases, told DeSmogBlog.ย โ€œBut the whole idea of trucking waste from Dallas to Louisiana isย ridiculous.โ€

He questions why the biggest state in the country needs to transport waste to the poorest one.ย โ€œTexas should handle their own garbage,โ€ Lutzย said.

โ€œThe attorney general’s actions show movement in the right direction,โ€ retired Lt. General Russel Honorรฉ told DeSmogBlog. Honorรฉ, founder of the Green Army, a coalition of environmental groups fighting pollution, thinks it is good toย question any waste being accepted into Louisiana. But he adds, โ€œWe have a lot more serious things going on in Louisiana that are a danger to public health, that threaten our air and our water, than this incinerated waste that poses no threat to anyone, that I wish the attorney general would speakย to.โ€

Honore points out the attorney general hasnโ€™t weighed in on a controversial oilfield wastewaterย injection well that is set to be built in Houma, LA, despite citizensโ€™ objections. Nor has he commented on concerns raised by residents of DeSoto Parish regarding the disposal of fracking industry waste.ย And then thereโ€™s the Coast Guards’ decision to consider allowing the transport of waste from fracking sites down the Mississippi River for disposal inย Louisiana.

โ€œThe attorney general has some kind of unfounded fear or fetish about incinerated non-infectious waste,โ€ย Lutz says. โ€œLouisiana, one of the poorest states in the nation, shouldn’t be taking other states waste,โ€ย Lutz argues. โ€œBut for reasons that don’t include the possible spread of Ebola.โ€
ย 

Photo credit: Julieย Dermansky

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Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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