Opponents to South LA oil drilling say AllenCo upgrades won’t be enough



Nalleli Cobo walks in her neighborhood near AllenCo | Esperanza Community Housing

Nalleli Cobo, part of the People Not Pozos campaign, walks in her neighborhood near AllenCo in November 2013. Click to view more photos. | Esperanza Community Housing

For months South L.A. community members complained of foul odors coming from their neighbor: AllenCo Energy Inc., an urban oil drilling site. After more than 200 complaints and a four-month investigation by the Environmental Protection Agency, the company agreed to spend $700,000 to improve their site. Yet the South L.A. community that has been opposing AllenCo’s operations says those upgrades still won’t mitigate the health consequences.

“They really shouldn’t be there at all,” said Ashley Kissinger, project manager for Esperanza Community Housing, which offers affordable housing properties as little as 25-feet away from AllenCo.

Last year Esperanza launched a campaign called People Not Pozos (People Not Oil Wells) to draw attention to community health concerns, including complaints of asthma, headaches and nosebleeds. Eventually the campaign helped bring about a temporary shut-down of AllenCo. [Read more…]

Industrial pollutions takes its toll on southeast Los Angeles



Listen to an audio story by Annenberg Radio News

Residents of southeast Los Angeles cities like Maywood and Vernon live along one of the country’s busiest shipping and manufacturing corridors. The area is also highly polluted.
California Watch reporter Janet Wilson found one Maywood family who agreed to take medical tests to find out how that affected their health. She spoke to us about her reporting.

Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors bans single-use plastic bags



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The most common complaints about plastic bags were that they destroyed the environment and were wholly unnecessary.

“There’s a very viable alternative, and that’s cloth or canvas bags, and there’s no reason for us to have to decide between paper or plastic,” said Gail Wilke, a San Fernando resident and ban supporter.

The ban will take about six months to go into effect. A similar ban was proposed at the state level earlier this year, but it was ultimately defeated. The Los Angeles County ordinance does not include the city of Los Angeles, but County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky says it will set the standard for other local cities to follow suit.

“We warned at the time that if the state doesn’t pass a uniform ban, there will be local bans popping up all over the place,” Yaroslavsky said. “And this is the first one, at least the first one of any major county.”

Yaraslovsky cites Santa Monica and Culver City as two other cities gearing up to implement their own bans. The average American uses an average of 500 bags per year. That is more than 19 billion bags total being used countrywide.

While some think lugging a reusable bag to the market is inconvenient, environmental groups say it is worth the extra effort. Heal the Bay blames plastic bags for polluting the ocean and destroying sea life. Mark Gold, the executive director of Heal the Bay, says that bags do not just end up on the beach.

“When you look at the LA River, it looks like we have plastic bag trees,” Gold said. “When you look at the ocean after a rain, and it looks like a trash dump, those days have to stop.”

Opponents of the ban say it will cause lay-offs in the plastics industry and narrow the job market at a time of soaring unemployment rates. Supporters say it will not eliminate jobs, but it will create a new market of green, eco-friendly jobs.

China, India and Bangladesh have all banned the use of single-use bags. American supporters of the plastic bag ban are hoping California will be next.