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Category: 31. The Lumbee River; environment and environmentalism
REGA001. Regan, Richard. A river
too good to waste. Christian Social Action 2 (March 1989):
14-15.
Publication type: Magazine article
Describes the Lumbees' opposition to the proposed
siting of a regional hazardous waste depository on the Lumber River.
Regan argues that the Deep South - particularly rural, poor areas populated
mainly by minorities - has become a target for new depositories because
minorities have little power and their communities need the economic benefits
of the depositories. The depository planned by GSX, Inc. would have
discharged over 200 different chemicals; at the time, the EPA had established
water criteria recommendations on only 62 of them.
Regan notes that throughout the GSX controversy
all components of Lumbee culture have been utilized to maximize effect.
Native American dance, music, and regalia have marked every GSX public
hearing. Local Lumbee churches have provided convenient locations
for the planning sessions. Leaflet distribution at these churches
has reached a diverse cross-section of people who would otherwise have
remained uninformed about the GSX crisis (p. 15). North
Carolina passed a law requiring a 1,000-1 dilution ratio for all surface
water in the state that serves as a municipal drinking water source.
This regulation would have required GSX to reduce its planned discharge
rate from 500,000 gallons per day to 80,000.
As of this article's publication date, hearings on the
proposed facility had been postponed indefinitely.
This article is an updated version of Regan's 1987-88
article for The egg (see The Lumbee Indians: an annotated
bibliography, item 1059).
Note: Author is Lumbee
Additional subjects: Hazardous waste disposal | GSX, Inc.
This annotation was edited on: June 24, 2002
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