drayer54
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The Ohio River is contaminated, people are evacuated, the economic impact is high, and the WH is quiet. Why wouldn't they cover this? It's debated whether the water is safe for a large population who are finding vinyl chloride traces in their lawn. Seems like it would make the list.What narrative? I worked as an environmental engineer for many years and my well founded understanding is that preventing environmental damage caused by companies is never a priority but purely a cost associated with doing business which gets diluted as much a possible to get the best result with the least amount of money spent. There will always be chemicals that remain and the true extent will not be know for likely decades. By that time Norfolk will have done the bare minimum, moved on and paid very little money relative to damage they inflicted and the community will have to deal with it for decades.
There isn’t much the media can do to report on because the site isn’t safe to be around and they are likely being sent to an overworked understaffed EPA office or NS legal department which won’t accurately report what’s happening because any admission of what’s there is an admission of guilt And that can’t happen.
Fitting the narrative, meaning they don't have a Republican to blame or a fossil fuel bashing agenda here.