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HOROSCOPES

by Eric Francis
It was midnight,
and I was sitting in the kitchen of the Camano Island, Washington youth
hostel with two other travelers, when the conversation turned to environmental
issues. The woman across the table was a college professor on leave,
a psychologist, and she was making the case that while things are very
screwed up on the planet ecologically, and that while environmental
issues are really important, humanity is ultimately meaningless in the
cosmic scheme of things, and whatever we do here, the universe will
ultimately take care of itself.
Outrageous arguments like this make my blood boil. I did not say anything
about it, but my thoughts were on a place I call home more than 3,000
miles away: New Paltz, New York, and the dread that I was feeling at
having to write this very column.
This is a message for students at the State University campus in that
town, our town, and the people who are full-time residents there and
who no doubt know this story well. Its a message Ive been
repeating since 1992for approximately a decadewhen the current
class of college students was in elementary school. Im not tired
of writing about it, but exhausted from not knowing how to get through
to people who are of a very different generation and perhaps possess
very different values than I do. So I will be asking for your help.
Heres the short version of the story, for the benefit of as-yet
uninformed students. This will raise more questions than answers, but
I am working with space constraints (more information is on my web page,
address below). During winter break in late 1991, an electrical accident
occurred at SUNY New Paltz. There were, as a result, extremely toxic
fires and explosions in the Bliss, Capen, Gage and Scudder residence
halls, as well as in the Coykendall Science Building and the Parker
Theatre. Supertoxins known as PCBs and dioxins spread into the ventilation
systems, onto personal property, into walls and bathrooms and all throughout
the structures. Toxins were also found in 15 other buildings, and had
spread into topsoil, utility holes, drains, wells, and so far beneath
the Earth that if it was removed, state documents say, the foundations
of the buildings may have collapsed.
In more than 100 articles in local newspapers, Sierra magazine and the
Village Voice, as well as in radio and television reports, I documented
a cover-up of the New Paltz contamination by the State of New York,
finally digging back to 1937 into the files of the companies that manufactured
the equipment that exploded and burned. These companies, and the state,
were fully aware of how toxic PCBs and dioxins are, that the explosions
were possible, and that results of their deception and negligence could
be devastating.
These are a few of the basic facts:
Bliss, Capen, Gage and Scudder residence halls were opened to
students after the fires and explosions with contamination remaining
in the buildings. Men in moonsuits would re-enter the buildings during
vacations and proceed with the cleanup. Contaminated areas were left
behind after the cleanup was declared complete. In Bliss and Scudder,
students currently live a few feet from, upstairs from or directly next
door to contaminated pits.
Ventilation systems in Bliss, Scudder and Gage halls were contaminated
with toxins, though the Gage vents were never tested until the state
was forced to do so three years after the explosion and fire in that
building. All were contaminated. The Capen vents were never tested for
contamination. State officials had refused to test the Gage vents previously,
and were only forced to after an investigation I conducted for the Woodstock
Times proved that there was contamination in the vents three years after
the building had been reoccupied.
The heat system in Bliss Hall was a known path of contamination,
but the heat systems in Capen, Gage and Scudder halls were neither tested
nor cleaned prior to moving students back into the building.
Low-level contamination was left throughout all the
buildings involved in the disaster. Re-entry levels (sometimes wrongly
called safe levels) of PCBs and dioxins used in the New
Paltz cleanup were developed in the early 1980s. Since that time, vast
knowledge has been amassed on PCBs and dioxins which indicate that there
are no safe levels of these toxins. There are many sources of exposure
in the world, and each dose adds to what is already there in the body.
PCBs and dioxins attack the immune system, the reproductive system
and the hormones. They are known carcinogensamong the most severebut
cancer is the last thing most people have to worry about. Exposure is
known to be associated with endometriosis (a painful condition of the
female reproductive system), the development of small penises in exposed
boys, and what some scientists describe as hormone chaos
in the body.
Failures of the immune system and hormone (endocrine) systems
are responsible for thousands of lifelong diseases. Dioxin induces cancer
and other serious diseases at the infinitely low level of just five
parts-per-trillion in the food of rats.
The contamination does not just go away. It is impossible to
remove all of the contamination from a building once it has been contaminated.
As a result, each new group of residents is affected the same as if
the explosions had happened yesterday.
State officials, the faculty, the college administration and
the local media are all fully aware of this. Any assertion of safety
is false; no one can honestly say the structures are actually safe for
students to live in.
I recognize that this information places residents of Bliss, Capen,
Gage and Scudder, and students who go to classes in other buildings,
in a tight spot. There is a need for more information, but mainly, there
is a need for students to give themselves the benefit of the doubt and
simply move out of these dormitories, immediately, and without getting
trapped in the lame excuses, denials and lies of state officials.
State officials will point to thousands of tests that supposedly prove
that the buildings are safe, but these tests do not address the fact
that the re-entry levels are totally outdated, and the fact that there
are numerous untested areas in the dormitories. So the only prudent
thing is to get out. Students have given me every excuse for staying
in these dorms, from my father will be angry to you
have to die of something to I will miss my friends.
And, if you live there, you are surely free to remain. Indeed, your
Residence Director will say its prudent to stay behind, and not
listen to supposedly alarmist views such as this.
Students at the very least have a right to know the story, as do their
parents. I have passed on a great deal of information to the editors
of the Oracle student newspaper. They are now fully apprised of the
situation and I have provided full documentation.
I ask you for this help: please copy this article and give it to the
New Paltz students and faculty you know. Students, please send it to
your parents. Send them the Oracle as well. More next month.
See the special link for New Paltz students at www.PlanetWaves.net/.
Students or parents wanting more information can call me locally at
339-3339. I will return calls directly.
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