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NEWS
May 15 2002
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The PRIVATE Sector Toxic
waste okay for kids, says Welsh Assembly In Llandudno, Conwy, a secondary school, Ysgol John Bright, is to be moved from its current site, which the council is selling to Walmart/Asda for a new supermarket, to the site of an old gasworks, which is known to be contaminated with heavy metals, waste oil and explosive levels of methane. Meanwhile in Newport, Durham Road Infant and Junior School, which has outgrown its current premises, is being transferred to the site of a former municipal waste dump, which locals remember was previously used by Monsanto for dumping drums of well, nobody is quite sure what, but apparently when soil samples were taken from the site there were some small explosions. Monsanto cannot actually be held responsible for cleaning up the site as there is no official record of their dumping. An alternative, relatively uncontaminated site had been proposed for the new school, but after soil testing Newport council decided to sell the clean site to housing developers and put the school and accompanying nursery on the toxic waste dump. Both new schools are to be built under PFI. Parents and local people opposed to the plans have met with a complete lack of sympathy from local councils, who insist the sites are safe without presenting any hard evidence or funding any serious investigation. (see previous news updates on this subject at http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/news/toxic_waste_1.html and http://www.corporatewatch.org.uk/news/private_sector_toxic.html). The Assembly
motion, introduced by Gareth Jones of Plaid Cymru, would have required
councils to consult health authorities before building schools on sites
which had been judged too contaminated for housing a simple and
sensible measure, one would have thought, especially since no formal
consideration of the health consequences of building on these contaminated
sites has been carried out in either Conwy or Newport. However, the
records of the debate in the Welsh Assembly show otherwise. Campaigners
have suggested an answer as statutory consultees, health authorities
would be entitled to see all relevant information, such as soil analyses
of the sites, which is currently classed as commercially confidential.
Lesley McCarthy, who is working on the campaign against re-building
the two schools on the proposed sites, explained why this was such a
problem, We have been saying how contaminated the sites almost
certainly are but have not had access to full soil analysis because
it impacts on remediation strategy, therefore on costs, therefore it
is Commercially Confidential or so said the councils.
So, even such limited investigation as has been done cannot be subjected
to independent analysis because it affects how much money corporations
might have to spend. What seems to be the priority here money
or childrens health? Private Sector Links World Bank support for private healthcare questioned Bretton Woods Project http://www.brettonwoodsproject.org/topic/privatesector/p2807privhealth.html CBI
boss accused over hospital contracts - Independent http://www.independent.co.uk/story.jsp?story=287311
'Private
firms could get police role' BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk_politics/newsid_1949000/1949827.stm Privatised
halls of residence are pricing poor students out of accommodation
Unison http://www.unison.org.uk/asppresspack/pressrelease_view.asp?id=73
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