Media release - January 23, 2004
Tight security measures were in place in Washington, D.C. Tuesday, as President Bush, the U.S. Congress, Cabinet members, Supreme Court Justices, and other VIPs gathered on Capitol Hill for this year's State of the Union address. These measures apparently included a temporary prohibition on the transport of hazardous chemicals through Capitol Hill.
Tight security measures were in place in Washington, D.C.
Tuesday, as President Bush, the U.S. Congress, Cabinet members,
Supreme Court Justices, and other VIPs gathered on Capitol Hill for
this year's State of the Union address. These measures apparently
included a temporary prohibition on the transport of hazardous
chemicals through Capitol Hill.
Today Greenpeace sent a letter to President Bush, accusing him
of hypocrisy and negligence for failing to take action on the issue
of chemical security. Also today, the Wall Street Journal featured
a front-page expose of the vulnerability of hazardous chemical
shipments travelling on the nation's rail system. Greenpeace worked
closely with the Journal on its story.
"It is hypocritical of you [President Bush] to divert chemical
shipments only during 'VIP' events, while leaving so many citizens
at risk on a daily basis," said Greenpeace Executive Director John
Passacantando in the letter. "Your administration has also been
irresponsible in failing to prevent these rolling weapons of mass
destruction from passing through U.S. cities every day. Instead,
your administration has embraced the chemical industry's position,
which is opposed to prevention policies."
In its letter, Greenpeace urges the President impose a permanent
ban on hazardous chemical shipments through cities and to support
bipartisan legislation before the District of Columbia City Council
that would prohibit the transport of such shipments through
Washington, D.C. Similar letters were also sent to the U.S.
Department of Transportation, the Transportation Security Agency,
Amtrak, the Washington Area Metropolitan Transit Authority, the
Maryland Department of Transportation and Virginia Railway Express.
The D.C. City Council will hold a hearing on the bill today at 2:00
p.m. in the Wilson Building.
"Even before the terrorist attacks
of September 11, we were urging President Bush to address the
threat posed by the use and transport of toxic chemicals," said
Rick Hind, Toxics Campaign Legislative Director for Greenpeace. "An
accident or deliberate attack involving a 90-ton rail car of
chlorine could kill thousands of Americans in minutes. With safer
substitutes readily available and alternate shipping routes around
population centers, it is unconscionable that this administration
has done nothing."