Environment

07.25.06

An Interview With Carl Lavin of The Philadelphia Inquirer

Regular readers of this blog know that I was quite upset by the recent spill of cyanide into Philadelphia’s water system. My initial horror at the early reports of a “fish kill” turned to anger when I found out that the spill involved cyanide. That anger turned to indignation when I learned that Merck, the pharmaceutical company responsible for the spill, did not notify government officials of it until a week after the incident.

After reading one Daily News article that minimized the issue, I compiled a list of questions that remained unanswered. Susie agreed that the investigation should not be left in the hands of an agency, and a federal administration, that had spent the last five years weakening our nation’s environmental laws. This was a local story that cried out for some old-fashioned muckraking.

As the weeks passed without further coverage, I wondered why the Inquirer didn’t seem to be actively investigating the story. Although I was tempted to write angry posts condemning the paper, I decided to do the responsible thing — to contact the paper in an effort to figure out what was going on.

Dan Rubin, an Inquirer journalist who writes eloquently about the Philadelphia blogosphere on Blinq, put me in touch with Carl Lavin, Deputy Managing Editor of the Inquirer. Carl very graciously agreed to an interview.

He was not able to answer all of the questions I asked. I can’t say I blame him; here is one of the questions he skipped:

From my perspective, the spill brings up a number of controversial, and potentially explosive, issues. It’s a local story with national implications: it involves a real threat to the public health; it relates to national politics (the Bush administration’s weakening of environmental protection laws); and it deals with issues of corporate responsibility and governmental oversight at a time when the city is hoping to encourage corporate investment in the region. And, of course, the week-long delay in Merck’s announcement of the spill brings up a host of questions that have yet to be answered fully — foremost among them the possibility that other, unreported spills may have occurred. Do you agree with that assessment? Am I overstating the scope of this incident, or the implications of the larger story?

It’s hard to blame him for passing on that one.

At any rate, I’m extremely grateful for the dialogue that Carl and I did end up having during the interview process. His responses below remind me, as a blogger, of the human realities in which journalists operate. And his willingness to take part in a dialogue affirmed my sense that bloggers and journalists can and should make better efforts to communicate with one another.

 


Matt: How does the Inquirer decide which stories are worth investigative, rather than factual or topical, reporting?

Carl Lavin: There are more than 400 journalists at the Inquirer, and we share a certain discipline and an approach to our jobs. Accuracy, fairness, curiosity, skepticism, context, story telling, relevance, impact on the lives of our readers and immediacy are all values we cherish. Each of us might have a slightly different list, but I think there is a consensus around those core values. We each bring to our jobs a wealth of experience, as journalists, but also as people — with histories, families, connections, and a full range of personal interests. Any good journalist tries to chase a story with an investigative zeal, if by investigative you mean that we want to do more than serve as stenographers to press agents and officials.

We want to avoid cynicism, but we don’t want to be passive about the flow of information we each face every day. We sift, we challenge, we triple check, we look for discrepancies, for holes. We also are aware of the people in each story — the people who are the decision makers and the people who read our paper, the ones who don’t have the time or ability to sate their own curiosity but who want to know what really happened. We can find the answers, trace how their tax money is spent, uncover the broken promises made by the officials who represent them, and point out ways that their world — our world — can be made better. We also celebrate success, capture drama and emotion, listen to the music of the soul and the poetry of the heart.

We tell stories. We help readers make sense of the tumult of the world. We tell the truth. We are limited in what we can do each day, each week. We always have ambitions that overshadow our resources. We make mistakes. We try to be efficient and to pick the paths that will lead to stories that illuminate powerful forces. We hit brick walls. We sometimes find the path is easier than we expected. Luck works both ways. We try through conversation, planning, training and experience to make it work for us as often as possible.

Do you, as an editor at the paper, see this as a story that warrants more investigation?

As an editor at this paper, I do want to know more about chemical spills in our watershed, and I want to know more about this specific spill.


 

In fact, Carl has informed me that the Inquirer will publish a new article on the spill in tomorrow’s paper. When I asked him whether that article stemmed, in any way, from our conversation, he replied that it had not — the paper’s environmental reporter had been working on it beforehand. But he added that “hearing from readers always helps us as we make decisions about news coverage.”

Let us, as readers of the paper, make sure that neither we, nor our local journalists, forget that.

 

UPDATE: Here is the story: Merck faces fines for June fish kill. It is not the investigative piece I had hoped it would be (I’m thinking Woodward and Bernstein here), but it’s a start, and I’m happy to see continuing coverage of the offiicial investigation.

06.28.06

Down in the Flood

I’ve just come back from Manayunk, where the Schuylkill River has flooded Main Street.

I was able to get past the police lines, and took a series of photographs very close to the flooding. You can find them in this flickr set (here’s a link to the slideshow, if you prefer).

Of course, my camera was still on 1600 ISO — a setting used for very low-light situations — from the shots I took at the Espers show earlier in the week. Surprisingly, they still came out okay.

For those of you who know Manayunk, the flooding has occurred, so far, towards the Shurs Lane side of the street. When I was there (around 3-4pm today), the rest of Main Street was still open for business. I did see some water creeping into the parking lot by Green Lane.

From what I’ve heard on the radio, river levels are going to peak tonight, but the waters won’t recede for a few days.

Update: A very strong thunderstorm passed through the area last night, exacerbating the situation.

Manayunk is far from the worst area to be hit — it sounds like the most horrific flooding has occurred along the Delaware River. Philly Future is collecting links to photos and stories from local bloggers; Dan Rubin puts them in context with his characteristic panache on Blinq.

06.27.06

A Few Questions Regarding the Merck Cyanide Spill

Note: please see update at bottom of post

I’m happy to see continuing coverage of the Merck cyanide spill in the Philly papers, but Sandra Shea’s article (if you can really call something that begins with the word “Eeeeew!” a legitimate act of journalism) raises more questions than it answers. Most of them center on the following paragraph:

In the case of the Merck release - which apparently happened June 13, though Merck didn’t discover it until a week later, after the fish-kill - authorities could tell something bad was happening not just because of the number of fish affected but because of the way the fish were acting: They were jumping out of the water and swimming upside down.

“Agencies Downplay Water Mess”, Philadelphia Daily News, 6/26/06 [emphasis added]

Uh, hello? Are there any reporters in the house?

Read the rest of this entry »

06.22.06

Merck’s Weapons of Mass Destruction

Un-fucking-believable. Via Philadelphia Will Do:

The Environmental Protection Agency identified a Merck and Co. Inc. research facility in suburban Philadelphia as the source of a cyanide-related discharge that killed more than 1,000 fish in the Wissahickon Creek last week.

According to officials in EPA’s mid-Atlantic region, a representative from Merck notified the EPA Tuesday that about 25 gallons of potassium thiocyanate was released into the sewer system on June 13 from a vaccine research pilot plant in West Point, Pa.

Merck spokeswoman Connie Wickersham said the discharge was not in keeping with company’s policies governing the disposal of chemicals.

Ya think?

I would write more, but I’m kind of foaming at the mouth over this.

I’m not even angry; the foam’s just a by-product of the CYANIDE IN THE LOCAL WATER!

 

Previously:
We’re All Going to Die
The Clean Party

06.21.06

The Clean Party

Last week, Richard Cranium of the All-Spin Zone published an important piece called “Talking to the Reptile.” Building upon a post by Mark Sumner, Cranium argues that if Democrats want to win, they need to stop the high-minded rationalization and start talking to “the reptile in each of us, addressing our basic human needs.”

Cranium suggests that the environment is an issue that speaks to the brain stem, at least when it is framed not in terms of loggers and owls, but in terms of safe drinking water and pollution:

Back during the past election cycle, I opined that I didn’t think Democrats were doing enough to make the Bush administration’s gutting of the clean air act an issue. One of the more critical components of this gutting was the increase (or “tradeoff” of credits) of mercury emissions in fossil fuel power generation. What a great campaign issue! Who in their right reptilian brains would support increased heavy metal contamination in their water, their food chain, their air, and their children’s bloodstream? Apparently, at least 51% of Americans. And you know why? Because neither the GOP or Democrats made an issue of it in a health framework - the lowest tier of the Maslow pyramid - the GOP by design, the Democrats by (apparently) omission. A self-preservation issue, and it was never discussed. Why?

During a week in which a cyanide leak killed a thousand fish in Philly, only to be followed by the disgorging of 55,000 gallons of raw sewage into the city’s waters, Cranium’s advice seems smarter than ever. Democrats need to make an issue — a national issue — out of this, and they need to do it now.

The rational response to this is to argue that Philadelphia is a Democratic city run by a Democratic mayor; that Pennsylvania is run by a Democratic governor; and that such issues can’t possibly be used against the Republican party.

But that’s thinking with the head, not the reptilian brain. Americans know that the Bush administration has gutted the nation’s environmental laws. Now that we’re waking up to find feces-covered, three-headed fish in our waters, Democrats need to point out that this is what happens when Republicans control the White House, the Senate, and the House, and embark upon a systematic effort to pollute the environment.

It’s everywhere you look, whether your eyes are set upon Philly, New Orleans, or Iraq. Beyond that, environmental threats to our safety strike the same chord of fear in the medulla as the threat of terrorism.

The basic message is that Republicans are making our world unsafe for our children. It’s true, it’s scary, and it’s a winner.

06.16.06

We’re All Going to Die

All over Philly this morning, people are thinking: maybe that Gore fella really is onto something!

Authorities report that a “fish kill” — shorthand for a flotilla of snaggle-toothed, three-headed fish, floating belly-up — has been found in the water that winds its way through the city.

The Health Department advises us “not to swim, fish or boat” in the Schuylkill River, or in the Wissahickon Crick (which practically flows through my backyard) because of high levels of toxicity. “Just don’t touch the water” is how one official summed it up on WHYY.

We’re assured, however, that our drinking and bathing water is safe, even though the city thought it prudent to shut off forty percent of the city’s water supply. Just a precautionary measure. Everything is fine.

Coming off my prescient prediction that Argentina would win the World Cup — which the team quickly backed up with an utterly convincing 6-0 dismantling of Serbia this morning — I’ve begun to think that I may possess Nostradamus-like qualities.

And so, here is another startling prediction: you won’t have Philly to kick around much longer, America.

Screw the new smoking ban — might as well smoke ‘em if you’ve got ‘em. The end is nigh!

Somewhere — perhaps on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. — a Dallas Cowboys fan is laughing.

 

Update: Well, they lifted the ban for the river, at least, but it remains in effect for Wissahickon Creek. They still don’t know what contaminant killed the fish, but whatever it was, it killed about 1,000 of them:

[Regional Manager of the State Fish and Boat Commission Jeff] Bridi said the fish that were alive along this stretch of the river “were displaying an avoidance type of behavior. Some were literally jumping out of the water, indicating that something was irritating them.”

Lovely.



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