Sometimes on vacation learning opportunities fall in your lap and you have to just go with it. This was the case on our college tour/Niagara Falls trip. Every time I said Niagara Falls, my 17-year-old would say “and the Love Canal.”
Eventually the question had to be asked
. . . “What is the Love canal?”
“It’s the site of one of the worst
environmental disasters in America”, I was informed.
“Why do we have to go there?” I asked.
Trash and chemical dump at the Love Canal (now just a grassy area) |
After a quick run to Walmart and Sam’s
Club, I was informed that we were only a short distance from the site. Not sure
what we were going to find, I drove us to a neighborhood in Niagara Falls, New
York. It looked like any suburban neighborhood with small houses, a senior
center and a senior housing facility all in use. Across the street was a fenced
off area, acres of green grass; but what still is just below the surface is
terrifying to think about even 40 years after the problems began.
On the far side of the fence was the
ghost town of what was supposed to be a model community, but it turned into a
nightmare for over 220 families. We drove the eerily quiet streets with the
sidewalks, driveways and street lights, but no homes or children were on these
streets. As we drove my husband read to us about the history of the area.
The Love Canal was named after William
T. Love, who bought the land to build his model community where water from the
upper Niagara River would flow through his canal into the lower Niagara River to
generate power. However, Love ran out of money in 1907, when investors had to
pull out due to an economic downturn years before.
In the 1920s, it became a dumpsite for
industrial waste from the booming city of Niagara Falls. In the 1940s, Hooker
Chemical Company began using the site as a place to dispose of its chemical
waste until the early 1950s. Hooker Chemical bought the canal and surrounding
area in 1947. After lining the canal with clay, it disposed a total of 21,800
tons of chemicals. In 1948, Hooker Chemical became sole owner of the land.
In the fifties, it became obvious that
Niagara needed more land for the population explosion that was taking place.
When Hooker Chemical decided not to use the site anymore, it sealed the
chemicals under clay and sold the property to the city for $1 with the clause
that no one could sue them because of the chemicals stored underground.
The site was used for two elementary
schools. For me, the kicker was that the children that attended those schools
were my age. If I had lived in Niagara Falls, I would have attended one of
those schools. I might be dealing with health issues to this day and the
chemicals could have affected my children.
The land adjacent to the schools was
sold to developers who wanted to use the land to put in a neighborhood. Because
the land being developed was not part of the original transaction with Hooker
Chemical it wasn’t disclosed to the families, who were purchasing the homes, that
the site was once a 16-acre chemical disposal. When they were building the houses
the clay seal was breached repeatedly, according to reports. The chemicals
really began leaking after a particularly heavy snow fall and snow melt,
raising the water table.
We drove the streets where the
neighborhood once stood. The houses were demolished and the over 400 families
were relocated. Over 200 homes closest to the site were taken down. The
families were given money for their homes to the tune of $15 million from state
and federal funds. This was the first emergency money ever paid for something
other than a natural disaster. However, the damage was more than chemical-filled
water in basements. It was in the emotional scars and birth defects that plagued
that generation and the next. The area is still being monitored today and
families that moved back into the area are concerned that their health issues
are related to the chemicals.
It wasn’t until 1977, that an official
investigation was conducted. Reporters uncovered the story and pushed until
something was done for the families in the area. There are so many more details
to this story, so many that we might never hear about, so many that remain
covered up. I am horrified that no one stood up and said, “Hey, this might be a
bad idea.” Or “Maybe we should listen to those families over on 100th
Street.”
The rest of our trip was spent doing
research and talking about what happened in this corner of New York. How could
something like that happen? Could something like that happen in Windham? We
never know what the impact of our decisions could be later in life.
We never would have known that a place
like the Love Canal existed, if it wasn’t for my son hearing about it on a
podcast. Someone decided that it was a story that shouldn’t be buried. Things
that are swept under the rug are destined to be repeated. We need to learn from
what has happened in the past, so it won’t happen again.
You may not be a “tree hugger” or care
about the environment, but we all care about what could happen if we are not
responsible with our actions. Every time I think about these families and what
they must have gone through, I cringe. The Love Canal isn’t some sweet,
romantic ride at an amusement park. It is a reminder that our actions have lasting
consequence. I had to drive to upstate New York and be forced by my teenager to
learn what happened there. Maybe it’s time to listen.
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