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Public Employee Press
Political Action 2008 City
council bill could halt air testing A piece of legislation
called for by President Bushs Homeland Security Dept. and the city Police
Dept. has set off a furor.
City Council Intro. 650 would require a license
from the Police Dept. for anyone to have or use a detector that measures chemical,
biological or radioactive agents. The original concept may have been to reduce
false alarms and spare residents unwarranted anxiety about terrorist attacks,
but safety and health experts view the actual consequences as potentially damaging.
If
such a bill had been in effect in 2001, it could have been used to ban the independent
monitoring that revealed dangerous levels of toxic airborne pollutants in lower
Manhattan and showed that government agencies and officials such as federal environmental
chief Christie Whitman and former Mayor Rudy Giuliani were lying.
Under
this bill, the environmental experts who tested the air after 9/11 would
have been a bunch of criminals, said Dave Newman, an industrial hygienist
for the New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health.
Chilling
effect A broad coalition formed to stop the legislation wrote
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg on March 13 saying that Intro. 650 would have a
chilling effect on citizens lawful and even commendable activity.
The coalition includes DC 37 and 44 environmental, labor, academic, public health,
faith-based and civil liberties organizations.
The bills definition
of biological, chemical and radioactivity detectors is so broad that it would
cover all types of environmental sensors, as well as research and laboratory analyses
by teachers, students, unions and environmental groups, says the coalition.
Intro.
650 could hinder the flow of information regarding serious airborne pollutants
and other environmental health conditions faced by city residents and workers
more than it would aid in the response to a potential future terrorist attack.
The
coalition charged that Intro. 650 vests in the police commissioner broad,
unilateral authority to regulate complex scientific matters. The group has
been convincing original sponsors to reject the bill, but proposes to work with
the City Council to develop narrower alternative legislation to serve the
legitimate purposes asserted by the NYPD. | |