No, Plastic Production Isn’t ‘Essential.’ It’s Dangerous.

We’re part of a national coalition working to stop the fossil fuel industry from dramatically ramping up plastic production in the United States, which threatens communities, oceans and our climate. The industry’s aggressive plan to convert fracked gas into mountains of throwaway plastic packaging is a serious public-health threat that will far outlast the current COVID-19 crisis.

Our message is simple: Protect our air and water, stop making plastic.

When the petrochemical industry recently sought waivers from national stay-at-home orders designed to slow the spread of coronavirus, we were outraged. So we wrote, circulated and submitted this letter, from more than 30 organizations that are fighting dozens of proposed plastic plants around the country:

March 24, 2020

Dear President Trump and United States Governors,

On behalf of the undersigned organizations, we write to ask that you deny the petition for special treatment submitted by the American Chemistry Council on behalf of the petrochemical industry. It is simply wrong to give a blanket exception to industry from protective measures designed to keep workers and communities safe from the spread of the coronavirus.

Coronavirus poses an unprecedented challenge to public health. Everyday businesses, services, community centers, and schools across the nation are closing to safeguard public health. The federal government and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have advised Americans to avoid gatherings of larger than 10 people, to cease unnecessary travel, and to implement social distancing.

Petrochemical manufacturing and related construction projects should not be the exception to the guidelines put forward by federal, state and local governments. All sectors of our economy must play a responsible role in stopping the spread of this highly contagious coronavirus. Exceptions should be considered on an individual basis and narrowly limited to essential needs for responding to this public health crisis. Our nation must put the safety of communities, workers, and the environment at the forefront of our response.

While there are certainly specific products that are critically important in the fight against the coronavirus, to grant a request for a blanket exception for an entire industry to continue to operate massive, broad-ranging chemical and plastic manufacturing complexes would pose an unreasonable risk to public health.

Thousands of petrochemical industry workers are continuing to travel to and gather at worksites, work in teams, and share equipment and common areas. Petrochemical construction workers have reported health hazards at petrochemical construction sites, including unsanitary conditions and overcrowded buses. They cannot effectively practice social distancing. It is not responsible to continue to put workers at high risk of contracting and spreading coronavirus. Just this week, a worker from a Baton Rouge chemical plant tested positive for coronavirus, but the industry refuses to implement closures like we have seen in auto manufacturing.

In addition to the health of workers and their communities, the financial security of their families during this time is also essential. It is imperative that industry workers be made whole, including paid leave and health benefits for all affected workers and their families.

Petrochemical facilities are inherently dangerous. The pandemic has severely compromised the ability of state and federal regulators to provide sufficient oversight and enforcement of safety and environmental laws. Now, it is asking for a wide-ranging exemption to continue to operate business-as-usual without appropriate oversight and while others make needed adjustments.

We urge you to refuse this request and instead consider the immense public health and safety risks of allowing the entire petrochemical industry to operate business-as-usual operations during this pandemic. Any exception must be narrowly tailored for public health and safety purposes.

Thank you for your consideration.

Sincerely,

Miyoko Sakashita

Oceans Program Director

Center for Biological Diversity

Veronica Coptis

Executive Director

Center for Coalfield Justice

Logan Welde

Director of Legislative Affairs

Clean Air Council

Lynn Thorp

National Campaigns Director

Clean Water Action, Clean Water Fund

Gail Murray

Spokesperson

Communities First Sewickley Valley

Bev Reev

Organizer

Concerned Ohio River Residents

Leann Leiter

Ohio & Pennsylvania Field Advocate

Earthworks

Doug Couchon

Co-founder

Elmirans and Friends Against Fracking, People for a Healthy Environment

Dr. Ann Blake

Environmental & Public Health Consulting

Alison Grass

Research Director

Food & Water Action

Brook Lenker

Executive Director

FracTracker Alliance

Leatra Harper

Managing Director

FreshWater Accountability Project

Charlie Cray

Political and Business Strategist

Greenpeace

Claire Barnett

Executive Director

Healthy Schools Network

Isabella Zizi

Member

Idle No More SF Bay

Mike Stout

President

Izaak Walton League of America — Allegheny County Chapter

Amy Ziff

Executive Director

MADE SAFE & Nontoxic Certified

Jim Vallette

President

Material Research L3C

Ashley Funk

Deputy Director

Mountain Watershed Association

Juan Parras

Director

Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services (T.e.j.a.s.)

Vivian Stockman

Executive Director

Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (OVEC)

Stephanie Ulmer

PCAT

Jacquelyn Bonomo

President

PennFuture

Tricia Cortez

Executive Director

Rio Grande International Study Center

Alison Steele

Executive Director

Southwest Pennsylvania Environmental Health Project

Christopher Chin

Executive Director

The Center for Oceanic Awareness, Research, and Education (COARE)

Kelsey McNaul

Regional Organizer

The Climate Reality Project

Jackie Nunez

Founder

The Last Plastic Straw

Sam Pearse

Lead Campaigner

The Story of Stuff Project

Chris DiGiulio

Co-founder

Upper Uwchlan Residents for Safety

Heather Trim

Executive Director

Zero Waste Washington