Kennedy Calls On Polluters To Pay Price For EnvironmentalInjury

May 25, 2000
Environmental advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., told\r\nattendees at the American Industrial Hygiene Conference and\r\nExposition (AIHCE) that big business should be held accountable for\r\nenvironmental injury.

Citing that good environmental policy is identical to good economic policy, environmental advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., told attendees at the American Industrial Hygiene Conference and Exposition (AIHCE) that big business should be held accountable for environmental injury.

Kennedy was the keynote speaker at the last general session of AIHCE yesterday in Orlando, Fla.

Kennedy''s speech was centered around the fact that this nation has environmental laws to protect the health of every American and everything should be to preserve those.

"In the 70s, Americans demanded environmental rights and the government responded by creating EPA and 28 major environmental laws over the next 10 years," said Kennedy. "Other nations around the world, such as China and Bangcock, who don''t have those laws, suffer from environmental injury, which has matured into economic catastrophe. If we didn''t'' have those laws in this nation, the same thing would have happened to us."

Kennedy emphasized that federal laws are in place to allow citizens to participate in the decisions that govern their communities, and these laws should not be ignored by big business.

"On Capital Hill they would like to give laws to the states for more community control, but the real outcome will not be community control, it will be corporate control," said Kennedy. "Federal laws are made to put an end to corporate blackmail and to give us the ability to control our destiny."

Kennedy challenged corporate companies who pollute the air and risk the lives and health workers and the community to pay the cost of doing business.

"A company does not have the right to endanger the air or workers to make a profit," said Kennedy. "The people shouldering the burden of environmental injury are those who can least afford to get sick. Most toxic waste dumps end up in poor areas where the community is too poor to defend itself."

Kennedy concluded by saying that Americans have an obligation to the next generation and as a community everyone should realize how the decisions made about the environment effect others.

by Virginia Sutcliffe

About the Author

EHS Today Staff

EHS Today's editorial staff includes:

Dave Blanchard, Editor-in-Chief: During his career Dave has led the editorial management of many of Endeavor Business Media's best-known brands, including IndustryWeekEHS Today, Material Handling & LogisticsLogistics Today, Supply Chain Technology News, and Business Finance. In addition, he serves as senior content director of the annual Safety Leadership Conference. With over 30 years of B2B media experience, Dave literally wrote the book on supply chain management, Supply Chain Management Best Practices (John Wiley & Sons, 2021), which has been translated into several languages and is currently in its third edition. He is a frequent speaker and moderator at major trade shows and conferences, and has won numerous awards for writing and editing. He is a voting member of the jury of the Logistics Hall of Fame, and is a graduate of Northern Illinois University.

Adrienne Selko, Senior Editor: In addition to her roles with EHS Today and the Safety Leadership Conference, Adrienne is also a senior editor at IndustryWeek and has written about many topics, with her current focus on workforce development strategies. She is also a senior editor at Material Handling & Logistics. Previously she was in corporate communications at a medical manufacturing company as well as a large regional bank. She is the author of Do I Have to Wear Garlic Around My Neck?, which made the Cleveland Plain Dealer's best sellers list.

Nicole Stempak, Managing Editor:  Nicole Stempak is managing editor of EHS Today and conference content manager of the Safety Leadership Conference.

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