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Diseaseville 

Asthma, cancer, and other illnesses occur at higher-than-average rates in Hunters Point. Many residents blame the nearby Navy shipyard, one of the most contaminated ex-military bases in the nation.

Wednesday, Aug 27 2003
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"If I have funding, it takes three or four months [to investigate]," explains Vincent. "If not, it could be years."

San Francisco Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader in the House of Representatives, says she will support whatever funding the Department of Defense needs to clean up former shipyard property released to the private sector without proper screening. During the past four years, Pelosi, working with Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, has secured $225 million for cleaning and revitalizing the shipyard. "The possible presence of toxic materials is a matter of serious concern to me and to the residents of Bayview­Hunters Point," Pelosi says. "If there is contamination of these parcels, I will work in Congress to identify the appropriate federal agencies and funding to clean it up."

Residents and environmental activists familiar with the situation are appalled that the Department of Defense has not made it a priority to investigate possible pollution of a community it helped create.

ARC Ecology's Bloom notes that the military's role in the creation of Hunters Point as a residential neighborhood -- bringing African-Americans to the area to labor in the shipyard -- makes its failure to conduct a timely environmental investigation particularly egregious.

"The military created that community smack dab against the shipyard, so for any of the airborne and soil-borne pollutants, they [the residents] were on the front lines," Bloom says. "[Workers] brought home the contaminants on their shoes and in their clothes, so that their families are on the front lines too."


Essie Webb moved to Hunters Point in 1946. Her husband had already begun work as a welder at Hunters Point Shipyard by the time Webb arrived from Missouri with their 10-month-old son, Olin. Webb recalls going to the San Francisco Housing Authority office on Kiska Road and being settled into the buildings on Old Navy Road. She lived there with her family, which would grow to include five of her own and three adopted children, until 1973.

"To me, it was very nice," Webb recalls. "It was a very secure neighborhood, because you knew everyone who lived there. We all kind of looked after each other and each other's children. We would lock the door, and the key was put in the mailbox or under the doormat. It was that kind of neighborhood. You could trust each other."

In addition to raising eight children, Webb managed to participate in civic work through the public schools, the Redevelopment Agency, and the Housing Authority, where she sat on the Relocation Appeals Board hearing complaints of tenants who believed they'd been improperly evicted. At 85, she knows all about sickness in Hunters Point.

"I have grandchildren who have asthma," Webb says. "And I had asthma when I lived up on the hill."

Webb helped with the Bayview Hunters Point Health and Environmental Assessment Task Force's health survey. The results were no surprise to her. She lists off the names of relatives, friends, and neighbors who've had cancer and asthma and diabetes over the years, with little effort.

"Health problems have gotten a lot worse," Webb says. "Just about everybody I knew who lived up there had cancer or asthma. A lot of people still have cancer and asthma."

Webb would like to see environmental testing done, but she's not anticipating drastic change any time soon. The shipyard has been a part of this neighborhood for longer than she has. So has pollution, and so has disease. In fact, the shipyard's history is so intertwined with the community that what might be striking revelations about environmental contamination for another neighborhood are, in Hunters Point, unsurprising additions to a legacy of gradual poisoning.

"I know they [shipyard workers] had lots of dumping in the water and in the ground that polluted. Neighbors and friends told us about it. We just didn't think about it," Webb says. "People were more concerned about making a living."

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Lisa Davis

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