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Tim Itiggins, 1796 Willamette Street, said his petroleum business was currently regulated by the EPA, <br />DEQ, the State Fire Marshal, and the Department of Agriculture. He said operators had to be licensed and <br />certified by the State prior to being able to operate underground storage tanks. He said the new <br />regulations were redundant. He stated that the proposed ordinance would have no effect on reducing <br />emissions in the petroleum industry, noting that implementing Stage 1 and Stage 2 recovery efforts were <br />the only ways to reduce emissions. Mr. Higgins said he recently spent about $450,000 upgrading his <br />company's facility, with no financial assistance from the oil companies, and said there was no money left. <br />When he was growing up, there were over 200 gas stations in Eugene and Springfield, and today there <br />were 28 to 30. Within five years, he said only 15 or 20 stations operated by the big conglomerates would <br />remain, and petroleum distribution in Eugene would be controlled by four or five people. He asserted that <br />there was nothing the City could do that would compare to what the DEQ would put his company through <br />during an upcoming six-hour inspection. He said the council was in over its head, and did not have a clue <br />about the environmental regulations and equipment at a simple site. His 86-year-old father had breathed <br />gasoline fumes his entire life and had no side effects, and his children had spent considerable time at the <br />gas station with no ill effects. He did not know of anyone personally who had a side effect from <br />petroleum fumes. He acknowledged that some people had health problems, but a small, noisy minority <br />supported the ordinance. He concluded that most people do not care about the Toxics Right-to-Know <br />Program. <br /> <br />Mark Robinowitz, 28549 Sutherlin Lane, said he knew many people who had cancer and other health <br />problems from the sorts of substances covered by the Toxics Right to Know ordinance. He asserted that <br />the real issue was prevention. He noted that the toxic plume under the railroad was caused by a <br />chlorinated solvent when a non-toxic alternative could have been used. Mr. Robinowitz said an article <br />about green building technologies and wafer board made without formaldehyde appeared in a recent <br />edition of Home Power Magazine published in Ashland. He noted that formaldehyde was the number one <br />toxin in the air in Lane County, and that there were nontoxic alternatives. He asserted that medical costs <br />resulting to toxic exposures were shifted to the public. He expressed concern about toxic substances <br />transported via rail. <br /> <br /> Councilor Poling, seconded by Councilor Bettman, moved that the meeting be extended to <br /> 10:20 p.m. <br /> <br /> Roll call vote; the motion passed unanimously, 8:0. <br /> <br />Mara Wile, 3470 High Street, supported the Toxics Right-to-Know Program. She said that exposure to <br />chemicals could lead to serious health issues. She stated that had that fact been known in the past, her <br />River Road area home would not be sitting next to a toxic plume. She said if businesses were bringing <br />toxic chemicals into the community, the community was entitled to the details. She did not see the much- <br />publicized commotion that Eugene was not friendly to businesses. Her research for a new office location <br />for her company in Santa Fe, Durango, Berkeley, and Boise demonstrated that those areas had more taxes, <br />more forms, more licensing, and more requirements than did Eugene. She said chemicals had benefits but <br />there should be correlating costs, asserting that the cost of the program was minimal, and the community <br />deserved the right to know. She objected to The Register-Guard's contention that the website was used <br />very little, when she found the website to be very helpful. <br /> <br /> Ethan McCutchen, 2984 Mill Street, the Director of Grass Commons, a Eugene-based, non-profit <br /> organization, said the obligation of a business to publish its effect on its social and natural environs should <br /> transcend the usual arm wrestling between free market capitalism and government regulation. He stated <br /> <br /> MINUTES--Eugene City Council February 14, 2005 Page 17 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />