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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Report finds no link between birth defects, dump

Garance Burke Associated Press

FRESNO, Calif. – California health officials said Monday they found no common cause for birth defects plaguing infants in an impoverished San Joaquin Valley farm town where residents are battling plans to expand the largest toxic waste dump in the West.

Eleven cases of cleft palates and other birth abnormalities have been reported since 2007 in Kettleman City, where officials said the rate of birth defects from 2008 to 2009 was higher than what would be expected.

Many community members have blamed the health issues on the landfill and called for more testing of children with abnormalities and their relatives to determine the cause of the problems.

“It’s very disheartening, very disappointing,” resident Maricela Mares-Alatorre, whose niece’s son was born with severe birth defects, said of the state finding. “These moms really do deserve answers. They feel that it is not normal.”

Officials interviewed mothers whose children were born with cleft palates and other defects and reviewed their medical histories. They also analyzed air, soil and water samples taken in the community and at the nearby Chemical Waste Management Inc. landfill.

“We’re pleased with the results,” said Jennifer Andrews, a company spokeswoman. “What’s in the report supports decades of monitoring and studies done on our facility, and they all show that it’s safe and protective of human health and the environment.”

In February, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger ordered the California Department of Public Health and the California Environmental Protection Agency to investigate the situation.

“We wish there was an explanation for what caused the birth defects experienced by the children we studied,” public health director Mark Horton said in a prepared statement. “Our investigation finds that no common health or environmental factor links the cases.”