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By
Bea Vongdouangchanh
The Hill Times
August 29, 2005
http://www.thehilltimes.ca/html/index.php?display=story&full_path=/2005/august/29/asbestos/&c=1
Tory
MP Chuck Strahl's stunning announcement that he has cancer should be a
wakeup call for the government to support a global ban on asbestos, says
NDP's Pat Martin.
Canada is an "international pariah" when it comes to supporting and
dumping asbestos around the world, said NDP MP Pat Martin, who's calling
for a global ban on the production, sale and use of asbestos, adding that
the recent announcement of House Deputy Speaker and Conservative MP Chuck
Strahl that he's battling a form of cancer most likely caused by asbestos
exposure should be a wake up call for the government to start moving on
the issue.
"Chuck's situation illustrates that this terrible, toxic substance is all
around us and the government has its head in the sand for the sake of a
few jobs in Quebec," said Mr. Martin (Winnipeg Centre,
Man.). "They refuse to acknowledge that there's no safe level of
exposure. It reaffirms my commitment that asbestos in all its forms should
be banned."
Mr.
Martin told The Hill Times that one of the main reasons he became an MP is
"to fight for the global ban of asbestos." As a young man, he had worked
in an asbestos mine in the
Yukon
from 1974-1975 and said he was lied to about asbestos hazards. "For the
tragedy of asbestos to strike so close to us all on Parliament Hill, it
strengthens my resolve that this is Canada's greatest shame and is crying
out to be addressed."
Mr.
Strahl (Chilliwack-Fraser
Canyon,
B.C.) announced last week in a column in the Chilliwack Times, a local
paper in his riding, that he is suffering from lung cancer likely caused
by exposure to asbestos when he worked as a logger years ago.
Mr.
Strahl said he plans to continue his MP and deputy Speaker duties. "This
column is about me (always a difficult subject), and it is about my
cancer," he wrote. "I don't see any other way around this. I'm a kind of
private guy in many ways, and I like to be pretty stoic about problems I
face day to day. But my job is so public and expectations so obvious that
it can't really be a secret. And perhaps it wouldn't be fair to be secret
anyway, because there are so many people who need to know and want to help
out in ways small and large."
Just
after the House broke for the summer, Mr. Strahl, 48, said he started to
feel ill. Then his lung collapsed. "I thought it was just the flu or
perhaps pneumonia, and I was too busy and too stubborn to rush into the
doctor's office," he wrote.
After two weeks of tests and surgery and another collapsed lung,
"Pathologists had determined that the lining (the pleura) had developed
cancer, likely because of an exposure to asbestos when I was a young man.
My logging days included a time when we used open, asbestos brakes on the
yarder and while my exposure wasn't that lengthy, it was intense.
Typically, 20-25 years later, the asbestos works its ugly magic.
Unfortunately, I'm right on time.
"A
column like this could have the word 'unfortunately' sprinkled throughout,
and it is the perfect word for the situation. Unfortunately, I was exposed
to asbestos. Unfortunately, my body couldn't handle it. Unfortunately, it
targets the lungs. Unfortunately, there is no cure, only treatment.
Unfortunately, like all cancer, the disease has an awful, debilitating
effect on your family and friends, all of whom want to help, can't believe
it is happening, and just wish they could do something to make the world
'right' again.
"I'm
none too thrilled with it all either. The treatment will be determined in
the next few days, and I'll have to start that soon. It won't be any fun,
but it has to be done and I'll just get at it when they're ready. I'm
hoping to be able to keep working while this happens. I'll be in there
sluggin' for now, and much of what comes up will be simply business as
usual."
Conservative House Leader Jay Hill told The Hill Times last week that he
was "struggling a lot" with the news of Mr. Strahl's cancer.
"He's my closest personal friend," said Mr. Hill (Prince George-Peace
River, B.C.). "The friendship that we've developed over the last decade as
Parliamentarians has morphed into a very close personal relationship. It
goes unsaid that myself and our entire caucus give our utmost support and
encouragement during this difficult time. He's loved by all and respected
by MPs. The respect they have for him as Deptuy Speaker is reflective of
the respect they have for him as an individual."
Mr.
Martin said he was shocked when he heard the news. "We wish Chuck the
best. He's such a healthy and vibrant man and if anyone can beat it, it's
him."
He
told The Hill Times that he is also worried about his own health and
regularly goes for bronchoscopies which show there is scarring around his
lungs but there is no sign of cancer.
Earlier this year, Mr. Martin was in Washington, D.C. for the first World
Asbestos Awareness Day with a U.S. lobby group. "It was on April 1, April
Fool's day, unfortunately, which is an irony because we've all been fooled
by asbestos for so long," he said, adding that the government refuses to
acknowledge that there is no safe level of exposure to asbestos.
Health Canada's website states that "asbestos poses health risks only when
fibres are present in the air that people breathe. If asbestos fibres are
enclosed or tightly bound in a product, for example in asbestos siding or
asbestos floor tiles, there are no significant health risks.
"When inhaled in significant quantities, asbestos fibres can cause
asbestosis (a scarring of the lungs which makes breathing difficult),
mesothelioma (a rare cancer of the lining of the chest or abdominal
cavity) and lung cancer. The link between exposure to asbestos and other
types of cancers is less clear."
The
federal government is currently keeping a close eye on the West Block
building on Parliament Hill where asbestos is present in many forms due to
major renovations conducted in the 1960s when it was legal to fireproof
buildings with the material. Using asbestos as insulation was banned in
Ontario in 1973.
According to a recent report by engineering firm Golder Associates Ltd.,
MPs and staffers toiling inside the building are at risk of asbestos
exposure.
"The
fact that asbestos fireproofing is observed to have fallen off (which
creates a disturbance), and the measured effect of activity in the
asbestos contaminated areas leads us to state that there is no guarantee
that the occupants have not been exposed to some levels of asbestos fibres,"
says the report.
In
the last session of Parliament, Mr. Martin raised the issue of an
asbestos-laden home insulation product called vermiculite whose commercial
name is Zonelite.
"Hundreds of thousands of homes have been made dangerous and even devalued
by virtue of Zonolite contamination," Mr. Martin said during Question
Period in February. "This happened because of a federal government program
that promoted and even subsidized the installation of this Zonolite.
Within months of learning that UFFI foam was irritating, a program existed
to remove that hazard from people's homes. Canadians are looking to their
government for help in removing Zonolite. What will the government do to
help homeowners get this carcinogen out of their walls when the government
helped put it in?"
In
response, Labour and Housing Minister Joe Fontana said, "I do not buy the
premise of the question at all. I am sure the member would want to be more
clear with Canadians. Yes, any time they are undertaking renovations we
would encourage them, obviously, to talk to professionals so that they can
get the right information. We have been told, and it is on Health Canada's
website as well as [the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation's
website], which advised all the stakeholders and so on, that if left
undisturbed it does not pose a health risk. Yes, we need to inform
Canadians on the health and safety of their homes but I am sure the member
would not want to alarm Canadians."
Mr.
Martin said that
Canada
is the largest and one of the only asbestos producers left in the world,
and where "it would be irresponsible to continue using it in Canada," it's
still exported to many countries in the developing world. "We spend
millions subsidizing the industry and promoting it in the third world,"
Mr. Martin said. "It's our greatest shame for dumping asbestos in the
third world and we're international pariahs for it."
In
1999, Canada appealed to the World Trade Organization to stop France from
banning asbestos imports and lost. "The WTO found that all levels of
asbestos posed some cancer risk, that safer substitute products were
available and that there was no such thing as 'controlled use,'" wrote
Barry Castleman, an environmental consultant, in the Washington Post last
year.
"We
really are the international bad guys," Mr. Martin said, adding that the
European Union's 23 countries banned asbestos as of Jan. 1, 2005.
"We've chosen not to use it, but it's still legal here and a whole
generation is at risk. It should have never been taken out of the ground
and now with wreckless abandonment we've scattered it across the country
and continue to dump it around the world. That's why I'm calling for a
global ban. We have an obligation to do anything and everything to get rid
of it."
One
solution, Mr. Martin said, is to shut down the mines and give the 800 or
so workers early pensions because the asbestos industry is a "dying
business" in Quebec.
However, Mr. Martin said, "The government is acting cowardly to shut down
the death mines and pension [the employees] off."
Mr.
Martin said that once Parliament resumes, he will organize a gathering on
the Hill with home owners from across Canada who have Zonelite in their
houses to demand action.
bvongdou@hilltimes.com
The Hill Times
*** POSTED
AUGUST 29, 2005 ***
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