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Lois Gibbs on Love Canal, 40 years after federal emergency declaration

A movement that started with scared homeowners, strange smells and a collection of health symptoms celebrates an anniversary today. Forty years after President Jimmy Carter first declared Love Canal a national health emergency, former housewife and activist Lois Gibbs looks back and realizes that the people she mobilized were the start of something a lot bigger.Lois Gibbs discusses the federal health disaster at Love Canal with WBFO.

"We were the one that broke open the lens for other people to see what was happening.. all of a sudden we were hearing of cases across the country,' Gibbs tells WBFO in an interview on the 40th anniversary of the federal declaration.

Occidental Chemical Corp., formerly Hooker Chemical and Plastics Corp., used the abandoned canal  in Niagara Falls for its waste in the 1940s and 1950s.  They covered the waste with dirt, and sold the land to the City of Niagara Falls to build a school and a playground on.  

Years later, neighbors like Gibbs began to notice clusters of ilnesses in the neighborhood, and black ooze in their basements. Children told tales of rocks that would explode into fire, and soil that could burn the soles of their footware.

Emergency declarations by President Jimmy Carter on August 7, 1978 and later in 1980 led to the evacuation of about 900 families and the bulldozing of an elementary school and two streets that had been built on the canal and the 21,800 tons of World War II-era chemical byproducts it holds.

Passage of the 1980 Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, known as Superfund, soon followed.

"And it really helped us to build this larger movement, open the door for other people who were suffering the same way, and didn't know it and didnt make the connection. It was Love Canal that opened their eyes because there was no other historical site to look at."

Gibbs wasn't always an activist, and says that when her biology professor brother-in-law first suggested that her son's symptoms might be tied to the chemicals at Love Canal, she was stunned.

"It was terrifying and shocking.  At that moment what do you do? You know. I was a full time mom. What do you do? I was frozen in place."

The company has paid more than $233 million since 1995 to cover cleanup costs and medical expenses for victims of the contamination and continues to pay for the site's monitoring. 

Gibbs at a rally of Canal area residents
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /
Gibbs at a rally of Canal area residents
Gibbs touring the Canal site, with Cong. John Lafalce and NYS Health Comm. Robert Whalen
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /
Gibbs touring the Canal site, with Cong. John Lafalce and NYS Health Comm. Robert Whalen
with homeowners
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /
with homeowners
In the media spotlight, circa 1988
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /
In the media spotlight, circa 1988
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /
(Photo courtesy: Courier-Express Collection, Archives and Special Collections, E.H. Butler Library, SUNY Buffalo State.) /

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Dave Debo's journalism career runs the gamut from public radio to commercial radio, from digital projects to newspapers. With over 30 years of experience, he's produced national television news programs and has worked as both a daily and weekly print journalist and web editor.