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Nancy Smith remembered that children had called it “the sick land” the wedge of property alongside the 110 Freeway where a dry cleaning facility had laundered aprons and uniforms for decades across from a Lincoln Heights elementary school.
“We were all up in arms about it because of the children getting sick,” said Smith, who has lived in the northeast Los Angeles neighborhood for more than half a century.
Decades after the old Welch’s laundry was shuttered, California regulators worked to clean up the soil and check the groundwater for the
chemicals used there volatile organic compounds such as tetrachloroethylene that could damage the human liver and nervous system and have been tied to an increased risk of cancer. The Department of Toxic Substances Control oversaw a cleanup effort that lasted for years and has continued to monitor groundwater at the site.
Toxic chemicals sullied a Lincoln Heights site. Now, new housing is planned next to it Emily Alpert Reyes © Provided by The LA Times Patricia Camacho and Michael Henry Hayden stand in front of a Lincoln Heights lot where a 468-unit development is planned. The project has raised concerns among residents about toxic risks. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)
Nancy Smith remembered that children had called it the sick land the wedge of property alongside the 110 Freeway where a dry cleaning facility had laundered aprons and uniforms for decades across from a Lincoln Heights elementary school. We were all up in arms about it because of the children getting sick, said Smith, who has lived in the northeast Los Angeles neighborhood for more than half a century.