Introduction | Scope | LC Subject Headings and Call Numbers | Archival Collections | Articles | Books | Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, and Handbooks | Image and Video Resources | Journals | Subscription Databases | Websites
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Introduction
Love Canal is probably the country's most notorious and infamous hazardous waste site. It wasn't the first. It wasn't the worst. But it did grab headlines, draw attention, and stimulate scientists, industrial leaders, politicians, government officials, and grassroots activists.
The Love Canal neighborhood is in the southeast section of the La Salle area of Niagara Falls, New York. William T. Love, an 1890's visionary and entrepreneur, sought to develop a planned industrial community, Model City, in the area. Waters from the Niagara River were to be routed around the Niagara escarpment (the other famous attraction of the region, Niagara Falls) to produce cheap hydroelectric power.
Model City never happened, but work on the canal to transport waters from the Niagara River did. In 1942, Hooker Chemicals and Plastics Corporation purchased the site of the Love Canal. Between 1942 and 1953 Hooker Chemical disposed of about 22,000 tons of mixed chemical wastes into the Love Canal. Shortly after Hooker ceased use of the site, the land was sold to the Niagara Falls School Board for a price of $1.00. In 1955, the 99th Street Elementary School was constructed on the Love Canal property and opened its doors to students. Subsequent development of the area would see hundreds of families take up residence in the suburban, blue-collar neighborhood of the Love Canal.
Unusually heavy rain and snowfalls in 1975 and 1976 provided high groundwater levels in the Love Canal area. Portions of the Hooker landfill subsided, 55-gallon drums surfaced, ponds and other surface water area became contaminated, basements began to ooze an oily residue, and noxious chemical odors permeated the area. Physical evidence of chemical corrosion of sump pumps and infiltration of basement cinderblock walls was apparent. Subsequent studies by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry would reveal a laundry list of 421 chemical records for air, water, and soil samples in and around the Love Canal area.
In April of 1978 the New York Department of Health Commissioner, Robert Whalen, declared the Love Canal area a threat to human health and ordered the fencing of the area near the actual old landfill site. In August, the Health Commissioner declared a health emergency at the Love Canal, closed the 99th Street School, and recommended temporary evacuation of pregnant women and young children from the first two rings of houses around the site. Within a week, Governor Hugh Carey announced the intended purchase of all "Ring 1" houses (later expanded to 238 houses in Rings 1 and 2). President Jimmy Carter simultaneously announced the allocation of federal funds and ordered the Federal Disaster Assistance Agency to assist the City of Niagara Falls to remedy the Love Canal site.
Amid this setting, individuals (most notably Lois Gibbs, Dr. Beverly Paigen, and Sister Margeen Hoffmann, OSF) and local neighborhood (such as the Love Canal Homeowners Association) and community groups (such as the Ecumenical Task Force of the Niagara Frontier) became concerned about the situation. Their primary concern was the actual extent of the chemical contamination and its impact on the health of Love Canal residents. Second, and perhaps more important, was the lack of readily available information to explain the science: the levels of uncertainty, political and corporate agendas, manipulation of the media -- in general an overall paucity of reliable information that would answer the simple question, "Is it safe?"
-- From the exhibit Love Canal @25 created by Fred Stoss and Carole Ann Fabian, August 1998
Scope
Although it has been almost 30 years since President Carter declared a State of Federal Emergency at Love Canal, it continues to be of interest. This pathfinder includes resources from the government, citizens affected by hazardous wastes, and others.
LC Subject Headings and Call Numbers
Subject Headings:
- Love Canal Chemical Waste Landfill (Niagara Falls, N.Y.)
- Chemical plants -- Waste disposal -- Environmental aspects -- New York (State) -- Niagara Falls
- Housing and health -- New York (State) -- Niagara Falls
- Hazardous waste sites -- Health aspects Pollution -- New York (State) -- Niagara Falls
- Environmental toxicology -- New York (State) -- Niagara Falls
Call Numbers:
Library of Congress Dewey RA 566 – Environmental Health 615.9 – Toxicology TD 181 – Environmental Pollution 363.7 – Environmental problems TD 195 – Environmental effects of industries and plants WA 788 – Sanitation and Environmental Control
Archival Collections
- MS 65, Ecumenical Task Force of the Niagara Frontier Inc. Records, 1970-1995, University Archives, State University of New York at Buffalo.
The Ecumenical Task Force (ETF) was founded in 1979 as a non-profit organization dedicated to the protection of human and natural resources from chemical and radiological contamination in the Western New York area and within the Great Lakes eco-system. This collection contains thousands of documents relating to the discovery of toxic waste, environmental and medical studies, remediation, and rehabilitation of the Love Canal Area.
- MS 74, Love Canal Area Revitalization Agency Records, University Archives, State University of New York at Buffalo.
The Love Canal Area Revitalization Agency was a governmental agency setup to coordinate the rehabilitation of the Love Canal area.
- MC84, Clarence W. Klassen Love Canal Collection, 1981-1996, University of Illinois at Springfield.
Charles Klassen was the first director of the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. Klassen was an expert in environmental issues and gave expert testimony in litigation regarding Love Canal.
- MS 89, Love Canal Repository Grant Records, 1978-2002, University Archives, The State University of New York at Buffalo.
In 2000, project archivist Kathleen Delaney worked with the Niagara Falls Public Library to conduct a search for all Love Canal collections and resources. The collection contains her final report listing resources available.
- 14-25-1649, Rose Goldsen Papers, [ca. 1950-1985], Cornell University Library.
Rose Goldsen was a faculty member at Cornell University who wrote the forward for Adeline Levine's book, Love Canal: Science, Politics and People. This collection contains manuscripts of Levine's work and a few other Love Canal resources.
- 22/3F/634, Adeline Levine Love Canal Research Materials (Part I), 1953-1981 (1978-1981 bulk), University Archives, The State University of New York at Buffalo.
- 22/3F/1113, Adeline Levine Love Canal Research Materials (Part II), University Archives, The State University of New York at Buffalo.
Adeline Levine is a sociology professor emeritus at SUNY Buffalo who researched the socio and psychological impact of the Love Canal disaster upon its residents. These collections contain her research papers.
Articles
- Brown, M.H. (1979). Love Canal and the poisoning of America [Electronic version]. The Atlantic Monthly, 244(6), 33-47.
Gives a good history of the Love Canal and the EPA's attentions.
- Brown, M.H. (1988). Love Canal Revisted. The Amicus Journal, 10(3).
The author that sparked the media frenzy revisits Love Canal after 10 years and discusses the changes.
- Brown, M.H. (1989). A toxic ghost town [Electronic version]. The Atlantic Monthly, July.
Give a status update of Love Canal 11 years after a federal emergency was declared. Brown sketches actions taken since then.
- Barbalace, R.C. (2000). Grownups don't do blue goo: growing up on the Love Canal hazardous waste dump. Environmental Chemistry. Retrieved April 15, 2008 from http://environmentalchemistry.com/yogi/hazmat/articles/grownups.html
A personal account from a former Love Canal resident.
- Case study one Love Canal superfund site, Niagara Falls, New York. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from Society for Applied Anthropology: http://www.sfaa.net/eap/lovecanel.pdf
- Depalma, A. & Staba D. (2004) Love Canal declared clean, ending toxic horror. New York Times. Retrieved April 26, 2008 from http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E05E1DF1231F93BA25750C0
A9629C8B63&sec=&spon=&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink
Discusses Love Canal's removal from the EPA Superfund list. Also gives information on the resettlement of the Love Canal area.
- Zuesse, E. (1981). Love Canal: the truth seeps out [Electronic version]. Reason, February.
An article on the history and actions taken at Love Canal. This article is biased, but represents a interesting perspective.
A case study of Superfund using Love Canal.
Books
- Bryan, N. (2004). Love Canal: pollution crisis. Milwaukee, WI: World Almanac Library.
Written for grades 4-8, provides a summary health issues relating to toxic chemicals and the rehabilitation of the Love Canal area.
- Center for Environmental Health, New York State Department of Health. (2006). Love Canal follow-up health study: Project report to ATSDR. Albany, NY: State of New York, Dept. of Health.
Government report on the 2006 health status of former Love Canal residents.
- Gibbs, L. M. (1998). Love Canal: the story continues. Gabriola Island, B.C.: Stony Creek, CT.
Lois Gibbs' personal account of the Love Canal environmental disaster.
- Hoffmann, M. (1987). Earthcare lessons from Love Canal: a resource & response guide. Niagara Falls, NY: Ecumenical Task Force of the Niagara Frontier, Inc.
A guide written by the ETF for other communities experiencing environmental disasters.
- Levine, A. (1982). Love Canal: science, politics, and people. Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books.
Discusses the socio and psychological impact of the Love Canal disaster upon its residents.
- Love Canal Homeowners Association. (1984). Love Canal: a chronology of events that shaped a movement. Arlington, VA: Citizen's Clearinghouse for Hazardous Wastes.
Provides a citizen's interpretation and chronology of the events at Love Canal. Presents a different perspective that sometimes contradicts the government's representation.
- Mazur, A. (1998). A hazardous inquiry: the Rashomon effect at Love Canal. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
This book discusses how each stakeholder at Love Canal has their own interpretation of events and how this affects the process.
Encyclopedias, Dictionaries, and Handbooks
These resources will provide an explanation of terms and concepts associated with Love Canal.
- Corbitt, R. A. (1999). Standard handbook of environmental engineering. New York: McGraw-Hill.
- Freeman, H. (1998). Standard handbook of hazardous waste treatment and disposal. New York: McGraw-Hill.
- Koren, H. K. (2005). Illustrated dictionary and resource directory of environmental & occupational health (2nd ed.). Boca Raton: CRC Press.
- Montgomery, J. H. (2000). Groundwater chemicals desk reference (3rd ed.). Boca Raton: CRC Lewis Publishers.
- Shineldecker, C. L. (1992). Handbook of environmental contaminants: a guide for site assessment. Boca Raton, FL: Lewis Publishers.
- Unterberg, W. F. J. S. (1989). Reference manual of countermeasures for hazardous substance releases. New York: Hemisphere Pub. Corp.
Image and Video Resources
- Corcoran, L. (Producer). (1983). In our own backyard: the first Love Canal [Motion Picture]. (Available from Bullfrog Films, P.O. Box 149, Oley, PA 19547)
A documentary on Love Canal's history and stakeholder's involvement.
- Singer, B. (Producer). (2007). Lois Gibbs on Love Canal, Parts I-III [Motion Picture]. (Available online from http://transition.turbulence.org/Works/superfund/video.html)
Conversations with Lois Gibbs on Love Canal, almost 30 years later.
- Singer, B. (Producer). (2007). Lois Gibbs on superfund, Parts I-III [Motion Picture]. (Available online from http://transition.turbulence.org/Works/superfund/video.html)
Conversations with Lois Gibbs on Superfund.
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Rice, M. (Producer/Director/Writer). (circa 1978). Love Canal: Neighborhood of Fear [Television Broadcast]/ Buffalo, NY: WIVB. [Formerly available online]
Documentary on Love Canal by local news station.
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University at Buffalo. (2009). Love Canal images [Digital Collection]. Buffalo, NY: Western New York Library Resources Council. (Available online from http://www.wnylegacy.org/cdm4/index_p15004coll2.php?CISOROOT=/p15004coll2)
Digital collection of over 600 Love Canal images from the University Archives, State University of New York at Buffalo. Great site for images on a wide range of subjects dealing with Love Canal.
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WIVB. (Producer). (2008). History of Love Canal [Television Broadcast]. Buffalo, NY: WIVB. [Formerly available online]
A contemporary history of Love Canal using archived footage.
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WIVB. (Producer). (n.d.). Bonus video: File video and old stories of the Love Canal [Television Broadcast]. Buffalo, NY: WIVB. [Formerly available online]
Various clips of news footage and stories of residents.
Journals
These journals discuss issues and concepts related to remediation of Love Canal.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- Environmental Science & Technology
- Journal of Environmental Science and Health
- Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health
Subscription Databases
These subscription databases contain citations and full-text articles relating to Love Canal and other environmental issues.
- BIOSIS Previews
- GEOBASE
- GeoRef
- SciFinder Scholar
Websites
- About us - The center for health, environment & justice. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from http://www.chej.org/love_canal.htm
Lois Gibb's organization's website on Love Canal. Has a general article, timeline, biography of Lois Gibbs, and a fact pack.
- Lessons from Love Canal: a public health resource. (2003). Retrieved April 15, 2008, from Boston University, School of Public Health: http://www.bu.edu/lovecanal/main.html
Website and resource guide for Love Canal topics. Provides Love Canal bibliography.
- Love Canal. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from http://www.scorecard.org/env-releases/land/site.tcl?epa_id=NYD000606947
Gives environmental and technical data regarding Love Canal's toxic waste.
- Love Canal. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from New York State Department of Health: http://www.health.state.ny.us/environmental/investigations/love_canal/
New York State Department of Health's official Love Canal website. Provides health study reports and Love Canal bibliography.
- Love Canal Collections. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from University at Buffalo, University Archives: http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/specialcollections/lovecanal/
SUNY Buffalo's University Archives web-portal to their Love Canal collections. Provides history, contains a useful glossary, online documents from the ETF, and links to related resources.
- Love Canal | EPA History | US EPA. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from United States Environmental Protection Agency: http://www.epa.gov/history/topics/lovecanal/index.htm
United States Environmental Protection Agency's official Love Canal website.
- Love Canal: New York. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from United States Environmental Protection Agency: http://www.epa.gov/r02earth/superfund/npl/0201290c.pdf
United States Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund Status Report on Love Canal
- Love Canal News Paper Database. Retrieved April 15, 2008, from University at Buffalo, University Archives: http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/specialcollections/lovecanal/search.html
A newspaper database of Love Canal articles hosted by SUNY Buffalo's University Archives.
- Superfund Information Systems: Site Progress Profile. Retrieved April 15, 2008 from United States Environmental Protection Agency: http://cfpub.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0201290
United States Environmental Protection Agency's Superfund website for Love Canal.
-- Created April 2008 by Nathan Tallman



















