Month: January 2020

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Killie Tillie scored 20 points and blocked a potential tying shot in the closing seconds to help top-ranked Gonzaga beat Pepperdine 75-70 on Saturday night for its 32nd consecutive home win.

Filip Petrusev scored 16 points and Joel Ayayi had 12 for Gonzaga (16-1, 2-0 West Coast). The Bulldogs have the longest home winning streak in the country. They have won eight consecutive overall since losing to Michigan.

Colbey Ross scored 24 points for Pepperdine (7-9, 0-2). The Waves have has lost 38 straight games to Gonzaga since their last win in 2002.

This game was a nail-biter from the start.

Pepperdine led 18-16 early in the first half, behind 11 points by Ross, when Gonzaga went on a 9-0 run to take a 25-18 lead. Gonzaga pushed the lead to 33-24.

But the Zags didn’t score for more than three minutes and Pepperdine outscored them 13-4 the rest of the way to tie the game at 37-37 at halftime. Ross led all scorers with 15 points in the first half and both teams committed nine turnovers.

Consecutive baskets by Petrusev, Corey Kispert and Tillie put Gonzaga up 48-42 early in the second.

Pepperdine went on a 9-0 run and Skylar Chavez hit a 3-pointer to put the Waves ahead 53-51.

Tillie made two baskets and two free throws to put Gonzaga up 57-54.

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Ross scored to tie the game at 59-59. Gonzaga replied with a 10-2 run for a 69-61 lead.

But the Zags went cold and Ross hit a pair of free throws to bring Pepperdine within 71-68 with 1:27 left.

Each team scored and Ross launched a 3-pointer that would have tied the game, but Tillie blocked the shot with 5 seconds left.

No. 13 San Diego State 77, at Utah State 68: Malachi Flynn scored 22 points, Matt Mitchell added 19 and San Diego State beat Utah State to improve to 15-0. The Aztecs snapped the Aggies’ 15-game home winning streak and beat them for the 12th time in the last 14 games.

San Diego State (15-0, 4-0 Mountain West) has the longest winning streak in the country. Auburn is the only other undefeated Division I team. Sam Merrill scored 26 points and Neemias Queta added 15 points and 14 rebounds for the Aggies. Utah State (13-4, 2-2) lost back-to-back games for the first time since coach Craig Smith took over the program before the start of the 2018-19 season.

No. 4 Oregon 69, at Utah 64: Payton Pritchard scored 19 points for the Ducks, and Will Richardson and Chris Duarte each had 14. Pritchard drew most of the defensive attention as usual so Oregon (12-3, 1-1 Pac-12) ended up moving the ball to Shakur Juiston and Chandler Lawson, who each had a pair of layups to erase Utah’s late lead and clinch the game.

Both Gach scored a career-high 24 points for the Utes (10-4, 1-1). Timmy Allen had 19 points and 11 rebounds.

at No. 25 Arizona 75, Arizona State 47: Zeke Nnaji had 17 points and 11 rebounds, helping the Wildcats open the Pac-12 season with an overpowering win. Arizona (11-3) had a size advantage inside and used it, outscoring Arizona State 50-18 in the paint.

Arizona State (9-5) generated almost no inside game against Arizona’s length and struggled to get anything to fall from anywhere. Remy Martin led the Sun Devils with 20 points.


Alec Martinez could feel his heart beating. He could practically see it happening too.

With every pump, blood was sent rushing through his veins. From his right wrist, it came gushing out through a gash opened by the edge of a skate. Beat by beat, a little more spilled. In all his years on the ice, the Kings defenseman had never suffered an injury like this.

“Anytime you look down and you’ve got blood shooting out of your arm to your heartbeat,” Martinez said, “that’s never a cool thing to see.”

In the Kings’ Nov. 25 win over the San Jose Sharks, Martinez sustained lacerations to his radial artery and two superficial radial nerves in his right wrist. He was rushed to the bench, then the locker room, then a hospital. As hockey injuries go, few demand such drastic measures.

“It’s pretty scary,” Martinez said.

More than a month later, Martinez was cleared to return to the lineup Saturday night for the Kings in a 4-1 loss to the Nashville Predators at Staples Center. Though the cut itself has healed, the scar on his skin remains — a long purple line curling from the bottom of his palm and around the inside of his forearm.

“I got some pretty gnarly pics,” he said.

The memory is still seared in his brain too.

Early in the third period that night, Martinez dove head-first and arms-extended toward a loose puck around his own net. His face-down position left the inside of his wrist exposed. Sharks defenseman Erik Karlsson accidentally stepped on it. Right away, Martinez knew something was wrong.

“I knew I got stepped on, I knew I was cut pretty bad,” he said. “I didn’t know it was that bad though.”

Highlights from the Kings’ 4-1 loss to the Predators at Staples Center on Jan. 4, 2020.

Martinez skated himself back to the bench, then was immediately escorted by the Kings’ training staff to the locker room. They quickly realized it was no minor nick. Martinez needed serious medical attention. He was transported to Keck Medicine of USC.

Martinez said the injury itself “wasn’t super painful — probably because my nerves were severed.” But once doctors discovered his radial artery — the same one used to take a pulse — was cut, reality sunk it.

“When they put my arm up in the arm, and the doctor pinched that off — it was horrible,” Martinez said. “I was squirming.”

Skate lacerations are an inevitable part of the sport. But this season, they’ve been uncomfortably common. Several other players have suffered similar situations since Martinez’s injury, which required surgery and more than a month of recovery time to let his injured nerves heal before he could even rejoin team practice.

In December, New York Islanders forward Cal Clutterbuck and Toronto Maple Leafs forward Ilya Mikheyev were cut in the wrist by skate blades, while a goalie in the Ontario Hockey League sustained a leg laceration. All three of those injuries also required surgery.

In October 2017, Kings forward Jeff Carter suffered a skate-related injury when he had an ankle tendon cut.

“I don’t think I’ve seen a run like this ever,” said Martinez, 32. “It’s a fluky thing.”

Asked if he thinks the league should mandate more protective gear for players — many wear cut-resistant socks, but wrist guards are rarer — Martinez didn’t endorse the idea, though added that he will start wearing wrist guards.

“Why not protect yourself, or take the risk?” he said. “I knew the risk going out.”

His return marked 40 days since his injury as the Kings recalled Derek Forbort from a conditioning assignment and put Joakim Ryan on injured reserve.

“There’s not much you can do,” he said. “You’ve just gotta let it heal. Surgery is what fixed everything. And then you’ve just got to let the wound heal.”


A single-engine plane crashed near the 14 Freeway in Santa Clarita early Saturday, killing the pilot, authorities said.

The crash occurred shortly after 10 a.m. near the freeway’s northbound Newhall Avenue off-ramp, said Sgt. Perry Haggard of the California Highway Patrol.

“From witnesses it sounded like smoke was coming from his engine, so it looks like he was trying to find a place to make an emergency landing,” Haggard said.

The pilot was the only occupant of the aircraft, he said.

One lane of the northbound freeway was temporarily closed as emergency crews responded.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.


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A homeless man suspected of stabbing to death a fellow diner at a downtown Los Angeles Mexican restaurant on New Year’s Day has been arrested, police said.

A civilian called police around 4 p.m., after learning about the crime, to report seeing the suspect inside the downtown Central Library, located at 630 W. 5th Street, police said.

Officers quickly responded and took the suspect, identified as Devan Lampkin, 49, into custody without incident, according to the Los Angeles Police Department.

Lampkin was wanted for the stabbing death of Homer Garcia, 56, after the two got into an argument inside Margarita’s Place, located at 103 E. 7th, about 8:35 a.m. Wednesday, police said.

Relatives said Garcia was an avid musician.

Surveillance video from inside the restaurant released by police showed the attack, then Lampkin calmly pick up his belongings off the counter and walk away.

Lampkin lived at a homeless shelter and was being held on $2 million bail, police said.

The case will be presented to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office next week.

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Strong, potentially damaging winds are expected across the Southern California mountains from Sunday afternoon through midday Monday or into Tuesday, the National Weather Service said. Winds in the local mountains, including the higher peaks of the Santa Monica Mountains, may gust in excess of 60 to 65 mph.

High-wind warnings in most areas take effect Sunday afternoon or evening. They remain in effect until 3 a.m. Monday in Santa Barbara County, Monday afternoon in Ventura and Los Angeles counties, and into Tuesday in Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties.

Elevated fire weather conditions are possible, although red flag warnings are unlikely because fuel moisture is high after recent storms.

Winds could cause downed tree limbs and local power outages in addition to difficult driving conditions, especially for high-profile vehicles, the weather service said.

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Northerly winds will increase in most areas Sunday morning, although some areas may see increases as early as Saturday night. Winds will peak Sunday afternoon into Monday morning. Some strong winds will reach the valleys and parts of the coast south of Point Conception.

Winds will shift and become traditional northeasterly Santa Ana winds on Monday morning, when they will begin to diminish in Santa Barbara County. Winds are likely to gust to about 50 mph in the mountains of L.A. and Ventura counties, and 30 to 40 mph in the valleys. Relative humidity will drop to about 10% to 20%.

Temperatures will remain cool inland, but the downslope winds will promote noticeable warming, particularly at the coast, where highs will be in the low- to mid-70s. Valleys will be a little cooler, but will still be above average.

Offshore winds blowing from inland areas toward the coast will persist into Tuesday, but will begin to diminish, which will result in slightly cooler temperatures at the beaches.

Wind advisories may need to be extended into Tuesday, especially for the mountains and valleys.


Before Pearl Harbor and the nationalist hysteria that led to the internment of tens of thousands of Japanese Americans during World War II, there was a thriving community of Japanese immigrants in Los Angeles’ Boyle Heights neighborhood.

Japanese churches in the neighborhood, a section of Evergreen Cemetery and a Japanese language school all have roots in that period before the war in 1941. So does the former Japanese Hospital, built to serve a community of immigrants who were routinely denied entry into public health institutions.

On Saturday members of the Japanese American community gathered to celebrate the significance of the two-story stucco building at First and Fickett Streets, which was declared a historic-cultural monument by the Los Angeles City Council in 2016. The group of about 30 included volunteers from the Little Tokyo Historical Society, representatives from the Boyle Heights Historical Society and City Council District 14, and Japanese Angelenos who were born or treated at the hospital.

They cheered upon the unveiling of a sign on a lamppost out front, which read, “Immigrant Japanese doctors prevailed in 1928 U.S. Supreme Court Case.”

“It was immigrants who were brave and decided to stand up for their civil rights and their community to build this institution,” said Kristen Hayashi, a historian with the Japanese American National Museum.

In the early 1900s Japanese immigrants in Los Angeles struggled to be accepted both as doctors and patients at mainstream hospitals. Turner Street Hospital in Little Tokyo, staffed by Japanese healthcare professionals for the care of Japanese patients, opened around 1915. It was there that Kikuwo Tashiro, a Japanese doctor and immigrant, began practicing after arriving in Los Angeles.

By the 1920s, after a devastating influenza outbreak and with the Japanese American population growing, it was clear to Tashiro and others that a bigger facility was needed. He and four other Japanese American doctors pooled their savings to create a Japanese hospital. But when they sought incorporation from the state, they were denied based on a 1911 treaty between the U.S. and Japan and alien land laws, according to the Little Tokyo Historical Society’s application for historic-cultural status.

Tashiro sued, eventually winning his case at the U.S. Supreme Court with the help of attorney J. Marion Wright.

The 69-room facility opened on December 1, 1929, the result of $129,000 in private donations. It was designed by Japanese architect Yos Hirose in the Streamline Moderne style, a subtype of Art Deco that was sleeker and less ornamental, according to the application. Hirose was himself instrumental in shaping Japanese institutions in Los Angeles, designing the Koyasan Buddhist Temple in Little Tokyo and Tenrikyo Junior Church of America as well.

During World War II, the Japanese Hospital was leased to nearby White Memorial Hospital, but after the war it reverted to its original owners. The hospital moved to a larger, more modern site in Lincoln Heights in 1962, and the building later became a convalescent home, which it still is today.

Paula Miura was born at the Boyle Heights building in the 1950s. (She declined to give her exact age.) Though her family lived in West Los Angeles, they came all the way east to have the delivery done by a Japanese doctor.

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“I think it was a comfort issue,” Miura said. “Having a Japanese American doctor… people understand the way you think.”

Miura, who is a sansei, or a third-generation Japanese American, said she still finds comfort in going to a Japanese dentist.

Bill Watanabe, 75, who founded the Little Tokyo Historical Society, was born in an internment camp at Manzanar. His parents, Japanese-speaking farmers who lived in Pacoima before and after the war, brought him to the hospital when he was six years old to have his tonsils removed.

“In the [San Fernando] Valley there was nothing for Japanese,” Watanabe said.

Watanabe said the building represents an important part of local Japanese-American history. He said anti-Japanese sentiment and outright racism persist today, but he hopes people who walk by the building will pay attention to the word “prevail” on the sign.

“It conveys a message that this country has flaws but it’s still a country where people can fight for their rights and prevail,” he said.


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He was my best work. A list of adjectives don’t do him justice. There is no justice. I am the luckiest person who ever lived in that I got to spend so much time and help grow this brilliant, funny, truly kind and thoughtful person-man-boy. My baby. My golden child. My beautiful boy. I don’t understand what life is now without him in the world. I don’t understand where he’s gone. And I’m broken. How is this real?

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A post shared by Jenji Kohan (@ijnej) on

She’s since received an outpouring of love and support in the comment section from others in the entertainment industry, including “Orange Is the New Black” stars Danielle Brooks and Jason Biggs, as well as “Orange Is the New Black” book author Piper Kerman.

Kohan and her husband, Christopher Noxon, also spoke on their son’s death earlier this week in a statement released by police.

“He was questioning, irreverent, curious and kind,” Noxon’s parents wrote. “Charlie had a beautiful life of study and argument and travel and food and razzing and adventure and sweetness and most of all love. We cannot conceive of life without him.”


Here is a list of classic movies in L.A. for Jan. 5-12:

American Neo-Realism, Part One: 1948-1984 This monthlong series kicks off with a restored version of J.L. Anderson’s dark, Ohio-set 1967 family drama “Spring Night, Summer Night” followed by the new companion documentary “In the Middle of the Nights: From Arthouse to Grindhouse and Back Again.” UCLA Hammer Museum, Billy Wilder Theatre, 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood. Fri., 7:30 p.m. $8-$10. cinema.ucla.edu

Don’t Cry, Pretty Girls! A young woman in Hungary must choose between her fiance and a rock musician in Márta Mészáros’ 1970 drama; in Hungarian with English subtitles. The Wende Museum at the Armory, 10808 Culver Blvd., Culver City. Fri., 7 p.m. Free. (310) 216-1600. wendemuseum.org

Fantastic Planet Earthlings are kept as pets by ginormous blue humanoid creatures on a distant world in this animated 1973 sci-fi fable. Landmark Nuart Theatre, 11272 Santa Monica Blvd., West L.A. Fri., 11:59 p.m. $12; no one under 18 admitted. landmarktheatres.com

Police Story Secret Movie Club presents this over-the-top 1985 action comedy set in Hong Kong and starring Jackie Chan, who also wrote, directed and did his own stunts. With Maggie Cheung. The Vista Theatre, 4473 Sunset Drive, L.A. Fri., 11:59 p.m. $11-$24. eventbrite.com

Things to do

Re-Animator A medical student (Jeffrey Combs) develops a serum that can raise the dead in Stuart Gordon’s gruesome 1985 horror comedy based on a story by H.P. Lovecraft. New Beverly Cinema, 7165 Beverly Blvd., L.A. Fri., 2 p.m. $8. thenewbev.com

The Searchers John Wayne stars as a former Confederate soldier on a mission to rescue his kidnapped niece from a band of Comanches in John Ford’s epic 1956 western. With Ward Bond, Jeffrey Hunter, Natalie Wood. Alamo Drafthouse, 700 W. 7th St., downtown L.A. Fri., 7:30 p.m. $12. drafthouse.com

Sing-along Moulin Rouge! Audience members are encouraged to sing along to a screening of Baz Luhrmann’s Paris-set 2001 musical starring Nicole Kidman and Ewan McGregor. La Mirada Theatre, 14900 La Mirada Blvd., La Mirada. Fri., 8 p.m. $15. (562) 944-9801. lamiradatheatre.com

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This retiree got a big surprise: taxes

January 5, 2020 | News | No Comments

Dear Liz: I’m 76 and retired. During the decades I worked, I contributed to my IRA yearly using my tax refund or having money deducted from my paycheck. No one told me I would have to pay taxes on this when I turned 70. For the past six years, I have been required to withdraw a certain percentage of this IRA money and pay taxes on it. Is there ever going to be an end to this? Do I have to keep paying taxes on the same money every year? And what about when I pass away, do my children have to keep paying?

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Answer: Ever heard the expression, “There’s no such thing as a free lunch”?

You got tax deductions on the money you contributed to your IRA over the years, and the earnings were allowed to grow tax deferred. Those tax breaks are designed to encourage people to save, but eventually Uncle Sam wants his cut.

Also, you aren’t “paying taxes on the same money every year,” because the money you withdraw has never been taxed. Plus, you’re required to take out only a small portion of your IRA each year starting at 70½. The required minimum distribution starts at 3.65% and creeps up a bit every year, but even at age 100 it’s only 15.87% of the total. You can leave the bulk of your IRA alone so it can continue to grow and bequeath the balance to your children.

Your heirs won’t get the money tax free. They typically will be required to make withdrawals to empty the account within 10 years and pay income taxes on those withdrawals. Previously, they were allowed to spread required minimum distributions over their own lifetimes. Congress recently changed that to require faster payouts because the intent of IRA deductions was to encourage saving for retirement, not transfer large sums to heirs.

The Roth IRA is an exception to the above rules. There’s no tax deduction when you contribute the money, but the money can be withdrawn tax-free in retirement or left alone — there are no required minimum distributions. Your children would be required to start distributions, but wouldn’t owe taxes on those withdrawals.

Credit scores measure Dad’s accounts, too

Dear Liz: I recently added myself onto my 95-year-old father’s two credit card accounts as an authorized user. I am his agent under a power of attorney and handle his finances. I noticed that after being added to those accounts, my credit scores increased. When he passes on, I plan to close those accounts. Will my credit score be negatively affected?

Answer: Possibly. Closing accounts doesn’t help your scores and may hurt them. Scoring formulas are sensitive to the amount of credit you have versus how much you’re using. Closing an account shrinks your available credit, and the formulas don’t like that.

If you have good scores and plenty of other open accounts, though, the damage from closing these accounts probably will be minor and short-lived.

When to claim a survivor benefit

Dear Liz: As a widower who just turned 60, what are the pros and cons of starting my survivor benefit now? My wife passed away at 55, after 20 years of marriage. My lifetime earnings are higher than hers. I am in good health and have not remarried (though I’m open to doing so). Finances are not an issue. I’m debating how long to continue to work. It seems my best Social Security approach is to claim the survivor benefit now, then later (perhaps at age 67 or 70) claim my own benefit. Your thoughts, please?

Answer: If you start any Social Security benefit before your own full retirement age, you will be subject to the earnings test that reduces your checks by $1 for every $2 you earn over a certain limit ($18,240 in 2020). So if you continue to work, it’s often best to delay starting benefits.

Your full retirement age is 66 years and 10 months if you were born in 1959. (It’s 67 for people born in 1960 and later.) Once you reach full retirement age, the earnings test disappears. You could collect the survivor benefit and leave your own alone to grow. Once your benefit maxes out at age 70, you could switch.

Liz Weston, Certified Financial Planner, is a personal finance columnist for NerdWallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizweston.com.


WASHINGTON — 

The Trump administration has built up the biggest backlog of unfunded toxic Superfund clean-up projects in at least 15 years, nearly triple the number that were stalled for lack of money in the Obama era, according to 2019 figures quietly released by the Environmental Protection Agency over the winter holidays.

The accumulation of Superfund projects that are ready to go except for money comes as the Trump administration routinely proposes funding cuts for Superfund and for the EPA in general. The four-decade-old Superfund program is meant to tackle some of the most heavily contaminated sites in the U.S. and Trump has declared it a priority even while seeking to shrink its budget.

“There hasn’t been a sense of urgency,” said Violet Donoghue, who has lived for 31 years on Bon Brae Street in St. Clair Shores, Mich. Toxic PCBs have poisoned some local soil, water and fish at nearby Lake St. Clair, and the neighborhood is one of the 34 Superfund sites where clean-up projects languished for lack of money in 2019.

“I feel many people have been harmed,” Donoghue said. She said the last word she heard from the EPA was that cotaminated soil would be removed from the front of her house. “Now when they say they’re cleaning it, I say, ‘OK, give me the date,’” she said.

The unfunded projects are in 17 states and Puerto Rico. They range from abandoned mines that discharged heavy metals and arsenic in the West to an old wood pulp site in Mississippi and a defunct dry cleaner that released toxic solvents in North Carolina.

Congress created the Superfund program in 1980 after toxic waste dumped at a landfill in Love Canal, N.Y., made hundreds sick and other notorious pollution cases. Its intent is to hold polluters responsible for cleanup costs or provide taxpayer money when no responsible party can be identified.

Trump “is focused on putting Americans first,” EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler told a Senate environment committee early 2019. “There may be no better example than our success in the Superfund program.”

“We are in the process of cleaning up some of the nation’s largest, most complex sites and returning them to productive use,” Wheeler said then.

But two former EPA officials whose work dealt with Superfund oversight said the growing backlog of stalled projects under the Trump administration, and steady or ebbing numbers of clean-up construction projects completed, point to a different picture.

“They’re misleading Congress and the public about the funds that are needed to really protect the public from exposure to the toxic chemicals,” said Elizabeth Southerland, who worked for 30 years at the EPA, including as director of science and technology in the water office, before retiring in 2017. “It’s detrimental.”

This is a “regulatory failure,” said Judith Enck, who served as the EPA’s regional northeastern U.S. administrator under President Obama.

Given the growing numbers of unfunded clean-up projects, the EPA “should be knocking on the door of Congress and saying, give us more money to deal with the sites,” Enck said.

Asked what the EPA spent money on instead and why the agency didn’t ask Congress for more to deal with the growing backlog, EPA spokeswoman Maggie Sauerhage offered few specifics Thursday.

The EPA’s Superfund program “will continue to prioritize new construction projects based on which sites present the greatest risk to human health and the environment,” Sauerhage said in an email. “Further, the agency maintains the authority to respond to and fund emergencies at these sites if there is an imminent threat to human health and the environment.”

She pointed to some areas where Trump’s Superfund effort was more on par with that of his predecessors. Long-term remedial efforts to make sure contamination didn’t rebound at existing Superfund sites, for example, averaged 64 a year under Trump. That compares with an average of 60 a year in Obama’s last five years.

But overall, the backlog of 34 unfunded projects is up from only 12 in 2016, Obama’s last year.

At the site of another of 2019’s unfunded Superfund projects, Montana’s Upper Tenmile mining region, which includes the community of Rimini and a subdivision downstream, the EPA has been providing bottled water to residents for the past decade because local water supplies have been polluted by about 150 abandoned gold, lead and copper mines.

Pollution still flows from the mines into Upper Tenmile Creek more than 20 years after the area was added to the Superfund list.

About six miles from Rimini in the rural Landmark subdivision is a huge pile of contaminated soil that was removed from residential yards. It was supposed to be hauled away but now has weeds growing over it after sitting untouched for several years, said Patrick Keim, who lives nearby.

“It’s a sword of Damocles hanging over us,” Keim said. “It just seems counterproductive they would spend two or three million dollars remediating this piece of property, haul it off and stockpile it across the road and then run out of money and leave this big pile for everybody to look at.”

Montana environmental regulators also are involved in the cleanup but say they need the EPA to come through with money for the work to resume, since the federal agency is providing 90% of funding.

Under Trump, the EPA has pointed to a different yardstick in declaring it was making progress on Superfund clean-ups — the number of cleaned-up sites officially deleted from the roster of more than 1,300 Superfund sites.

In 2019, for instance, the EPA said it had deleted all or part of 27 sites from the official Superfund list, saying that was the most deletions since the George W. Bush administration. But deletions from the list typically reflect clean-up work done over decades and often completed on the ground years ago, meaning Trump is sometimes taking credit for work done under his predecessors.

In 2018, for example, the EPA cited the seven Superfund sites fully or partially removed from the list in the previous year as a signature accomplishment of the Trump administration. Records showed the physical work was completed before Trump took office, the Associated Press reported at the time.

Sauerhage, the EPA spokeswoman, did not directly respond to questions about the backlog of 34 unfunded Superfund clean-up projects. The EPA posted the total on its website without fanfare the day after Christmas. Some of the projects that are ready to start have languished for lack of money since Trump’s first year in office.

The EPA has been one of the main focuses of Trump’s efforts to cut federal regulations and oversight that he sees as burdening businesses. Trump each year has asked Congress for nearly one-third cuts in EPA’s budget, and has sought much smaller cuts for Superfund.

Congress has kept both levels of funding roughly even.


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