A B C D E F G
1 First Name Last Name Email Address Organization State Comment Additional Document
2 Shawn Dolqan sdolan50@msn.com Sustainable Skys I read the monitoring for the control device installed annually but I do not read the monitoring of the visible emissions for the facilities. Is this rule subject to another rule that regulates visible emissions from the furnaces?  
3 Melody Roth mroth97@msn.com OR I am a full-time health professional and part-time glass artist from Portland, OR. I work in a studio that is owned by a sole proprietor who provides classes, open studio time, equipment and that produces architectural glass pieces for sale to retailers across the U.S.

I have been interested in glass for many years, but it took a health scare experience for me to really begin creating with glass. I ground myself with focus on the color, the feel and the activity. It is a wonderful stress reducer and an opportunity to help by giving gifts of glass to support others during their difficult times. If the studio that I work in is unable to survive, I and many others will have no place to work.

I live in SE Portland, OR where Bullseye has been under scrutiny for emitting heavy metals from their exhaust stacks during glass production. In an industrial area where there is an intermodal train yard and diesel truck exhaust, a cement company and many other industries tucked in between neighborhoods, we would expect to see these metals. Uroboros, another Portland-based glass producer is in an industrial area between two freeways that carry a high load of truck traffic, is close to train tracks and a switching yard. Did you know that diesel exhaust produces chromium, manganese, mercury, selenium, arsenic, cadmium, lead, nickel and many more chemicals that are dangerous to our health?

The Governor of Oregon issued a Cease & Desist order twice to Bullseye without specifically identifying the source of emission. DEQ, Oregon Health Authority, EPA and our elected officials across the country seem to be pointing to the production at Bullseye as the definitive culprit. Fused art glass is limited in production in the US to 6 small manufacturers. Many are in industrial areas where they belong. However, this does make it challenging to identify the real sources of toxins to more accurately deal with the air quality issue.

We all want cleaner air. We all want a thriving economy and jobs. While Bullseye employs about 125 people, many thousands of people depend on their success worldwide to support their families and to pay taxes. They export about 35% of their production. They are a strong contributor to our community both in special projects and income. Bullseye attracts tourism revenue in many of our service sectors due to classes, tours and retail sales of products.

Bullseye is at present adding baghouses to their furnaces that will allow them to produce glass with 99.9% filtration rate. It is difficult to meet the deadlines for installation when nearly 80% of production had been shut down for a period of time, and at present are strictly limited, with limited impact on air quality.

As recent air monitoring data has shown, there has been little change in air quality since Bullseye has been limited in their production. That points to a stronger likelihood of other bigger contributors in the neighborhood. Please use objective scientific methods and data and consult with glass professionals for advice in making sound decisions when developing pollution control solutions for the glass art industry. Please be fair in application of rules to art glass manufacturers. Please consider the impact on jobs, tax revenues, and the limited win on pollution control when applying subjective and stringent rules on the glass industry with short notification in relationship to the environments they operate in. This effort has a huge financial impact and may well cause production to shift overseas. Sending production to China will not clean our air. It will not support the Oregonians who work in the art glass industry, nor any of those across our continent and the rest of the world. It will not provide any tax revenues.

Thank you for your time. Please consider using scientific data to have a real impact on our health and air quality, on art and our economy as changes are made in environmental regulations.

Sincerely,
Melody Roth
 
4 Susan Zarit slzarit@msn.com Mind and Soul Art Washington Mr. Westersund,

You had asked for people to comment about the fiscal impact of the permanent ruling on the glass industry. However, it has come to my attention that, perhaps, you may be disregarding those of us that are outside the State of Oregon. I do hope I am misinformed. As I had stated in my previous comment, Bullseye Glass Co. is not an island unto itself. It is an integral part of a much larger community...a community of thousands of people to be somewhat exact. Therefore, the decisions you, the DEQ and the EPA, make have a very far reaching effect. Therefore, Mr. Westersund, statements from people outside of Oregon are just as valid as those from within because Oregon is not an island unto itself either.

Now, having said all of that, I am the owner of Mind and Soul Art. I do not make money as I donate my art work to various charities for auctions and other fundraisers. Actually, I helped Eugene's Relay for Life. They have been the largest fundraiser's for that organization. Did you know that? I also help organizations within my own State of Washington: Mosaic, The Answer for Youth, My choices, local animal shelters, etc. I help nation/international organizations: American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, Walk in My Shoes, American Cancer Society, Autism Speaks, etc. My point in listing some these organizations is to point out that the financial impact is not only about making a living, supporting a family, supporting employees. It is all of those and more.

If you would like some examples of how "out-of-Staters" have a more direct fiscal impact in this matter, please allow me to give you a few examples. I was just recently in Portland for a 5-day education class at Bullseye. Now, I came down a day early, so that's 6 days at a hotel. I stayed at the Oxford Inn & Suites at Jantzen Beach because I thoroughly enjoyed my stay there from the last time I was in town for a Bullseye education class. While in town, I had to purchase food. I also needed to purchase other items I forgot to pack. like a good pair of sturdy shoes. Now, my family joined me during my stay. While I was in class, they were out sightseeing and spending tourism dollars. Now, I was not the only "out-of-Stater" at this class. Bullseye has a large selection of education classes. This draws in many people who spend money in your State.

Please consider all sides of this discussion when making your decision. We all want clean air. I don't want to see what happened to Spectrum Glass (Woodinville,WA) happen to Bullseye or any other glass company.
 
5 Leora Druckman leorad@aol.com na Michigan *Why closing Bullseye could mean the death of an international industry.*

I make glass art, not for a living, but simply because I love it. But, I respect the many tens of thousands of people around the globe who depend on art glass for their living. This includes talented artists who make beautiful works of art by cutting, melting, shaping, casting and blowing this amazing material. It includes the galleries that sell these works of art; the many wholesale and retail businesses that sell glass tools and materials; the instructors who make their living teaching this ancient craft; the manufacturers of kilns, glass tools, enamels and other additives; and, of course, those who make art glass - the specialty glass required for almost all of today's modern glass crafts. Bullseye is, by far, the primary producer of art glass in the world. Without Bullseye, the art glass industry may cease to exist.

But how can a single producer in an industry this large have such a huge impact? Aren't there other colored glass producers in the world?

Yes, other companies produce colored glass, but only a few produce colored glass that can actually be used in creating art glass. There are a few producers of colored glass who make glass primarily used to create stained glass, but the glass they make can not be used when creating blown, kiln melted, lampworked or cast glass art. All of which combine multiple colors of glass under high heat and constitute the vast majority of glass art today.

There are only a few companies that make glass that can be used in this way. The largest and most experienced is Bullseye. Bullseye is the only major producer of a full color range of 90 COE (coefficient of expansion) glass. Most glass artists use either 90 COE or 96 COE glass. In fact, many restrict their studios to one or the other. Why? While two pieces of colored art glass may look exactly alike, when pieces of COE 90 and COE 96 are combined though heat, hours or even months of work can be destroyed. Glasses with different COEs pull away from each other in heat, causing cracks, warping, breaking and often, one big mess.

Bullseye created and perfected the manufacturing processes and technology for producing glass that is COE compatible across an entire product line. Before Bullseye did this, most of the magnificent glass art you see today would not have been possible. Because of their vast selection, rigorous 90 COE testing, high quality and excellent (and very generous) production of educational materials, most in the art glass business primarily stock and use Bullseye glass. The only other major competition comes from producers of COE 96 colored art glass. COE 96 glass is produced almost exclusively by two businesses, Spectrum glass (which just announced that they are going out of business) and Uroboros. The 90 COE and 96 COE glass manufacturers have provided healthy competition with each other in an industry with few competitors. The majority of the rest of the glass produced in the world is of uncertain and/or inconsistent COE and therefore unusable for making most art glass.

Usually, businesses do not rely primarily on one supplier for their business needs. Because of the difficulty of producing quality, COE compatible glass, the art glass industry is different. Bullseye is the only major producer of COE 90 compatible glass. Even if everyone in the art glass business attempted to switch to COE 96 glass, many businesses would go under due to the cost of switching all their glass and supporting materials. The art glass industry (like many businesses) is still recovering from the recent recession. Also, due to the death of Spectrum, it is unlikely that enough COE 96 glass in the needed range of colors will be available as soon as it would be needed. And, if Uroboros receives the same treatment as Bullseye, it may end up out of business like its sister Spectrum.

Please consider this unique and valuable international industry when making decisions involving Bullseye. Clearly, the company is showing a willingness to improve their impact on the environment as they have already started implementing filtering systems and have offered a plan for reduced emissions. Consider giving time for the company to adjust so it can continue to survive while making these important decisions. And, be very, very sure that the data you are using to make these decisions is accurate and actually leads to any conclusions you decide to make before you destroy a entire industry.
 
6 Bonnie Sparlin sparlin1059@charter.net Glass Artist Oregon Glass art has been an important part of culture for 100's of years. Please work with our glass companies to keep to find a solution so we can keep this art form alive.  
7 Debbie Harary Debbieharary@gmail.com Harary Glass Studio. Owner Massachusetts As a working glass artist. I support myself and my family in this manner. The glass i ise is only american made to keep business within our own country viable. Bullseye glass company is my source for my medium. Without this i would no longer be able to create my art and sustain a lifestyle. Please consider the implications to all glass artists across the nation if our source for quality glass is not available  
8 Janet Davis janetd010100@gmail.com LA Art glass manufacturers, plus their suppliers and customers, are important to the economy everywhere. Give them regulations to follow and time to meet them. We do not want to lose MORE glass manufacturing to China.  
9 Bobbi Lolby Bobb1e@aol.com Montana I have been using stained glass and fusing glass now for 40 years. The joy I personly get from a finished item is so satisfying. Yes I believe we need to save our planet but make the goals of better filters or reducing what goes into the air liveable for the manufactures. They can complie but in what time frame? Putting people out of work does no good. From the plants that produce the glass right down to the little guy artists. I am retired and when possible I buy beautiful colored glass. And the products from China do not compare to what is made here in the USA. Please make sure this manufacturing if colored glass remains here in the USA.  
10 Celie Mayer csmayer46@gmail.com Arkansas Fused glass is a family affair for 3 generations of my family. I would appreciate it if you would find a way to help control the pollution rather than shutting factories down. The loss of a USA manufacturer would probably cause the price of glass to rise forcing hobbiest out of their hobby.  
11 MM Walter mm.newleaf@gmail.com from Ella Ross GA Good afternoon, I am writing to let you know how important my ability to obtain the beautiful glass of Bullseye is to my business. I have a small but nice fused glass business in Atlanta, GA. I do not know how my business can continue if the glass Bullseye produces is discontinued. I do believe we should not taint the air we breathe and sincerely hope all the parties involved will seek a reasonable and mutually beneficial solution so that I can continue in my business. Thanks, MM  
12 Donna Coffin redheron@aol.com Red Heron Handprints and Glass art Florida Glass art is very important to me. I am an artist and use this media to make a living and express my views on life around me. My work has been sold all around the world.  
13 Carol Rasmussen Theglasscat@comcast.net Illinois I hope you will give the glass manufacturers time to comply with the new rules and restrictions. It would severely hurt my passion and livelihood if the manufacturing of colored art glass left the USA.
I have been creating glass art for the last 30 years.
 
14 Terri Johanson Terrijohanson@terrijohansonartglass.com Terri Johanson Art Glass, member of the Oregon Glass Guild Gorge Chapter Washington I am a glass artist in the Columbia River Gorge and although I currently live in Washington I was a long-time Oregon resident. I have experience with state rule-making and I understand the pressures exerted by the passions of diverse stakeholders. I urge that the process resist rules responding to hypothetical and/or "what if" ideas that may be presented; but rather that the standards be set to align with scientific evidence of toxicity levels and the rules should include procedures for continued monitoring and response processes.

I have extensive experience working with the 2 glass manufacturers in Portland. I know them to be responsible and responsive business people. In addition to their desire to produce the glass products that we use for our art and to make a reasonable profit, they are also people who want to be sure that they are keeping their employees, customers and communities safe and healthy. The rule-making that is currently in process MUST place equal responsibility on those who monitor and regulate the environmental impacts of manufacturing as on the manufacturers. The rules must require consistent and immediate communication with manufacturers to initiate a collaborative problem-solving process to address any real or perceived problem. Also reasonable time frames must be established for initiating or installing any equipment or process to resolve such problems. Without a positive and reasonable regulatory and monitoring process in place both industry (not just the glass industry) and the regulatory agencies that carry public responsibility for setting and monitoring the standards are vulnerable to media generated hysteria that can result in unreasoned and unfair responses. Industry cannot respond to issues that emerge beyond the existing requirements and/or without appropriate notification and problem-solving efforts between the regulators and the industry representatives. Public fear is a dynamic and powerful force which can cause undo harm to all concerned...to people who are, or imagine that they are, or may be, harmed; to regulators caught without appropriate standards grounded in real science; and to the industries impacted by the rules and the standards. The rules must set not only standards, but also a proactive ongoing process that supports a healthy environment for both the population and the industries impacted.

It is highly unlikely that the recent environmental uproar in Portland was due to emissions from just the glass manufactures but also to others in the complex industrial environment that exists in the urban area. Therefore whatever rules emerge from this effort must be applied across the industrial entities that may be using the chemicals involved in these rules...and that the rules govern responsible operations of both the industry and the regulatory agencies involved.

The rules must also include requirements for regular review and amendments of the rules to respond to ungoing research and analysis of the environmental impacts of issues governed by the rules. Science has consistently shown that what is known or thought to be known is often revealed to be erroneous and/or misguided in light of new research and emerging knowledge.

This rule-making effort is serious business. The impacts are far-reaching. There are significant economic impacts not just on the glass industry and on the art world and artists who depend on its products, but also on the employees of the industry, the retailers who serve the art community and the economy of the communities involved.

The health impacts of these rules must also be evaluated in light of grounded research of the potential for and/or existing demonstration of harm. Fear, supposition and imagined or media hyped harm should not influence or guide the rule making process.





 
15 Terri Johanson Terrijohanson@terrijohansonartglass.com Terri Johanson Art Glass, member of the Oregon Glass Guild Gorge Chapter Washington I am a glass artist in the Columbia River Gorge and although I currently live in Washington I was a long-time Oregon resident. I have experience with state rule-making and I understand the pressures exerted by the passions of diverse stakeholders. I urge that the process resist rules responding to hypothetical and/or "what if" ideas that may be presented; but rather that the standards be set to align with scientific evidence of toxicity levels and the rules should include procedures for continued monitoring and response processes.

I have extensive experience working with the 2 glass manufacturers in Portland. I know them to be responsible and responsive business people. In addition to their desire to produce the glass products that we use for our art and to make a reasonable profit, they are also people who want to be sure that they are keeping their employees, customers and communities safe and healthy. The rule-making that is currently in process MUST place equal responsibility on those who monitor and regulate the environmental impacts of manufacturing as on the manufacturers. The rules must require consistent and immediate communication with manufacturers to initiate a collaborative problem-solving process to address any real or perceived problem. Also reasonable time frames must be established for initiating or installing any equipment or process to resolve such problems. Without a positive and reasonable regulatory and monitoring process in place both industry (not just the glass industry) and the regulatory agencies that carry public responsibility for setting and monitoring the standards are vulnerable to media generated hysteria that can result in unreasoned and unfair responses. Industry cannot respond to issues that emerge beyond the existing requirements and/or without appropriate notification and problem-solving efforts between the regulators and the industry representatives. Public fear is a dynamic and powerful force which can cause undo harm to all concerned...to people who are, or imagine that they are, or may be, harmed; to regulators caught without appropriate standards grounded in real science; and to the industries impacted by the rules and the standards. The rules must set not only standards, but also a proactive ongoing process that supports a healthy environment for both the population and the industries impacted.

It is highly unlikely that the recent environmental uproar in Portland was due to emissions from just the glass manufactures but also to others in the complex industrial environment that exists in the urban area. Therefore whatever rules emerge from this effort must be applied across the industrial entities that may be using the chemicals involved in these rules...and that the rules govern responsible operations of both the industry and the regulatory agencies involved.

The rules must also include requirements for regular review and amendments of the rules to respond to ungoing research and analysis of the environmental impacts of issues governed by the rules. Science has consistently shown that what is known or thought to be known is often revealed to be erroneous and/or misguided in light of new research and emerging knowledge.

This rule-making effort is serious business. The impacts are far-reaching. There are significant economic impacts not just on the glass industry and on the art world and artists who depend on its products, but also on the employees of the industry, the retailers who serve the art community and the economy of the communities involved.

The health impacts of these rules must also be evaluated in light of grounded research of the potential for and/or existing demonstration of harm. Fear, supposition and imagined or media hyped harm should not influence or guide the rule making process.





 
16 CLAUDIA SPORTELLI CLAUDY25189@HOTMAIL.IT ITALY I truly believe that if we leave that the art glass dissapear we are going just to lose all the purity in the world. Glass art is a way to bring people to their purity which got lost when we start to live as adult. Please, don't leave the world to became an unbright place... https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/75b056f0-c939-4dff-875d-01895ebaa78d?filename=IMG_1321.JPG&content_type=image%2Fjpeg
17 William Punch bill.punch@gmail.com Hobby Glassblower MI I was very lucky to have realized my life's dream when a glassblower set up shop in my small Michigan town (Williamston, Fireworks Glass). I have been taking classes ever since. Now, I cannot participate in my hobby due to the lack of glass. I had promised my son I would create glass for his wedding day on May 20th 2017 but that looks like it might not happen.

Please allow these good people to maintain their art. It is important to me, and many other people, not just because it is my hobby but because it brings so much beauty into the world.

-- Bill Punch
 
18 Karen Sharbo Karensharbo@me.com Hilltop Studio Texas This is like asking do we really need French Horrns. Glass isn't a new creation. It dates back thousands of years....maybe more. Colored glass is an intragal part of art just as each musical instrument, eg. French Horns, are used to complete a musical score. Right now, worldwide, thousands of artists are earning a livings using colored glass in hot, warm and cold applications to earnings a living. Colored glass is the heart and soul of everything from church windows to the space industry. It adorns skyscrapers, dinner tables and fashionistas. It is significant in religious symbols and prescription eye wear. Don't throw out the baby witht the bathroom water. Right now Oregon has the finest manufactured colored glass in the world. You have an industry that feeds your locals as well as many in the world. Take a global view, please?  
19 Karen Price karenjprice@gmail.com Missouri I am a glass artist who relies on fusible art glass made by Bullseye glass. I would not be able to continue as a glass artist if Bullseye was not able to continue making affordable fusible glass. Please know that glass artists like myself have invested a large amount of money in kilns, tools and supplies. Because my tools are specific to stained glass and warm glass, it would not be possible to reuse my tools in another capacity. Also, the companies which produce kilns and glass tools will also feel the repercussions of a negative decision. Please trust Bullseye Glass to produce fusible glass in a safe and responsible manner without adding additional restrictions that would decimate the industry.  
20 Trisa Swerdlow trisa_s@yahoo.com Trisa Swerdlow Studio California I depend on American made Art Glass for my business. I am an environmentalist. I believe the glass companies can and will update their systems if you give them the time (and maybe some tax credit help) to do so. https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/c38cd5d3-00d4-4338-951c-dd9323576057?filename=Trisa+Placer+Image.jpg&content_type=image%2Fjpeg
21 Peggy Orosz-Boslar Orosz789@gmail.com Boslar Jewelry Mi My husband and I are glass artists. My husband, a glass artist for over 40 years is a native of Portland OR and has worked exclusively with Bullseye Glass. I have been a glass artist for 20 years and also use Bullseye Glass exclusively.
We sell our work at art shows and galleries.
This is how we pay our bills.
The art shows bring visitors and create an influx of money into the various communities. The same with the galleries. These businesses have employees, pay local taxes and contribute to their communities.
If art glass is no longer produced, not only would my husband and I stand to lose our income, but the trickle down effect will cost jobs. No need for salespeople, no need for food servers, fewer places to eat out, less local taxes being paid, less money spent on family needs, school clothes, books, fewer parents involved in schools. The list goes on and on.
I live in Mi and have witnessed this many times through out the years. Local communities still have empty store fronts and children are left with fewer opportunities .
Please keep in mind that art glass is not just a hobby for people. It leads to the creation of jobs and yes, beauty.
Respectfully
Peggy Orosz-Boslar
 
22 Karen Sharbo Karensharbo@me.com Hilltop Studio Texas This is like asking do we really need French Horrns. Glass isn't a new creation. It dates back thousands of years....maybe more. Colored glass is an intragal part of art just as each musical instrument, eg. French Horns, are used to complete a musical score. Right now, worldwide, thousands of artists are earning a livings using colored glass in hot, warm and cold applications to earnings a living. Colored glass is the heart and soul of everything from church windows to the space industry. It adorns skyscrapers, dinner tables and fashionistas. It is significant in religious symbols and prescription eye wear. Don't throw out the baby witht the bathroom water. Right now Oregon has the finest manufactured colored glass in the world. You have an industry that feeds your locals as well as many in the world. Take a global view, please?  
23 Angela Cottingham angiecottingham@hotmail.com none Texas It is important that we have glass suppliers like bullseye for many different reasons. I got into glass as a major hobby after my father unexpected passed away. It is a hobby that has since then allowed me to have an escape/stress reliever ever since. There are not many glass suppliers that are able to supply quality glass. Or this particular COE that is used for fusing. There are other glass suppliers but mostly for lampworking or for stained glass. Stained glass does not need a COE rating in order to use since you are not heating it. But bullseye provides quality glass with true stable colors that allow fusing to be possible. Fusing and other uses for Bullseye glass are very important for a lot of people, some their lively hoods relay on it. For me my sanity and relieving of stress relies on it. Without Art glass I do not know what I would do. Glass is beautiful and there are so many different thing you can do with it. Even your mistakes can be refired and turned beautiful.  
24 Vi Laux Dvkj@msn.com Craftsmanship Guild of Pittsburgh Pa Save American Glass, there are thousands of lives effected by the loose of glass. Not only in manufacturing of glass, thousands of artists and glass purchasers. Keeping the price and quality affordable is extremely important. So that we can afford to create and customers can afford to purchase.  
25 Jan Simpson Janatkoru@Gmail.com Koru arts United kingdom Without the extremely specialist coloured glass produced by American companies such as Bullseye, Uroboros etc, myself, my employees and countless other UK based small businesses would be unable to continue in business. This would have a huge knock on effect to kiln suppliers, mold manufacturers, lighting companies, interior designers, religious institutions, who would be unable to sell their specialist products or obtain their architectural installations. The industry is much larger then is visible and many people have spent many years developing their scientific methods and techniques. Without the materials to continue this development a lot of families would have lost huge investment - in my case 17 years, in many other people's cases, a great deal more.  
26 barbara domsky domskyglass@aol.com domsky glass nevada My husband and I have been professional glass workers since 1990. We have built, and continue to build our livelihood on the art we create from fused and hot glass. This is a craft we have passed down to a new generation of emerging glass artists. to illuminate the production of the medium we require would be to remove my very ability to support myself and my family. Please we beg that you consider those who require the very glass that we have built our lives upon. and consider the devastating results of elimination.  
27 Charity Heroux Gotdichro@yahoo.com SOURGiRL glass art California Hello,

I have been working with glass for the last fifteen years. Wow, to see it in print like that is amazing. I feel so fortunate to have found the art form that makes me whole. From the minute I saw dichroic glass, I was hooked. I have been madly in love ever since.

I started out small, making things for myself and gifts for others, but with hard work and sacrifice (so much sacrifice) I have built a business and a name I am very proud of. I was born to make this art, and I cannot do it without companies like Bullseye and Uroboros.

Over the last several months the Art Glass industry has been under fire for emissions that the companies were unaware of. As soon as they found out they were emitting the toxins they voluntarily  stopped production and manufacturing using any of the compounds in question until they are able to install filtration on their furnaces. The Office of the Governor and the DEQ have made it very difficult for these companies to continue working while they try to come up to code with the new and swiftly changing  regulations, but Bullseye and Uroboros have worked very hard to comply. The Cease and Desist issued by the Governor all but crippled Bullseye, prohibiting them from raising any capital to meet the new filtration requirements. But still, they have persevered.
They believe in this industry. They believe that this art form must survive.

I believe Bullseye glass when they say they want to comply with the new standards. I have known and worked with these people for fifteen years, they are truly GOOD people. I believe they want to make their facility as clean as they possibly can. They just need your help to do it.

What I am asking for is your help to keep this American industry alive. There are no known facilities that produce the glass these companies make outside of the USA. This does not just affect fused glass but stained, flameworked, and blown glass as well. The agrument here is not against the new regs, it is against the timeline and restrictions in which the EPA and DEQ are requiring changes. Bullseye cannot stay afloat if they can't come up for air.

In order for these companies to survive they need time to install the new baghouses. They need time to raise money (by making glass to sell) to be able to afford these baghouses, as they are all family owned companies. America was built on the sweat of small companies like these.

So please, we need to help this amazing artform stay alive in the USA. Their closure will impact the glass art movement world wide if this industry does not survive. This is an international industry primarily made up of American companies supplying the entire world of Glass Artists. We cannot do this without you.


Help us keep American jobs in America!


Thank you so much for your time,

Charity Ann Heroux

SOURGiRL glass art 
 
28 Jill Mooney Jillmoon4655@gmail.com Texas Having recently retired I had assumed I would be having much more time to teach fused glass. Fused glass is an art and we all recognize the arts are not being taught in schools anymore so we must provide this service. Don't take this art away from the kids.  
29 Carolyn Sturdivant cps47@bellsouth.net Old House Glass Works MS I am the artist/owner of the above stated business in the State of Mississippi. I am absolutely dependent of American glass manufacturers to keep my business viable. Bullseye Glass and other Washington State glass manufacturers are under Federal pressure that has and still may force other glass businesses to close their doors. If it continues, I will also be forced to close my business. The artists that work in glass are proud that our art work is solely produced in the United States and we strongly urge you to see that this does NOT change.  
30 Kathleen White glassclass101@gmail.com Glass Class Art California i am a fused glass artist and teacher who relies on the availability of compatible glasses for my work. As I'm sure you are aware, Bullseye is part of a very small group of manufacturers of this comodity, and the loss of Bullseye or Uroboros would send this industry overseas, likely to China, where there is little oversight of the environment or the quality of the end product. Please do all that is possible to work with the industry to keep it in the US, and to make it as clean an operation as is possible. The history of American Art glass is long and proud, don't let it end here!  
31 Kathleen White glassclass101@gmail.com Glass Class Art California i am a fused glass artist and teacher who relies on the availability of compatible glasses for my work. As I'm sure you are aware, Bullseye is part of a very small group of manufacturers of this comodity, and the loss of Bullseye or Uroboros would send this industry overseas, likely to China, where there is little oversight of the environment or the quality of the end product. Please do all that is possible to work with the industry to keep it in the US, and to make it as clean an operation as is possible. The history of American Art glass is long and proud, don't let it end here!  
32 Robin Houck houck@consolidated.net Artsajoy! Texas I am an artist that works exclusively with fusible glass, making art glass cabochons for jewelry. I also have several jewelry makers that would be very disappointed if I was not able to supply them anymore!  
33 Marina Vrouvlianis mvrouv@hotmail.com Mrs. MA while growing up, I always had a yearning to collect glass art! And one day I was blessed with the opportunity to actually make this kind of art! The joy and fulfillment have been overwhelming. I would be crushed it this was lost....

 
34 Gayle Bamber Clanbamber@aol.com California I have been a registered nurse for almost 50 years and am still working full time. This is a demanding and offer high pressure job. I started fusing glass seventeen or eighteen years ago and hove found the creative outlet to be invaluable to my mental health. In addition to giving me a creative outlet it has given me a positive connection with many of my patients, often bringing light, color and joy to their lives. My world and theirs would be much darker without this outlet.  
35 Professor Sandra Feder sandy_feder@hotmail.com Sacramento City College California I am a college professor in California. I have been making art glass for 40 years. Colored glass is critical to what I make. These companies MUST continue to make colored glass for this art form to survive. The entire world uses colored glass created in Oregon. Don't stop production of colored glass in Oregon.  
36 Dawn LaBonte dawnl23644@gmail.com MA I am very concerned as a glass artist about the situation the glass manufacturing industry is in. I am certain they want to comply with any and all regulations put forth for safe operation. It can not be done overnight. If these companies are put out of business because they cannot comply within a reasonable time frame, my livelihood and passion will be denied to me. Please allow these companies to remain open and operating till the changes are made. My future as a glass artist will be in jeopardy if the American glass industry is put out of business.  
37 kate lindley lindleykk@aol.com wa Glass fusing is important to me. As a veterinarian I spend my days in service to others and I center myself to prevent burn out in my studio.  
38 Dennis Brady brady@debrady.com Victrian Art Glass BC I spent 35 years and raised my family with glass art. My 2 sons have taken over the business I created and expect to raise their family reliant on it. Loss of some glass makers will seriously harm us - BUT the bigger issue is one of environmental ethics. If a glass maker can nt make glass without distributing toxins into the environment, they should be shut down. No exception. No exemption. Clean it up or shut it down.  
39 Carol Korfin Carol@glassgiraffe.com California These companies have been following all prescribed procedures and are being treated unfairly. Do not throw the baby out with the bath water. Give them a fair shake. They are willing to compromise,y  
40 Rebecca Dunbar Dunbarrj@aol.com Illinois Art glass manufacturers are the foundation of numerous small businesses and craftmen alike. The long legacy of this industry in the U.S. in one that is world renowned. To put these factories, artsts and small businesses at risk combined with sending another American I did try to SE Asia is not what this country deserves. Please consider the depth of the impact of your decision. Please keep the glass manufacturing here in America.  
41 Vicki McPhail vickimcphail55@gmail.com The Glass Diva Cambridge Ontario I would like to say that the demands being put on the glass manufacturers are making it very hard for the whole glass community. I make my living from my glass work. If I am unable to keep purchasing art glass then that means you have just put me out of business and taken away my livelyhood. Please consider the impact you will be having on not just the USA but world wide for those who buy American made art glass.  
42 James Wright vvrjim@yahoo.com Recycled Iron and Glass Calif We supplement our retirement making things from Bullseye glass. We have invested heavily in glass equipment in the last two years tp loose our glass supplier would kill our small Bis  
43 Sherry Salito-Forsen Glassicsart@gmail.com Glassics CA I am a fused glass artist. I have been making my living creating glass art since 1976. I rely solely on the sheet glass that Bullseye Glass makes. If they were to go under, so would I. Please consider that there are thousands of artist who rely on their glass. Please allow them enough time to comply with requirements.
Thank you
Sherry Salito-Forsen
www.glassicsart.com
 
44 Carol Gault cgault@rof.net Aspen Light Imaging Colorado I am a strong advocate for the improvement of the quality of air and water. Bullseye glass had been asked to change their production to lessen their impact on the environment around them by Oregon. It is my understanding that they are trying to put these changes in place. So, I am confused as to why they are being penalized for not having it done in a time frame that is impossible to meet. They may to close down their production. Bullseye glass makes a product that is important to me and my company. I am new to glass fusing but have planned different products that I want to sell using Bullseye glass and other products they make. If their glass is no longer available, it will set me back many months as I try new glass for my product development. Also, I will have to source glass from out of the country at greater expense and time waiting for delivery. Also, ordering from overseas can cause more damage to the environment with shipping fuels expended and no guarantees that that company doesn't pollute their country with its production. Thank you for your consideration. Carol Gault  
45 Carol Gault cgault@rof.net Aspen Light Imaging Colorado I am a strong advocate for the improvement of the quality of air and water. Bullseye glass had been asked to change their production to lessen their impact on the environment around them by Oregon. It is my understanding that they are trying to put these changes in place. So, I am confused as to why they are being penalized for not having it done in a time frame that is impossible to meet. They may to close down their production. Bullseye glass makes a product that is important to me and my company. I am new to glass fusing but have planned different products that I want to sell using Bullseye glass and other products they make. If their glass is no longer available, it will set me back many months as I try new glass for my product development. Also, I will have to source glass from out of the country at greater expense and time waiting for delivery. Also, ordering from overseas can cause more damage to the environment with shipping fuels expended and no guarantees that that company doesn't pollute their country with its production. Thank you for your consideration. Carol Gault  
46 Kim Smith abednego.smith@gmail.com Creative adventures caravan Canada I teach fused art glass to children through out the Edmonton,Alberta area. I teach close to 4000 children each year allowing them to explore the scientific and creative potential found in art glass. I exclusively use Bullseye art glass and have created this business on my own for the past six years. As a single mom this is the only income I have to raise my children. Glass art is my life.  
47 Kim Smith abednego.smith@gmail.com Creative adventures caravan Canada I teach fused art glass to children through out the Edmonton,Alberta area. I teach close to 4000 children each year allowing them to explore the scientific and creative potential found in art glass. I exclusively use Bullseye art glass and have created this business on my own for the past six years. As a single mom this is the only income I have to raise my children. Glass art is my life.  
48 Donna McClaren jenalib@me.com PA With regards to the current issues on plate glass makers - please do not forget that Nullseye and other manufacturers have already been working to resolve environmental impacts.

Please remember that shutting down American industries will continue to allow foreign companies who are not as concerned with environmental issues to fill those gaps - often with substandard product.

Please remember that layoffs due to closing those American manufacturers will affect your community by straining resources in an already difficult economy.

Please remember that it will affect those who may not live in Oregon as well. As a single mother, my artwork supplements my income just enough that I do not have to use public assistance programs. By closing down these manufacturers, you are now actively choosing to affect more than just Oregon.

Please remember these things when making your decision.
 
49 Dee Janssen dee@deejanssenglass.com Dee Janssen GlassWorks GA I'm a glass artist whose livelihood depends on there being materials to create my work. I sell wholesale and retail. While I agree that the glass companies - as well as all the other manufacturing companies in Portland - need to be in compliance, I do find it troublesome that you seem to be singling out only one specific industry. These are not major corporations with deep pockets, these are small companies who need time to purchase, install and test the needed filtering equipment.  
50 Kristin Young bulblet@hotmail.com Short Fuse Glass Alaska the pressure you have put on Bullseye has already caused the one Alaska distributor of Bullseye glass to go out of business. Your cease and desist order has already therefore severely impacted my business as I no longer have a local supplier of bullseye glass. If you continue to prevent Bullseye from operating, in spite of their good faith efforts to come into compliance, you will put me out of business as well. I know a certain state governor whose opponent in the next election will receive a donation from me.  
51 TJ Miller urbanglowartglass@live.com Urban Glow Art Glass Alberta, Canada Although I personally do not YET use the COE of glass that Bullseye produces, I know and have interacted with many glass artists that rely on it. Decisions made with you are far-reaching, way beyond Oregon and the US. Please keep this in mind when formulating your opinions and final decisions. Thank you.  
52 Kenneth Cowan ansilatoms@comcast.net self-employed artist Washington By being reactive and draconian, you could easily sink a large part of the economy, and negatively impact thousands of people all over the country and World...even destroying their way of life and way of making a living. Please don't do that THINKING you're saving the planet. Actually do your research before making any sweeping declarations, and shutting down thriving and vital businesses.  
53 Jennifer Francis Mommyfrancis2004@yahoo.com AZ I am a glass artist in AZ I order on average 10k worth of glass from Bullseye Glass every year. I have invested so much of my life into my art and love making beautiful art projects that I sell at art shows all over the west. This is my life! Please consider the people who are affected and work with the glass producers and not against them . This is an ancient art form that has been around for thousands of years and it will be China I buy my glass from if the glass makers go out of business here in the US. I like things made in America â�£  
54 Julie Sparks spjule@gmail.com Fused glass artist Alberta Canada As a glass artist, Bullseye has the best and safest product on the market. I have been to the area many times and believe there are many other industries that should be targeted for the same compliances. Artists like myself rely on their quality to produce a safe and superior project.  
55 Cheryl Forsman irishhick@gmail.com American Citizen Washington Leave them alone. They supply beauty, and we need more of that.  
56 Marla Montgomery mmngrace@msn.com Kiss My Glass Artist Florida I move to Mt. Dora Florida when I retired three years ago, having lived in Portland Oregon for 47yrs. I was self-employed and worked in my Day Spa 6 day a wk. 10-12hr. days. I told myself that one day, when I could retire I wanted to work with glass as a Kiln formed glass artist. Well I finally got my chance, spent lots of money learning practicing and now that I'm finally able to do art, my love of glass is Bulls eye Glass, from my home state. It is the very best glass, I love knowing that the money I spend on my glass goes to such an incredible company, both ethically, creatively and the way they treat their employees. It is very important to me that Bullseye is able to continue to not only do business in my beautiful Portland, but to thrive. When they thrive, their employees thrive and I get to also thrive. It is a wonderful company. I researched all my products thoroughly when I had my spa, for these very same reasons and that is why I chose Bullseye. Please do what you can to allow them to continue to do their work and their craft. Thank you. Marla Montgomery  
57 Clarann Bjers glasselegancems@gmail.com CA I am a glass artist in California. Im deeply concerned with the challenges and changes taking place in regards to colored glass production and availability. Not only will this effect my income but my passion. The availability of glass within the USA is crucial to this form of art. Why would the government not work with the companies, communities etc to come to a workable solution. I teach teens and children this art form. Many have said how they dont have many options in the art world...now what will the future look like to our upcoming generations if the red tape of bureaucracy force closures of our glass manufacturers? it will be a sad prospect to loose this art form because of the government s ruling......what happened to "of the people for the people".....a concept lost, freedom jeopardized for political gain.  
58 danny Beinsberger danny.beinsberger@telenet.be glass artist Belgium If production of this specialtyglass stops, it will mean that the artists all over the world will loose the colours they need to create the art objects they wanted to make...what a loss of culture...  
59 Tanya Veit info@aaeglass.com AAE Glass LLC Florida I have built a successful family glass art business in a relatively short amount of time. This I am proud of. What I am more proud of however is the amount of glass artists around the world I have been able to assist in building their businesses as well. Many have been able to leave their day jobs to pursue their passion as a glass artist. There are only a handful of colored glass manufacturers in the world and they are all in our beautiful United States, most being in your state of Oregon and the city of Portland. I truly hope that the decisions that are being made by the deq are fair, honest and based on facts, rather than guided by ulterior motives. There is a way to allow a business such as Bullseye glass to operate in a safe manner while improving air quality. Bullseye initiated immediate action to address the problem and has made it clear that they intend to be the most "clean" glass manufacturer in the world. Please allow them to conduct business under set and clear guidelines so we can assure the residents of Portland that their health is safe and we can continue to produce beautiful glass art that has been around for centuries. Thank you.  
60 Beth Ulrich bu626@yahoo.com Chester County Glass PA This is MY BUSINESS - please do not take that away from me - Glass effects a lot of people  
61 Theresa Bour t@bour.org Ar Please help us save our American made glass makers. I am sure there is enough of a demand that China will start making it. Do we want that?  
62 Gayle Potter pottergayle305@gmail.com Arizona I am writing to express my concern about the recent restrictions on the manufacturing of art glass, specifically Bullseye Glass. The availability of their glass is crucial to many artists in Arizona.  
63 Gayle Potter pottergayle305@gmail.com Arizona I am deeply concerned about the possibility of losing Bullseye glass. Many artists in Sedona are dependent on glass in order to produce a quality product.  
64 Lenore Hemingway lenhem@msn.com Mosaic Madness ARIZONA I want to emphasize the criticality of the impact to the small glass artist, as well as the overall glass community of suppliers and consumers who rely on being able to purchase glass at a reasonable cost. Significantly higher costs to the consumer will put many small businesses out of business very quickly--not what our nation needs right now.  
65 Beth Gershovich bbgartistry@gmail.com BBG Artistry NE Please don't shut down the Art Glass Suppliers. The medium of Art Glass is vast, and done with these techniques: blown, cast, fused, mosaic and Lampwork (done over a torch. You already forced a large and wonderful glass supplier, Spectrum, which many of us glass artists used religiously.
Many people around the world purchase glass art in the various mediums I listed above. Please work with the glass suppliers instead of shutting down the entire medium of Art Glass.
Sincerely,
Beth Gershovich
Glass Artist
 
66 Beth Gershovich bbgartistry@gmail.com BBG Artistry NE Please don't shut down the Art Glass Suppliers. The medium of Art Glass is vast, and done with these techniques: blown, cast, fused, mosaic and Lampwork (done over a torch. You already forced a large and wonderful glass supplier, Spectrum, which many of us glass artists used religiously.
Many people around the world purchase glass art in the various mediums I listed above. Please work with the glass suppliers instead of shutting down the entire medium of Art Glass.
Sincerely,
Beth Gershovich
Glass Artist
 
67 Gloria Fuller rgfuller@tds.net Lancaster High School WI Glass is extremely important in the art classroom. I teach over 300 students a year, times 26 years of art education, so far. We use glass constantly for clay projects, etching, fusing & stained glass. I can't begin to think about inspiring our youth without it.  
68 Jack DeNina jjack9485@yahoo.com fused glass artist Texas keep our air clean !!  
69 Glenda Melton gsm32423@live.com Fl I buy the majority of my glass from bullseye. Many small business glass owners depend upon the glass manufactures for the supplies we need to make our products. to us american made still means something  
70 Gloria Fuller rgfuller@tds.net Lancaster High School WI Glass is extremely important in the art classroom. I teach over 300 students a year, times 26 years of art education, so far. We use glass constantly for clay projects, etching, fusing & stained glass. I can't begin to think about inspiring our youth without it.  
71 Gloria Fuller rgfuller@tds.net Lancaster High School WI Glass is extremely important in the art classroom. I teach over 300 students a year, times 26 years of art education, so far. We use glass constantly for clay projects, etching, fusing & stained glass. I can't begin to think about inspiring our youth without it.  
72 Jessica Applegate applegatebrown@msn.com EPAC/Concerned citizen and neighbor of Bullseye OR Regard for the public health should be utmost in the decision making process and expedite emission controls installation. My family has been subjected to unfiltered emissions from Bullseye for decades. Knowing what we know now, it would seem the most protective of public health to consider the following when making these rules permanent. 1) Close loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces;
2) Apply state-wide;
3) Apply to all glass manufacturers;
4) Apply to all heavy metals;
5) Would ensure public notice and comment instead of locking the public out of DEQ decisions.
 
73 Jessica Applegate applegatebrown@msn.com EPAC/Concerned citizen and neighbor of Bullseye OR Regard for the public health should be utmost in the decision making process and expedite emission controls installation. My family has been subjected to unfiltered emissions from Bullseye for decades. Knowing what we know now, it would seem the most protective of public health to consider the following when making these rules permanent. 1) Close loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces;
2) Apply state-wide;
3) Apply to all glass manufacturers;
4) Apply to all heavy metals;
5) Would ensure public notice and comment instead of locking the public out of DEQ decisions.
 
74 Jessica Applegate applegatebrown@msn.com EPAC/Concerned citizen and neighbor of Bullseye OR Regard for the public health should be utmost in the decision making process and expedite emission controls installation. My family has been subjected to unfiltered emissions from Bullseye for decades. Knowing what we know now, it would seem the most protective of public health to consider the following when making these rules permanent. 1) Close loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces;
2) Apply state-wide;
3) Apply to all glass manufacturers;
4) Apply to all heavy metals;
5) Would ensure public notice and comment instead of locking the public out of DEQ decisions.
 
75 Jessica Applegate applegatebrown@msn.com EPAC/Concerned citizen and neighbor of Bullseye OR Regard for the public health should be utmost in the decision making process and expedite emission controls installation. My family has been subjected to unfiltered emissions from Bullseye for decades. Knowing what we know now, it would seem the most protective of public health to consider the following when making these rules permanent. 1) Close loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces;
2) Apply state-wide;
3) Apply to all glass manufacturers;
4) Apply to all heavy metals;
5) Would ensure public notice and comment instead of locking the public out of DEQ decisions.
 
76 Jessica Applegate applegatebrown@msn.com EPAC/Concerned citizen and neighbor of Bullseye OR Regard for the public health should be utmost in the decision making process and expedite emission controls installation. My family has been subjected to unfiltered emissions from Bullseye for decades. Knowing what we know now, it would seem the most protective of public health to consider the following when making these rules permanent. 1) Close loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces;
2) Apply state-wide;
3) Apply to all glass manufacturers;
4) Apply to all heavy metals;
5) Would ensure public notice and comment instead of locking the public out of DEQ decisions.
 
77 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years to poison people who live and work in our community. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down. Health-based regulations must be enacted on a statewide basis for ALL known sources of air pollution.  
78 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down. Health-based regulations must be enacted on a statewide basis for ALL known sources of air pollution.  
79 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down. Health-based regulations must be enacted on a statewide basis for ALL known sources of air pollution.  
80 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down. Health-based regulations must be enacted on a statewide basis for ALL known sources of air pollution.  
81 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down. Health-based regulations must be enacted on a statewide basis for ALL known sources of air pollution.  
82 april st. john aprilstjohn@gmail.com Oregon I live 5 blocks from bullseye glass with my husband and 3 young children (3months, 3 years and 6 years). This is our home and we deserve to breath clean air. The DEQ has failed to keep us safe in the past please don't fail us again. Public health should always come before private profits!  
83 James Ofsink james@ofsink.today Oregon As a resident of SE Portland my chief concern is for the health of my neighbors, friends, family, and community members. Like many Oregonians I was disturbed to learn about the high levels of heavy metals and other toxins discovered recently in our air. The primary goal of art glass regulation (and other industrial manufacturing regulation) should be to protect the wellbeing of workers, neighbors, and the environment around industrial sites. Resultantly I urge you to develop strong regulations with health-based standards to keep our neighborhood safe. These regulations should be mandatory and apply statewide to large and small manufacturers to make it possible for all Oregonians to breathe clean air. Additionally the health based standards should cover all heavy metals and hazardous air pollutants and take into account cumulative/interactive effects instead of pretending that people are exposed to a single pollutant in isolation. Finally, there must be sufficient monitoring and enforcement of the regulations. As we have seen, rules with largely self-monitoring and inadequate enforcement is not enough to stop toxic pollution. Monitoring should be conducted strategically at undisclosed times and should include fenceline monitoring as well as more general assessment. The air we breathe, the water we drink, and the soil that enriches our gardens belongs to all of us and not just industry. I urge you in the development of these rules to consider the levels of hexavalent chromium, cobalt, mercury, and lead you would be comfortable with your children breathing, consuming, and playing in. Thank you for doing everything you can to keep our community healthy and safe.  
84 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
85 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
86 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
87 Judith Kiriazis judy@heartofstonestudio.com Arizona My name is Judith Kiriazis. Please see my attached testimony. Please contact me at judy@heartofstonestudio.com if you do not receive it. Thank you. https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/6a32a9ac-5f03-4f39-9e5d-bbd21b7ca948?filename=testimony+to+State+of+Oregon.txt&content_type=text%2Fplain
88 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
89 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
90 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
91 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
92 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
93 Paulette Marchand yellowgardenhouse@yahoo.com se portland resident please close the loop holes. Put peoples health first. Filter all furnaces .we will never have all the the answers regarding past exposure, but lets go forward knowing our neighborhood parks, schools ,homes are safe places to breath. we have no other choice.  
94 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
95 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
96 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
97 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
98 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
99 Judith Kiriazis judy@heartofstonestudio.com Arizona My name is Judith Kiriazis. Please see my attached testimony. Please contact me at judy@heartofstonestudio.com if you do not receive it. Thank you. https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/eef647cd-1d66-42ac-af8a-fc9fd75ece1e?filename=testimony+to+State+of+Oregon.txt&content_type=text%2Fplain
100 Brittney Bieberich brittneymathews@gmail.com Oregon Loopholes that would allow for emissions of heavy metals from uncontrolled furnaces need to be closed. This needs to be applied state-wide to all glass manufacturers. Additionally, this needs to be applied to all heavy metals by September 1st.
The clean up process needs to be open to the public and open for public comment.
We are tired of getting poisoned and need to hold DEQ accountable.
 
101 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down based on health-based regulations enacted on a statewide basis.
 
102 Barbara Peters barbaraannpeters@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I'm appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It's your responsibility to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down based upon health-based regulations enacted on a statewide basis.  
103 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
104 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
105 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
106 Elizabeth Breitenstein Brei7588@pacificu.edu Oregon As a life long Oregon resident I strongly support strong regulations to protect the health of all Oregonians. I hope to see DEQ close loopholes that would allow for emissions of all heavy metals. I think these rules should apply to all glass manufacturers not just those that produce 10 tons per.
It is critical that we have true HEALTH BASED STANDARDS when determining concentration levels that are protective of human health.
 
107 Vivian Christensen vivianchristensen@earthlink.net Oregon As you know, residents of Portland have been breathing unhealthy air for many years. The EPA estimates that Portland’s air is capable of causing between 26 and 86 extra cancers per 1 million people. In six census tracts near the city center, this cancer rate is worse than 99 percent of the country. As you are aware, Oregon lags behind California and Washington in enforceable air quality standards. I urge the DEQ to implement art glass regulations that will result in the state meeting meaningful air quality benchmarks. I also urge the DEQ to require all glass manufacturers to demonstrate on an annual basis that they are using the best available technology to limit toxic emissions from their facilities. Residents living and working near these facilities should not have to shoulder the burden of poor environmental regulatory oversight. It is also imperative that the DEQ foster transparency of the amount and types of toxins that industry is emitting throughout Oregon. In order to win back the public’s trust, the DEQ must enable the public to view pollution permits as well as the pollution regulations that facilities are required to implement. I urge the Oregon DEQ to become a national leader in creating meaningful pollution regulations aimed at protecting human health and the environment.
 
108 Joe Westersund westersund.joe@deq.state.or.us DEQ Oregon test comment  
109 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide.
 
110 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide.
 
111 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide.
 
112 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide.
 
113 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide.
https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/295df75f-fc04-4416-806d-008387a1be67?filename=I+have+lived+in+Portland+most+of+my+adult+life+and+since+2002+I+have+been+in+contact+with+the%C2%A0DEQ%C2%A0trying+to+figure+out+what+was+going+on+with+the+air+in+Portland.docx&content_type=application%2Fvnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
114 Alicia Cohen cohenalicia@gmail.com Oregon I have lived in Portland most of my adult life and since 2002 I have been in contact with the DEQ trying to figure out what was going on with the air in Portland. At first I could *smell* that something was awry. I called the DEQ many times over the years desperate for answers. The smells were awful, toxic and different all through the city. The DEQ never once gave me any substantive information about air toxics. They would tell me they had no idea what could possibly be causing that awful odor! They would even come out and sniff the air in my neighborhood a say to me personally "I don't smell anything." So much for science. I was baffled by their seeming concern but utter lack of knowledge about the airshed. It was only years later that the USA Today article "The Smokestack Effect" came out that I understoond why the air in Portland was so foul smelling. Portland air stinks because it is some of the dirtiest air in the United States. My neighborhood in Northeast ranked in the bottom 11% for toxic air from sitting Title V factories. I was about to move to SE 24th and Division and the air there ranked in the bottom 2%. Then, all these years later, the Forest Service came out with even more detailed findings: there is cadmium and arsenic in the air at incedibly dangerous levels and it comes from Bullseye. This arsenic and cadmium doesn't even facotr in the measurements that give the same airshed the bottom 2% rankings for Title V polluters nor all the dirty diesel we are breathing due to Oregon's weak diesel laws. We get bad air coming and going in Portland and in the neighborhood around Bullseye is like a war zone. Journalists have revealed documents that show the DEQ even encouraged Bullseye to skirt EPA health measurements and guidelines. Now the governor of Oregon has demanded that the DEQ and Bullseye start following EPA rules and write permits in adherence to health standards. Finally, some sanity will guide the DEQ's permit rules. Sure, I love colored glass as much as anybody. I love art. But if we can send a man to the moon, then we can make colored glass that does not poison children. There is no economic reason to permit Bullseye to emit any toxics into our airshed. The cost in terms of lost of health for the community vastly outweighs any economic benefit that comes from jobs and tax revenue. We, the neighbors and employees of Bullseye have already paid in pain and suffering and death for the long years that Bullseye has emitted toxics into the airshed without limit, We demand the highest, strongest emssions standards for Bullseye. The citizens of Portland will no longer tolerate the DEQ's weak enforcement and permits. And we don't want the air to get "better" we want Oregon to begin to set the gold standard for urban air quality nation-wide. https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/36a137e5-9dd4-4126-9f4c-a676c17355d7?filename=I+have+lived+in+Portland+most+of+my+adult+life+and+since+2002+I+have+been+in+contact+with+the%C2%A0DEQ%C2%A0trying+to+figure+out+what+was+going+on+with+the+air+in+Portland.docx&content_type=d2l%2Funknowntype
115 Barbara Peters barbaraAnnPeters@gmail.com Oregon [Submitted by Joe Westersund on behalf of Barbara Peters]
As a resident of Portland who has suffered long-term exposure to toxic wood smoke and other air pollutants, I’m appalled that the art glass industry has been given a pass for so many years. No one should be involuntarily exposed to known carcinogens and air toxics. It’s your responsibility to act now to close every loophole that might allow continued uncontrolled heavy metal emissions. All furnaces of every glass manufacturer along with any industry that produces heavy metals should be controlled or shut down based on health-based regulations enacted on a statewide basis.
 
116 Shawn Ingersoll shawnwingersoll@gmail.com [emailed to Joe Westersund by Shawn Ingersoll on 7/21/2016] https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/3f4a3def-eb55-4f66-8e3f-a8523344af5f?filename=E%3A%5CJoe%27s+Documents%5CAir+Toxics+Rulemaking+2016%5Ctemp+to+permanent%5C4%29+public+comments%5Cerror+reports%5Ccomments+that+need+to+be+manually+included%5CShawn+Ingersoll+comment+7-21-2016.txt&content_type=text%2Fplain
117 Shawn Ingersoll shawnwingersoll@gmail.com "[posted by Joe Westersund for Shawn Ingersoll]
- Health based regulation that incorporate the Precautionary Principle.
- Clause to allow for the future addition of other materials from glass manufacturing if found to exceed either short and/or long term health standards for air shed quality.
- Choose limits based on those most at risk, not normal average healthy adults (i.e., children, elders, and those with medical issues). Many of the facilities are near schools and parks, so there are large populations of children that cannot tolerate the same level of pollution as a full grown adult.
- Assume the EPA view that all Cr III converts to Cr 6 in glass production.
- Require filters that are rated to remove 99.9% of emissions.
- Require all furnaces to have said filters if they use HAP.
- Create facility limits, not furnace limits. If you limit based on furnaces, their is the likelihood that the accumulative pollution for all furnaces would be above health based standards.
- Heavy fines for violations and a plan for repeat offenders. The ability to shut facility down if it poses an immediate risk to the public and environment.
- Incorporate full health and environmental costs into account. Both long and short term.
- Health before profits. The cost of pollution will always outweigh any benefits a facility brings to the economy. We can get new jobs, develop new ways to make glass, yet we can't prevent the damage that has already been done to our bodies. Damage that may take years to surface.
- Ensure their coldshops (where they cut the glass) and resulting wastewater are safe. Incorporate direction/regulation/fines to ensure their coldshops do not result in environmental damage (i.e., fine glass particulates making their way into the water system).
- Incorporate direction/regulation/fines related to the fine glass particulates that have the ability to become airborne, as well as the glass fragments that litter the perimeter of their facility (particularly near their scrap collection bins).
- Incorporate an accumulative pollution approach to permitting (multiple industrial polluters in a small vicinity). There may be health based limits, but if two polluters are hitting both of their limits in a small geographical area, it will double the health/environmental impact of said pollutant and cause damage to people and the environment. In addition look at how pollution interacts, for example there was a study that showed higher rates of autism when a population was exposed to both styrene and chromium.
- Do not delay implementation beyond the defined timeline.
- Continue to involve the public in the process with transparent decision making and public input.
- Continue to monitor the air quality near these facilities.
Beyond just these rules:
- A public notification system for the permitting process (new and renewals). DEQ has a responsibility to ensure homeowners, businesses, and schools are aware of the pollution that is being permitted in their area. Currently there is no system in place that provides transparent and easy to access information for the public. We have a right to know who permits what, and we have a right to as a community, refuse to allow a polluter into our neighborhoods if they cannot do business responsibly or if their business puts the public or environment at unnecessary risk. We need in-person mailers to all homes, businesses, and schools within a determined radius of the facility (i.e., a mile) with information on the permit, other polluters nearby (so we can have an understanding of the addition of pollution being made to the area). In addition, an accessible online mapping system that identifies all facilities, all hazardous materials used/on site, the health effects (long and short) on the specific materials, permitting allowances for their facility, when a permit ends/begins, and air/water/soil monitoring data etc.... [see attachment for full text]"
https://data.oregon.gov/views/54i7-gnrh/files/f74dd231-dc70-46c9-a04f-c0905fb0ae51?filename=E%3A%5CJoe%27s+Documents%5CAir+Toxics+Rulemaking+2016%5Ctemp+to+permanent%5C4%29+public+comments%5Cerror+reports%5Ccomments+that+need+to+be+manually+included%5CShawn+Ingersoll+comment+7-21-2016.txt&content_type=text%2Fplain
118 Kevin Kaufman kevinkaufman@comcast.net Oregon Oregon can no longer afford to ignore the negative health impacts glass making facilities are having on the surrounding communities. Health-based regulations must be put in place that favor human health over profit. Relying on the Clean Air Act’s Emissions Standards for Hazard Air Pollutants (NESHAPS), which regulates point sources of air toxics (including heavy metals) only when a single industrial source has total annual emissions exceeding 10 tons of each air toxin (or 25 tons per year of aggregated toxic emissions) from a single source does not protect the public from the harmful effects of toxins that are emitted into neighboring communities from industrial polluters. I urge the DEQ to close these loopholes.  
119 Shawn Ingersoll shawnwingersoll@gmail.com [posted by Joe Westersund for Shawn Ingersoll]
...- DEQ needs to start collecting all info on all hazardous materials used on all sites, not just a lump sum of

pollution.
- DEQ needs to advocate for funding. Show the public why you need it and what it is for. The DEQ is severely

underfunded.
- DEQ should have informed the public of the high levels of cadmium when they first knew. DEQ needs to start

notifying the public immediately to instances such as these.
- DEQ needs source and ambient air monitoring. The ability for DEQ to do source testing needs to be included in

all permits moving forward.
- DEQ needs to do statewide moss sampling.
- Realize that for all the out of state glass artists that Bullseye has recruited to contribute their comments,

their numbers pale in comparison to the affected families around these facilities. Be aware that many working

families that are impacted by this pollution do not have the luxury to comment on these rules; be it time, access

to the internet, or even being aware of this issue.
Our air, water, and soil is community based. We all need it to be clean and healthy for generations to come. A

facility does not have the right to put others at risk simply by paying a small fee and all the while the public

is none the wiser. Bullseye is the catalyst. It is my sincere hope that DEQ does not stop here because the public

sure won't.
Thank you,
Shawn
 
120 Owen Kaufman owenkaufman1@gmail.com Oregon As a resident of Portland, I urge the DEQ to implement health-based regulations for ALL industrial facilities that emit toxins into our environment as soon as possible.  
121 Nancy Brown Nancyla23@aol.com OR Please give careful consideration to the proposed air regulations, especially considering the proximity to neighborhoods, etc.  
122 Judith Kiriazis judy@heartofstonestudio.com Arizona My name is Judith Kiriazis and I am a PhD in biology as well as a glass artist. In the past, I've run an environmental organization to protect Lake Michigan’s water quality. I know from experience that the most effective way to effect change to protect the environment is to work in concert with government agencies, scientists, businesses, citizens groups, and individuals. As an environmental activist, I have fostered communication and cooperation among these sometimes varying interests. It might not be the quickest method, but it is the most long-lasting. I know it’s a challenge to balance the health needs of city residents with the economic viability of local industries. I also know what a company looks like when it is trying to skirt the law, and I'm here to tell you today that Bullseye Glass is not one of those companies. I've been a Bullseye customer for more than 20 years. I've been to the BE Portland several times, toured the facility, met many of the staff, and taken classes there. I think that it's fair to say that this whole problem with emissions arose, not because Bullseye was attempting to defy or skirt regulations, but because the regulatory “holes in the netâ€� were simply too big for smaller companies like Bullseye to get noticed. I believe the citizen uproar resulted from fear and concern, but was based on incomplete evidence and shaky science. It’s vital for the citizens of Portland to know that their air quality is being protected, but a knee-jerk reaction that might drive Bullseye and other glass companies out of business is both unfair and unprofessional. Bullseye has done its utmost to come into compliance, and as a long-term customer, I know that these continuing improvements are going to be costly, so I and my fellow customers are prepared for increased glass prices because I know that these changes are for the best. What is not acceptable is an unreasonable compliance schedule or vindictive lawsuits that will drive a good company out of business, rob dozens of dedicated employees of their jobs, and leave tens of thousands of glass users around the world without a source of quality art glass. Glass is a material that can be infinitely recycled. I predict that in the near future, glass will replace plastic in many applications, freeing our oceans from the glut of plastic waste. As such, I urge you to think long-term and expand your stance in order to work in partnership with glass companies such as Bullseye. They are the good guys, but they need your guidance. I urge you to dialogue with them to set long-term goals: They need to be encouraged to develop production methods that are both cost-effective and environmentally responsible. A clean, successful company in your state that benefits many people on many levels is something you can be proud of, as opposed to a company needlessly driven out of business. Please help glass companies achieve the former. Thank you.  

Comment_on_Art_Glass_Rulemaking