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Zane’s Law

Key information

Date: Thursday 07 November 2024

Time: 10:00am

Motion detail

Zack Polanski AM moved, and Zoë Garbett AM seconded the following motion:

“This Assembly agrees that the right to a clean, healthy, and sustainable environment is a human right, as declared by the UN General Assembly.

We also know that for many people this is not the reality of their daily lives. Current and historic chemical and particulate contamination of our air, water and land can and has caused significant negative impacts on lives and health, including fatalities.

This Assembly recognises and applauds the campaign work of the parents of seven-year old Zane Gbangbola, who died in the early hours of 8 February 2014, during catastrophic River Thames flooding at Chertsey in Surrey.

The flood water passed through the field behind their house, a historic landfill site, enabled hydrogen cyanide gas (HCN) to enter their home with tragic consequences. Zane’s father was also paralysed with a diagnosis of hydrogen cyanide (HCN) poisoning.

There are sites in London that are of concern, such as former gas works being redeveloped for residential use and former landfills near green space. Through proposing a new bill, Zane’s Law, they hope to ensure greater transparency over contaminated land.

The London Assembly notes that Zane’s Law would call for:

  • Increased national Government funding and support so that every local authority, including those in London, must keep a full, regularly updated Register of Land that may be contaminated within their boundary.
  • The Environment Agency to keep a full, public National Register of Contaminated Land to be regularly updated by information from local authorities.
  • Registers of Land to be accessible and available for inspection by the general public.
  • Relevant local authorities must fully inspect any land registered that may be contaminated and must fully remediate or enforce remediation of any land which poses harm to public safety, or which pollutes controlled waters.
  • Local authorities and London boroughs to have the funding, resources and support necessary to be responsible for inspecting previously closed landfill sites and fully remediating them, or enforcing their remediation, when they pose a risk of significant harm to people or controlled waters.
  • The Government must take full responsibility for providing the necessary funds for local authorities to meet these new requirements, following the ‘polluter pays’ principle: to recover costs as appropriate where those responsible for the pollution can be identified.

The London Assembly asks the Mayor to join them in supporting the above calls by writing to the Prime Minister to bring forward primary legislation needed to establish Zane’s Law.”

Following debate and upon being put to the vote, the motion was agreed unanimously.

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