As long as those 2 Asarco smokestacks remain standing then they continue to be a symbol of an industry that poisoned our air and soil. I am looking forward to the day when those stacks are forever demolished. It will be a good day for El Paso. As for any former Asarco workers who are still alive to enjoy life then I say that they should form an alumni association and used that for pot luck reunions and to give back to El Paso, a city that Asarco abandoned and left contaiminated.
Interested El Pasoan December 6, 2012
at 2:31pm
As long as those 2 Asarco smokestacks remain standing then they continue to be a symbol of an industry that poisoned our air and soil. I am looking forward to the day when those stacks are forever demolished. It will be a good day for El Paso. As for any former Asarco workers who are still alive to enjoy life then I say that they should form an alumni association and used that for pot luck reunions and to give back to El Paso, a city that Asarco abandoned and left contaiminated.