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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-09-08 07:57 AM
Original message
The Clintons, Jackson Stephens and the East Liverpool OH Incinerator:
Call it what you like, but just the "experience" Hillary is touting includes working @ the Rose Law Firm where Bush financier/BCCI broker Jackson Stephens gave the good (and economically disadvantaged) people of EAST LIVERPOOL OHIO the WTI Incinerator, right next to an elementary school. Was it a coincidence that this HW Bush financier financed the Clinton's campaign solely for belief in his stances? :


Here is a portion of activist/mother, Terri Swearingen's acceptance speech for the Goldman Environmental Prize, given April 14, 1997:



I am not a scientist or a Ph.D. I am a nurse and a housewife, but my most important credential is that I am a mother. In 1982, I was pregnant with our one and only child. That's when I first learned of plans to build one of the world's largest toxic waste incinerators in my community. When they began site preparation to begin building the incinerator in 1990, my life changed forever. I'd like to share with you some of the lessons I have learned from my experiences over the past seven years.

One of the main lessons I have learned from the WTI experience is that we are losing our democracy. How have I come to this sad realization? Democracy is defined by Merriam Webster as "government by the people, especially rule of the majority," and "the common people constituting the source of political authority." The definition of democracy no longer fits with the reality of what is happening in East Liverpool, Ohio. For one thing, it is on the record that the majority of people in the Ohio Valley do not want the WTI hazardous waste incinerator in their area, and they have been opposed to the project from its inception. Some of our elected officials have tried to help us, but the forces arrayed against us have been stronger than we or they had imagined. Public concerns and protests have been smothered with meaningless public hearings, voodoo risk assessment and slick legal maneuvering.

Government agencies that were set up to protect public health and the environment only do their job if it does not conflict with corporate interests. Our current reality is that we live in a "wealthocracy" big money simply gets what it wants. In this wealthocracy, we see three dynamics at play: corporations versus the planet, the government versus the people, and corporate consultants or "experts" versus common sense. In the case of WTI, we have seen all three.

The second lesson I have learned ties directly to the first, and that is that corporations can control the highest office in the land. When Bill Clinton and Al Gore came to the Ohio Valley, they called the siting of the WTI hazardous waste incinerator next door to a 400 student elementary school, in the middle of an impoverished Appalachian neighborhood, immediately on the bank of the Ohio River in a flood plain an "UNBELIEVABLE IDEA." They said we ought to have control over where these things are located. They even went so far as to say they would stop it. But then they didn't! What has been revealed in all this is that there are forces running this country that are far more powerful than the President and the Vice President. This country trumpets to the world how democratic it is, but it's funny that I come from a community that our President dare not visit because he cannot witness first hand the injustice which he has allowed in the interest of a multinational corporation, Von Roll of Switzerland. And the Union Bank of Switzerland. And Jackson Stephens, a private investment banker from Arkansas. These forces are far more relevant to our little town than the President of the United States! And he is the one who made it that way. He has chosen that path. We didn't choose it for him. We begged him to come to East Liverpool, but he refused. We begged the head of EPA to come, but she refused. She hides behind the clever maneuvering of lawyers and consultants who obscure the dangers of the reckless siting of this facility with theoretical risk assessments.

-snip

http://www.ohiocitizen.org/campaigns/wti/et0897s17.html




There has always been something incongruous about Stephens Inc. Despite the Little rock firm's attempts to portray itself as a small- city operation that closes for the duck season and got fabulously lucky on a couple of down-home deals like Wal-Mart, it was, at the incinerator's inception, the ninth-largest investment bank in the country. Since it is not headquartered in New York, its dealings are local news, little noticed by the national press, even when they have national implications. And, as a source close to the company once remarked, "The farther you get from Arkansas, the better it looks."

Stephens Inc. was founded by Witt Stephens, a state legislator's son who parlayed a Depression-era belt-buckle, Bible, and municipal-bond business into an immense personal fortune. After his retirement in 1973, the company was run by his shy younger brother, Jackson (a classmate of Jimmy Carter's at the Naval Academy). Witt Stephens and Stephens Inc. did much to create the economic paradox that is modern Arkansas: a desperately poor state with a scant 2.3 million inhabitants that is nonetheless home to a number of wealthy companies. Without the financial assistance of the Stephens brothers, Sam Walton might have ended his days as the most innovative merchant in Bentonville. Stephens money was also important to the fortunes of enterprises as various as Tyson Foods and Linda Bloodworth-Thomason, the television producer and reigning First Friend. Stephens Inc. is an important client of the Rose law firm, whose chairman, C. Joseph Giroir, made Hillary Rodham Clinton a partner. And back in 1977, Stephens assisted BCCI's infiltration of the American banking system by brokering the latter's purchase of National Bank of Georgia stock held by Bert Lance, former President Jimmy Carter's friend and disgraced budget director.

Jackson Stephens (who turned over the reins to his son, Warren, in the late eighties) and his firm were both substantial contributors to the campaigns of Presidents Reagan and Bush (to the tune of at least $100,000 in 1980 and 1989), but they have been closer still to Bill Clinton (whom Witt Stephens had been known to call "that boy").

On two occasions, once when Clinton was running for reelection in Arkansas in 1990 and again in March 1992, when his battered presidential campaign was broke, the Stephens family saved Clinton's bacon with an infusion of money. Indeed, it may not be too much to say that their Worthen Bank's emergency $3.5 million line of credit saved the presidential campaign from extinction. --L.J.D.

-snip

http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/1993/11/davis.html




Who is the octopussy that might be lurking in the Ohio River Valley? Perhaps we should start by asking shy Arkansas billionaire Jackson T. Stephens. After all, Stephens introduced BCCI from Pakistan to the United States and the WTI waste incinerator to East Liverpool, Ohio. Stephens would be a good sketch artist because he's seen some monstrous scandals in his day. Stephens' family firm is the largest privately owned investment bank outside Wall Street. In September 1977, President Jimmy Carter's Budget Director Burt Lance was forced to resign amid allegations about his bank dealings with Stephens (Stephens and Carter were classmates at the Naval Academy). In 1978, Stephens, Lance and BCCI were charged with violating U.S. security laws. The charges were dropped after the defendants promised not to violate security laws in the future, even though they admitted no guilt.

The New York Post reported in February 1992 that it was Stephens who enabled BCCI to gain a foothold in the U.S. and helped the fraud-plagued bank secretly acquire U.S. banks. In Peter Truell and Larry Gurwin's book, False Profits, perhaps the best account of the BCCI scandal, the authors outlined how opium revenue from Afghanistan Mujahedin fighting the Soviets ended up in the accounts of BCCI, founded by Agha Hasan Abedi. The Post reported that Stephens allegedly introduced Abedi to Lance shortly after Lance resigned.

In 1991, Lance testified that he urged Abedi to acquire a Washington bank holding company, but he denied any knowledge of BCCI's subsequent secret ownership of First American Bankshares. The Post reported that Securities and Exchange Commission documents from 1977 substantiate that the idea originated with Stephens.

During Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential run, Stephens and his son Warren boasted of raising more than $100,000 for the campaign. The Stephens family also owned a 38 percent share in Worthen National Bank that extended a crucial $2 million line of credit to Clinton in January 1992.

-snip

http://www.ohiocitizen.org/campaigns/wti/bob.html

Environmental Justice Case Study: Waste Technologies Industries, Inc. and the Fight Against A Hazardous Waste Incinerator in East Liverpool, Ohio

The Problem

The Waste Technologies Industry, Inc. incinerator is located in the floodplain of the Ohio River in East Liverpool, Ohio. The surrounding area is elevated on a bluff, such that incinerator's stack is level with the windows of local buildings. The incinerator is located about 300 feet from homes and just 1100 feet from an elementary school. The location of the facility has been intensely criticized by citizens, scientists, and government officials alike. East Liverpool is located at the juncture of Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania, approximately 35 miles from Pittsburgh.

The WTI struggle is a regional issue that drew much national attention during the early 1990's, much to the credit of organizer Terri Swearingen, a citizen of Chester, W. VA. who coordinates the Tri-State Environmental Council. Tri-State Environmental Council became outraged by the various environmental problems that the WTI facility has created for several reasons. First, there has never been a comprehensive study of the potential health effects upon the surrounding community, either from inhalation of toxics or accumulation of materials (such as dioxin, a known carcinogen) in fatty tissues and subsequent transmission via mother's milk or the food chain. Also, the incinerator will be pumping hazardous chemicals into the environment, including mercury and other heavy metals. It is expected to emit 4.5 tons of lead per year, and this less than 400 yards from an elementary school and residential area.

Foremost, issues of environmental justice have been avoided by regulatory officials through this struggle, although it has been observed that East Liverpool and the surrounding communities are predominantly low-income and minority neighborhoods. These neighborhoods have already incurred adverse environmental effects from existing local industry. Government response during the reauthorization process for WTI as well as towards these concerns has been conspicuously slow.

Back to Table of Contents

Background

Waste Technologies Industries' hazardous waste incinerator was first proposed in 1977, and has been under severe scrutiny from its neighbors since 1980. Once construction began in 1990, an intense campaign against the WTI facility and incineration as a means of hazardous waste disposal commenced in East Liverpool, surrounding communities, and eventually the nation. WTI its self has been a topic o national controversy, and was mentioned specifically during the 1992 Clinton-Gore campaign. Clinton and Gore promised the American people that not only would the Clinton Administration never let such a facility become a reality, but they aimed to prevent the WTI facility from opening before questions regarding the safety and legality of its operation were answered. Vice-President-Elect Gore, along with five U.S. Senators and two Representatives, followed up on this promise by requesting a General Accounting Office (GAO) investigation of the facility. However, after sixteen years of community struggle after the incinerator was proposed, the facility is currently operating, despite an array of procedural and legal mishaps.
There have been repeated discrepancies in ownership throughout the permit application process. RCRA permits are not transferrable between parties, thus the Ohio Attorney General declared the permits invalid. Furthermore, the initial permit applications were not signed, and thus technically cannot be issued. The initial permits listed Columbiana Port Authority as part owner of the facility. Later, Columbiana Port Authority asked to be removed from the permit, and may have been listed as part owner simply because the land on which WTI sits was once owned by the Port Authority. The land then taken in emminent domain from the Port Authority, later to be sold to WTI. Emminent domain requires that a public entity show "proper public purpose" before it acquires property for public use. Whether WTI's incinerator demonstrates proper public purpose is obviously still at question by the community of East Liverpool.

-snip

http://www.umich.edu/~snre492/mcormick.html









The incinerator failed its March 1993 test burn.<6> Among other shortcomings, its efficiency rating for burning mercury was only 7 percent, as opposed to the required 99.99 percent.

An April 1993 inspection of the facility revealed numerous violations. For example, employees had failed to store some of the hazardous waste in closed containers and were not monitoring the underlying soil conditions, although cracks had already appeared in the incinerator's foundations.

In late June, after a three-year investigation, the Ohio attorney general issued a heavily censored report concluding that, yes, because of all the ownership changes, under state law the incinerator permit was invalid after all. Nonetheless, on August 24, the U.S. EPA ruled that although Von Roll wrongfully failed to register the 1989 ownership change, this did not invalidate the incinerator's operating permit. The EPA just fined Von Roll $64,900 for failing to modify the permit.

On July 28, an EPA whistle-blower charged two senior EPA administrators with fraud for allowing the incinerator to operate despite the decision of the Ohio attorney general. In a memo to U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno, Hugh Kaufman, whose job is to act as an internal watchdog at the EPA, claimed that Deputy Administrator Robert Sussman and Region 5 Director Valdus Adamkus modified the incinerator's permit to grant it "temporary authorization" to operate, even though they knew the permit was legally invalid. He called for a criminal investigation into Sussman, Adamkus, and the "business entities" running the incinerator. (The federal Justice Department has had no comment on Kaufman's charges.)<7>

-snip

http://www.ohiocitizen.org/campaigns/wti/motherjones.html



The Rose Law Firm became emblematic of the scandals that dogged Clinton and her husband, Bill, while he was president: Whitewater; the death of Vince Foster, a Rose partner who became deputy White House counsel; and the missing billing records from Rose that were discovered in Hillary Clinton’s book room at the White House.

-snip

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0607/4617.html
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Kolesar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jan-10-08 06:35 AM
Response to Original message
1. That is quite a strong account!
I remember the East Liverpool incinerator story. Do you have in mind to distribute this further?
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 09:32 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. I have certainly been sending it around to my politically active friends and
contacts I have made in the media. I wasn't that politically active been this story broke, and was floored after reading it.

I was actually looking into Jackson Stephens and his connection to BCCI and came across this information on East Liverpool. As a mother, the speech Terri Swearingen gave in accepting her environmental activism award really moved me. I am tired of politicians working in the best interest of the rich at the expense of those less fortunate-INCLUDING THE CLINTONS!
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Feb-07-08 09:57 AM
Response to Original message
3. Because our primary is coming, I believe it is important for Ohioans to be familiar with this. kick
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-10-08 04:27 PM
Response to Original message
4. JAN 08 IMPORTANT EPA CHANGES! ADDS INFECTIOUS & HAZARDOUS WASTE:
http://www.epa.state.oh.us/pic/nr/2008/january/VonRoll.html

For Release: January 9, 2008
Media Contact: Mike Settles, (614) 644-2160
Citizen Contact: Caroline Markworth, (614) 644-2160


Ohio EPA Approves Permit Modification
For East Liverpool Incinerator

Ohio EPA has given final approval for Von Roll America, Inc., to receive, manage and incinerate waste not previously taken at its hazardous waste incinerator located at 1250 St. George Street in East Liverpool.

The permit modification allows the facility to receive and manage mixed infectious and hazardous waste. Typical wastes could include vaccines containing mercury; sharps containing chemotherapy drugs; growth plates and Petri dishes containing hazardous components; and tissue and organs from small lab animals preserved in ethanol or formaldehyde.

Ohio law requires that any infectious waste that also is hazardous waste be managed as hazardous waste. While the permit modification allows Von Roll to accept mixed infectious and hazardous waste, the facility will continue to be prohibited from accepting and treating waste that is only infectious.

On February 21, 2007, Ohio EPA held a public meeting in East Liverpool to discuss the draft permit modification. Comments presented at that meeting and during the public comment period were considered prior to final approval. Ohio EPA's written response to public comments is available online at:www.epa.state.oh.us/dhwm/von_roll_america_inc.html.

Issuance of the final permit modification can be appealed to the Environmental Review Appeals Commission (ERAC), 309 S. Fourth Street, Room 222, Columbus, Ohio 43215. Many appeals must be filed within 30 days of the issuance of the final permit; therefore, Ohio EPA recommends that anyone wishing to file an appeal contact ERAC at (614) 466-8950 for more information. The appeal must be in writing and a copy must be received by the Ohio EPA director within three days of filing with ERAC. Further appeals can be made through civil courts.

The permit modification and related materials are available for review at the Carnegie Public Library located at 219 East Fourth Street, East Liverpool, and at Ohio EPA's Northeast District Office in Twinsburg by first calling (800) 686-6330.


-30-

found this at daily kos:

The Latest: January,2008
Ohio EPA Approves Permit Modification
For East Liverpool Incinerator (from OEPA pdf file
The permit modification allows the facility to receive and manage mixed infectious and hazardous waste. Typical wastes could include vaccines containing mercury; sharps containing chemotherapy drugs; growth plates and Petri dishes containing hazardous components; and tissue and organs from small lab animals preserved in ethanol or formaldehyde.
Ohio law requires that any infectious waste that also is hazardous waste be managed as hazardous waste. While the permit modification allows Von Roll to accept mixed infectious and hazardous waste, the facility will continue to be prohibited from accepting and treating waste that is only infectious.
Examples: From the public hearing PDF
Concerns Regarding Anthrax:
Comment 2:
Alonzo Spencer had the following question: "Will this facility be permitted to handle Anthrax at all?"
Response 2:
Yes, VRA will be authorized under this permit modification to manage anthrax, if it meets the definition of a mixed infectious and hazardous waste (MIHW). MIHW is defined as infectious waste that is also hazardous waste. In order to be managed as MIHW, waste must be both infectious waste and hazardous waste simultaneously. If a waste stream contained a mixture of untreated anthrax and hazardous waste with hazardous waste codes, then VRA could request to manage the waste under this permit modification request. Based upon Ohio EPA knowledge of waste generation, it is unlikely waste streams containing both anthrax and hazardous waste will be generated.
Untreated anthrax, by itself, does not meet the description of mixed infectious and hazardous waste (MIHW) because no hazardous waste codes are associated with it. Therefore, untreated anthrax without a hazardous component is solely infectious waste and cannot be accepted and managed at VRA at all. Solely infectious waste must be managed at an infectious waste treatment facility
Translated: Not Anthrax alone but if the waste contains a mixture of Anthrax and other wastes, it's Okey Dokey.
Radioactive Waste:
Comment 9:
Richard Wolf had the following question: "It says MIHW must be monitored for radioactivity to ensure levels do not exceed background concentration. How about letting us know what the background concentrations are?"
Response 9:
Radioactivity of incoming hazardous waste is currently evaluated by VRA personnel during analysis of samples in accordance with the Waste Characteristics and Waste Analysis Plan (WAP). Radioactivity levels of individual containers are also monitored as appropriate. In the case of MIHW waste, each individual container will be monitored.
Radioactivity measurements taken for quality control purposes to calibrate the monitor are measured inside of the VRA laboratory on a daily basis. Measurements between 11 and 14 counts per second are considered background levels. During waste evaluations, radioactivity readings above 14 would be considered unusual and VRA would take further action at that time.
On Infectious Waste:
Richard Wolf had related questions, such as: "Concentration of what? What percentage of it is infectious; what percentage is hazardous? When does infectious waste contaminate hazardous waste? When does hazardous waste contain infectious?"
Response 3:
The word "mixed" (MIHW) in mixed infectious and hazardous waste refers to the waste being simultaneously infectious as well as hazardous at the point of generation. VRA is prohibited from accepting solely infectious waste, and that will not change with the approval of this permit modification request. Therefore, solely infectious waste cannot be accepted at the VRA facility and then mixed with hazardous waste, as a means of creating mixed infectious and hazardous waste.
Translation: It cannot be mixed at the site but if it is mixed before it gets there, no problem.
-snip
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2008/1/31/21045/9822/688/446786

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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Feb-10-08 04:47 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. I've sent this to Harvey Wasserman, Ohio Citizen Action, some state reporters
and Ohio Envir Council. If anyone has any media contacts please attempt to get this out!
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mod mom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Feb-29-08 07:29 PM
Response to Original message
6. kicking so folks have background on favoring the powerful over the people.
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Name removed Donating Member (0 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-01-08 04:12 PM
Response to Original message
7. Deleted sub-thread
Sub-thread removed by moderator. Click here to review the message board rules.
 
Danzo Donating Member (362 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-01-08 05:45 PM
Response to Original message
8. If You Live In A Glass House, Don't Throw Stones
"Barack Obama, whose home state of Illinois has more nuclear plants than any other, also has received substantial contributions from the industry and wants to leave nuclear power on the table."


"Illinois' nuclear industry, which has thousands of tons of waste at its facilities awaiting opening of Yucca Mountain, has long backed Obama. Executives and employees of Exelon Corp., the Chicago-based energy giant and nuclear plant operator, have contributed more than $200,000 to Obama campaigns since 2004, according to PoliticalMoneyLine.com.

Obama has said he believes nuclear energy should remain on the table."


http://www.nevadaappeal.com/article/20071118/ELECTIONS/111180127
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Laylagrande Donating Member (12 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Mar-01-08 11:54 PM
Response to Original message
9. Her experience is mild, I agree
agree.
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