Debi's blog

David Wins

I received this e-mail the other day and wanted to share it with all of you to let you know that what you do can have a positive affect even when big business is involved. And I would like to thank all of you who rose to the cause and sent your letters to BP. This also serves as a reminder to everyone that if enough voices are heard big business will react. Nothing makes a company listen more than bad publicity and boycotts which affect their bottom line. Kudos to you all!

Dear Debi,

Goliath Stumbles

BP operating out of their Whiting, Ind. refinery is currently the top industrial source of nickel, lead and amonia pollution directly released into Lake Michigan. In addition BP and a power plant in Chesterton, Ind. are the only two industrial polluters who still dump mercury directly into the Lake. BP's wastewater includes more than a dozen toxic byproducts including benzene, toluene, and suspended solids containing mercury, lead, nickel and vanadium. It is also one of two plants in the area that releases acetoniltrile which, in the environment, metabolizes into cyanide. With their $3.8 Billion expansion of the Whiting, Ind. refinery they have asked and been granted by the Indiana EPA permission to up their pollution levels to 54% more amonia and 35% more waste water solids released into the Lake each year. The trade off seems to be an estimated 620 million gallons of Global Warming gasoline per year and 80 jobs. Keeping in mind that Lake Michigan is the primary source of all of Chicago's drinking water it doesn't seem like such a great deal to me.

Help stop BP from Dumping in Lake Michigan

The following is from an e-mail I received from Senator Dick Durbin concerning BP and Lake Michigan...If you haven't already, please go to the link below and let your voice be heard...

British Petroleum wants to dump 1,584 pounds of ammonia and 4,925 pounds of industrial solids into Lake Michigan every single day. Their plan represents a massive setback to decades of work to clean up the lake.

Over 5,000 people -- including you -- have already emailed BP CEO Bob Malone to ask him to stop this terrible idea in its tracks. We know the company is hearing us because it has started running ads in Illinois newspapers to defend polluting the lake.

 

Stand with me to protect our lake. Ask your friends and family to join us today.

The Journey

Ok, this is what happened....it was last Sunday morning and my Daughter and I were taking her four year old--my Granddaughter--to the Kidzfest in our local town. We found to our surprise that a local farmer had provided baby animals for the kids to enjoy. And enjoy them they did! They fed them. They patted them. They cuddled and cooed and scratched them to their hearts content! The expressions of excitement and wonder were priceless as the baby goats and ponies nibbled feasts from their tiny fingers. Gasps of delight and feined disgust could be heard as they looked at their slobberd on hands and quickly, with giggles, reached for the buckets of feed to give them some more. All the while, admonishing voices could be heard in the background of little ones instructing other little ones to be “ever so careful” in their handling of the baby ducks “cuz you don’t wan ‘em to get broked”.

As I watched those little souls, my heart was happy. I thought...wow.... Could this simple act... their holding these lives in their precious little hands be a beginning? A beginning of something they will always remember? I hoped it would be so. I hoped they would remember.... the soft fuzziness of the baby ducks, the tickley nibbles they received from the ponies as they fed from their tiny fists, the funny, fuzzy chickens and the lively, black bunnies....Above all, I hoped they would remember the joy and concern they felt this day for a life not their own. Then, I looked to the heavens, released my hopes along with a prayer to the four winds, took my Granddaughter's nuzzeled and slobbered hand in mine and continued our journey.

Help stop BP from Dumping in Lake Michigan

Please go to the following sites to see what you can do.

http://www.suntimes.com/news/commentary/495493,CST...

 

http://ga3.org/campaign/bp_greatlakes/

Further Information

BP vs The Clean Water Act

chicagotribune.com >> Business

 

BP gets break on dumping in lake

Refinery expansion entices Indiana

 

By Michael Hawthorne

Tribune staff reporter

Published July 15, 2007

 

The massive BP oil refinery in Whiting, Ind., is planning to dump significantly more ammonia and industrial sludge into Lake Michigan, running counter to years of efforts to clean up the Great Lakes.

Indiana regulators exempted BP from state environmental laws to clear the way for a $3.8 billion expansion that will allow the company to refine heavier Canadian crude oil. They justified the move in part by noting the project will create 80 new jobs.

Under BP's new state water permit, the refinery -- already one of the largest polluters along the Great Lakes -- can release 54 percent more ammonia and 35 percent more sludge into Lake Michigan each day. Ammonia promotes algae blooms that can kill fish, while sludge is full of concentrated heavy metals.

The refinery will still meet federal water pollution guidelines. But federal and state officials acknowledge this marks the first time in years that a company has been allowed to dump more toxic waste into Lake Michigan.

BP, which aggressively markets itself as an environmentally friendly corporation, is investing heavily in Canadian crude oil to reduce its reliance on sources in the Middle East. Extracting petroleum from the thick goop is a dirtier process than conventional methods. It also requires more energy that could significantly increase greenhouse gases linked to global warming.

Environmental groups and dozens of neighbors pleaded with BP to install more effective pollution controls at the nation's fourth-largest refinery, which rises above the lakeshore about 3 miles southeast of the Illinois-Indiana border.

"We're not necessarily opposed to this project," said Lee Botts, founder of the Alliance for the Great Lakes. "But if they are investing all of these billions, they surely can afford to spend some more to protect the lake."

State and federal regulators, though, agreed last month with the London-based company that there isn't enough room at the 1,400-acre site to upgrade the refinery's water treatment plant.

The company will now be allowed to dump an average of 1,584 pounds of ammonia and 4,925 pounds of sludge into Lake Michigan every day. The additional sludge is the maximum allowed under federal guidelines.

Company officials insisted they did everything they could to keep more pollution out of the lake.

"It's important for us to get our product to market with minimal environmental impact," said Tom Keilman, a BP spokesman. "We've taken a number of steps to improve our water treatment and meet our commitments to environmental stewardship."

BP can process more than 400,000 barrels of crude oil daily at the plant, which was built in 1889 by John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil Co. Total production is expected to grow by 15 percent by the time the expansion project is finished in 2011.

In sharp contrast to the greenways and parks that line Lake Michigan in Chicago, a string of industrial behemoths lie along the heavily polluted southern shore just a few miles away. The steady flow of oil, grease and chemicals into the lake from steel mills, refineries and factories -- once largely unchecked -- drew national attention that helped prompt Congress to pass the Clean Water Act during the early 1970s.

Paul Higginbotham, chief of the water permits section at the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, said that when BP broached the idea of expanding the refinery, it sought permission to pump twice as much ammonia into the lake. The state ended up allowing an amount more than the company currently discharges but less than federal or state limits.

He said regulators still are unsure about the ecological effects of the relatively new refining process BP plans to use. "We ratcheted it down quite a bit from what it could have been," Higginbotham said.

The request to dump more chemicals into the lake ran counter to a provision of the Clean Water Act that prohibits any downgrade in water quality near a pollution source even if discharge limits are met. To get around that rule, state regulators are allowing BP to install equipment that mixes its toxic waste with clean lake water about 200 feet offshore.

Actively diluting pollution this way by creating what is known as a mixing zone is banned in Lake Michigan under Indiana law. Regulators granted BP the first-ever exemption.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has been pushing to eliminate mixing zones around the Great Lakes on the grounds that they threaten humans, fish and wildlife. Yet EPA officials did not object to Indiana's decision, agreeing with the state that BP's project would not harm the environment.

Federal officials also did not step in when the state granted BP another exemption that enables the company to increase water pollution as long as the total amount of wastewater doesn't change. BP said its flow into Lake Michigan will remain about 21 million gallons a day.

In response to public protests, state officials justified the additional pollution by concluding the project will create more jobs and "increase the diversity and security of oil supplies to the Midwestern United States." A rarely invoked state law trumps anti-pollution rules if a company offers "important social or economic benefits."

In the last four months, more than 40 people e-mailed comments to Indiana officials about BP's water permit. One of the few supportive messages came from Kay Nelson, environmental director of the Northwest Indiana Forum, an economic development organization that includes a BP executive among its board of directors. She hailed the company's discussions with state and community leaders as a model for others to follow.

Nearly all of the other comments, though, focused on the extra pollution in Lake Michigan.

"This is exactly the type of trade-off that we can no longer allow," wrote Shannon Sabel of West Lafayette, Ind. "Possible lower gas prices (I'll believe that when I see it!) against further contamination of our water is as shortsighted as it is irrational."


Call to Action-One Person's Story

Some thought me crazy back in the day....the day when I pushed to build a hazardous waste treatment facility in yes.....my backyard.   An extensive list of possible chemicals to be treated where listed in the local paper and labeled appropriately as mutagen, carcinogen etc.  A great cry was heard...NIMBY--NOT IN MY BACKYARD!   Movements were started, committees formed, mothers with their babies marched!  All were crying out with ONE voice! The fear and anger so strong it was electrifying!!!

I wanted to march.  I wanted to take up the battlecry....but....but....something was wrong.  It just didn’t feel quite right....(we all have that ability by the way....  It’s innate.  Oh, ya, you’ve had it.  There’s some decision that needs to be made. You think about it....you get that feeling...you choose....but when it doesn’t have your intended outcome...you look back and you know ....you knew when you made your choice it wasn’t the right one but you choose it anyway...but YOU KNEW BEFORE.)

Well, that was what was happening here.  I looked, I listened...I felt passionately ...I wanted to become involved!  I was just as afraid,  just as terrified!  Cancer?...Mutants?  Oh yes, I was afraid.......  And it was liberating!!!!

 

That fear forever changed me....that gut wrenching fear was the beginning!

 

I began reading everything I could get my hands on.  I began questioning anyone who knew anything!  I listened..I learned.  Love Canal, Times Beech, the Cuyahgo River catches Fire!  WOW!!!   How can water burn?    I realized with shock and dismay....all those horrid things were everywhere....THEY WERE ALREADY HERE!  

The “Company” wasn’t thrusting these horrid things into our lives...forcing them down our throats as was believed! WE, each and everyone, had lined up at the banquet table to BINGE on the feast wholeheartedly and happily!  And, amazingly enough, when the feast was ended, we cried for MORE!

No, No, NO, I cried ...This is so Wrong! What can I do?....there has to be something!!  This was my chance!  My chance to do something other than just be afraid!  My chance to make a DIFFERENCE.  I no longer wanted to stand at the banquet table and gorge myself.   I wanted SOLUTIONS!  

And so I fought....fought to get that plant built.  Fought to take just one chemical that could harm my family and this beautiful world ....OUT!  Fought to take something DEADLY and render it POWERLESS!    

I learned that the end product from this “Comapny’s” process could be held benignly in my hand! And hold it there I did .... in TRIUMPH!   And to this day I still have all my fingers!  What I don’t have is that great fear. 

You may be wondering....did the plant ever get built?  Yes...but not here....not in this country..it resides in Germany.  My greatest lesson from all of this:  You Can Never NOT KNOW SOMETHING ONCE IT’S KNOWN...   There was no way to go back ......because I now knew.  And Yes, I lost that battle but believe me....I DO NOT INTEND TO LOOSE THE WAR! 

 

So, Rally yourselves!  Read everything you can.  Learn everything you can!  Point and Counterpoint!  Grab Every Opportunity   Move in POWER NOT FEAR!   Make a difference!  And when nay sayers tell you Global Warming is a myth, stop, look them squarely in the eye and say....YOU’RE WRONG!

Solar Power

Found this site and wanted to share.....small steps!
http://www.rain.org/~philfear/how2solar.html

Mother Culture and the Explaining Story

Excerpt from:    Ishmael- An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit     by Daniel Quinnn

 

“....one of the pupils I mentioned yesterday felt obliged to explain to me what she was looking for, and she said, “Why is it that no one is excited?  I hear people talking in the Laundromat about the end of the world, and they’re no more excited than if they were comparing detergents.  People talk about the destruction of the ozone layer and the death of all life.  They talk about the devastation of the rain forests, about deadly pollution that will be with us for thousands and millions of years, about the disappearance of dozens of species of life every day, about the end of speciation itself. And they seem perfectly calm.”

‘i said to her, ‘Is this what you want to know then--why people aren’t excited about the destruction of the world?’  She thought about that for a while and said,” No, I know why they’re not excited.  They’re not excited because they believe what they’ve been told.’”

I said, “Yes?”

:They’ve been told an explaining story.  They’ve been given an explanation of how things came to be this way;  and this stills their alarm.  This explanation covers everything, including, the deterioration of the ozone layer, the pollution of the oceans, the destruction of the rain forests, and even human extinction,--and is satisfies them.  Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say the it pacifies them.  They put their shoulders to the wheel during the day, stupefy themselves with drugs or television at night, and try not to think too searchingly about the world they’re leaving their children to cope with.”


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