BP Citizen's Arrest – Friday, High Noon

This Friday at high noon join with CCAN, Public Citizen, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, Energy Action Coalition, 350.org, Hip Hop Caucus and the Center for Biological Diversity as we hold BP accountable for its high crimes and misdemeanors. We need YOU to help us deliver our charges against BP!

Join us from 12-1 outside of BP’s D.C. headquarters at 1101 New York Avenue, NW.

Charge #1: Criminal negligence. BP has a long history of worker, consumer and environmental violations. BP’s culture of negligence, shunning of common safety devices and inability to adequately respond to the mounting catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico and the surrounding communities warrants a citizen finding of criminal negligence.

Charge #2: Unfettered corporate influence. Corporate meddling in the political process has led to oil-friendly regulators and lawmakers, and a blatant disregard for the regulatory process.

Charge #3: Need for clean solutions. Even with increased safety and environmental regulations, oil drilling is still inherently dangerous. The only way to ensure we don’t have any more catastrophes is to stop offshore drilling altogether. Instead, we should pursue clean energy and energy independence.

RSVP on facebook or using this google spreadsheet. Then help us spread the word!

Mike Tidwell reports from oil disaster site in Louisiana

By Mike Tidwell
It’s Sunday morning and I’m writing from Grand Isle, Louisiana on the front line of the BP oil disaster. President Obama was here Friday walking the beach, viewing the small tar balls that continue to wash up here. I’ve now seen this battered coast from the air in a small sea plane. I’ve seen the oil in the marshes from the boat of an out-of-work crab fisherman. And I’ve walked the beaches myself, smelling that smell in the air that people here say is a mix of oil and “agent orange,” their name for the toxic chemical dispersant BP is spraying on the oil to make it sink out of site.
Continue reading

CCAN director reports from oil disaster site in Louisiana

It’s Sunday morning and I’m writing from Grand Isle, Louisiana on the front line of the BP oil disaster. President Obama was here Friday walking the beach, viewing the small tar balls that continue to wash up here. I’ve now seen this battered coast from the air in a small sea plane. I’ve seen the oil in the marshes from the boat of an out-of-work crab fisherman. And I’ve walked the beaches myself, smelling that smell in the air that people here say is a mix of oil and “agent orange,” their name for the toxic chemical dispersant BP is spraying on the oil to make it sink out of site.


CCAN director Mike Tidwell gets a firsthand
look of the BP oil disaster during a flyover May 27th.

I’ve come here on a three-day tour to see for myself just what’s at stake for states like Virginia and Maryland if any plan for new offshore drilling moves forward in the mid-Atlantic region. Thankfully, due to the activism of people like you, President Obama last week announced the cancellation of a plan to sell drilling leases in an area just 50 miles off the Virginia coastline. That’s a good start. But it’s not a done deal. The cancellation could just be temporary.


Photo of oil invading Louisiana wetlands as seen
from air by CCAN director Mike Tidwell on a May 27th
tour of the disaster zone.

Based on my trip to Louisiana this week, here’s why we need a permanent ban on all new offshore drilling everywhere in America: We will never be safe with oil. Never. Besides the fact that it’s wrecking our climate, there’s no way to permanently regulate away human error and equipment failure. As long as we have thousands and thousands of drilling rigs off our shores, our shores will sooner or later see another spill. Oil is a destructive fuel on every level.

Here’s the human level. I’ve spent three full days now visiting and interviewing innocent Louisiana fishing families who are now being wiped out by the spill. Many of them weep openly as they talk. They describe spending their whole lives fishing here only to be told in May 2010 that they’ll get a $10,000 fine if they drop a single net or line in the water.


CCAN director Mike Tidwell flies over the Louisiana
oil disaster site May 27th with Aaron Viles of
the Gulf Restoration Network.

Fear and anger run rampant here. No one knows when the oil disaster will end. Will the Gulf be biologically dead by the time this is over? Will a proud 200-year fishing culture be doomed? People cry a lot over those questions here. Grown men in their 70s cry. Working mothers in their 20s cry.

If a similar blowout occurred off the coast of Virginia, we’d have oil from Virginia Beach to Cape May, NJ. And it would be innocent Virginia watermen crying. Innocent motel owners and dockworkers crying. Virginia offshore wind power, conversely, using a small portion of the coast, could provide enough electricity to power 3.6 million electric cars forever. With practically zero pollution even if, god forbid, a hurricane blew through and knocked down some or all the windmills. It’s clean energy.

Yesterday I spent time with a Cajun woman named Phyllis Melancon of Leeville, Louisiana. Standing next to her idle shrimp boat, here nets hanging dry for the first time anyone can remember in the month of May, she said, “BP thinks they can repay us with money. But they’ve take away something no money can repay. They’ve taken away our way of life. Our life on the water. Now all we have are dry nets and a big emptiness inside.”

We are all victims of climate change all over the world, of course. But these are the victims, right now, of one of our more obscene addictions within the climate crisis. It’s our responsibility to make sure the suffering down here is not in vain.

Photo Credit: Jeffrey Dubinsky, Gulf Restoration Network

Why the CLEAR Act is Fair

The following is an article written by Meg Power, Senior Advisor to the National Community Action Foundation (NCAF). NCAF is the Washington, DC representative of the nation’s 1100 local Community Action Agencies, which deliver many services and investments in all the nation’s low-income communities including Low-Income Home Energy Assistance and the federal Weatherization Assistance Program. NCAF has endorsed the CLEAR Act.

Why the CLEAR Act is Fair to Low- and Moderate-Income Households
By Meg Power

About one-third of US households have incomes lower than 60% of the median income of their state and qualify for the federal Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program. Their average annual residential usage is just 87% of the average for the other 2/3 of consumers. The gasoline consumption of the lowest income drivers is less than half that of median income households. Their houses are smaller, albeit more inefficient per square foot; they own fewer appliances, buy few finished goods and drive fewer cars. Their carbon footprint is far lighter than that of middle income consumers.

However, these Americans are extremely vulnerable to increases in energy costs; on average they spend from 18% to more than 23% percent of an entire year’s income directly on energy, including home fuels and gasoline, depending on the fuel prices in a given year. This percentage is known as the Continue reading

The war goes on

The announcement today by President Obama that his administration canceled the lease sale for offshore drilling spots off Virginia’s coast is a big step in the right direction but it’s one battle in the larger war. Until this administration announces a permanent moratorium on offshore drilling we still need to fight. It doesn’t hurt to take a long weekend to celebrate this victory though ;-).

In case you haven’t seen it, check out our press release on the announcement too!

VIDEO: Share the dirty secret of mountaintop removal.

Mountaintop removal is devastating hundreds of square miles of Appalachia; polluting the headwaters of rivers that provide drinking water to millions of Americans; and destroying a distinctly American culture that has endured for generations.

Watch this new commercial from our friends at the http://www.ilovemountains.org and help share the dirty secret of mountaintop removal.

**commercial may not play in some browsers (like google chrome)… you’ve been warned**

Will the BP Oil Spill Be the Spark?

“The fact that 11 human beings were killed in the Deepwater Horizon explosion (their bodies never found) has become, at best, an afterthought. BP counts its profits in the billions, and, therefore, it’s important. . . This is the bitter reality of the American present, a period in which big business has cemented an unholy alliance with big government against the interests of ordinary Americans who, of course, are the great majority of Americans. The great majority of Americans no longer matter.”
-Bob Herbert, “More Than Just An Oil Spill,” NY Times, May 22, 2010

Just about a week ago I was on a conference call with leaders of about a dozen national and regional groups which have made the climate crisis a top priority of their work. The two main things we talked about were the prospects for decent climate legislation in the Senate and how we should be responding to the catastrophic BP oil spill.

Most of us were not very hopeful about the prospects in the Senate, absent the kind of leadership on this issue Barack Obama gave to achieve passage of a not-so-good health care reform bill. Indeed, there is legitimate reason to be concerned that if he did so, he could advance a bill strongly supportive of nukes, coal and offshore drilling, based on things he has said and done as President, and based on the Kerry-Lieberman “American Power Act” released on May 12th.

As far as the BP spill, there was discussion on this call about the idea of local actions around the country on the one-month anniversary of the spill, May 20th. One important national organization, the Energy Action Coalition, took the initiative and organized 45 local actions around the country beginning on that day, to their credit.

Could the BP spill be the spark that generates an on-going, in-the-streets movement for a rapid shift away from dirty fossil fuels to a justice-based, green jobs, clean energy economy? It sure seems to have a number of the elements that make that a possibility. Continue reading