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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (7915)2/21/2005 5:12:56 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361240
 
George: "Walmart's business practices perpetuated poverty" "Clerics Speak Out on Wal-Mart
Some parishioners complain to Cardinal Mahony, saying that vocal opposition to discount store has no place in church.


By Hector Becerra, Times Staff Writer

After growing up in an Ireland pockmarked with poverty, Father Mike Gleeson said he had always considered it important to speak out on social issues he believed in.

So the pastor of St. Anthony Catholic Church in San Gabriel didn't hesitate when some parishioners asked him to help fight Wal-Mart's proposal to build Los Angeles County's first Supercenter store in neighboring Rosemead.


Such outspoken views have divided his parish as well as a nearby church, Mission San Gabriel, where another priest has criticized Wal-Mart. Some parishioners believe that the priests have no business encouraging opposition to the chain store.

"This is not what I go to church for," said Mary Ellen Dundas, 58, a Mission San Gabriel parishioner, who along with several others has written a letter of complaint to Cardinal Roger M. Mahony. "This is not a moral issue. When I go to church, I go to be uplifted, to get what I need to move on to the next week. I don't want to hear that I'm a sinner for supporting Wal-Mart."

The dispute underscores the passions boiling over as the retail giant attempts to expand its presence in Los Angeles County. Wal-Mart has been trying for more than a year to open a Supercenter — which sells groceries as well as items available at regular Wal-Marts — in the county. But it has faced strong opposition from unions, community groups and some politicians.

Rosemead officials approved the Supercenter plan two months ago, saying the city needed the tax revenue that Wal-Mart would bring. But critics predict that the store will kill surrounding businesses and depress wages, especially for unionized workers at grocery stores that would be the Supercenter's main competition.

Rosemead and San Gabriel are middle-class bedroom communities about 10 miles east of downtown Los Angeles where most residents are either Asian American or Latino. The Wal-Mart issue has been the talk of the towns, and St. Anthony and Mission San Gabriel churches are no exceptions.

St. Anthony, an imposing structure with a tall brick tower, is on a stretch of San Gabriel Boulevard marked by small businesses, including Chinese restaurants, dental and medical offices and auto repair shops. Leafy residential areas with tidy yards are just to the west of the church.

A marquee on the front lawn of the church reads in English and Spanish: "Voting Is a Privilege and a Responsibility."

St. Anthony parishioner Alice Guerrero, 75, said she first approached Gleeson in early summer just as the Wal-Mart controversy was heating up. She and others wanted to gather signatures for a referendum on the project.

"We needed signatures, so I thought, 'I'll just ask Father Mike; he's always helpful.' He agreed to help," Guerrero said.

Gleeson, 57, said he simply did what priests often do: assist causes they think have social and moral implications, regardless of whether the outcome is victory or defeat.

"I think in the end it's important to speak out," he said. "You just can't limit yourself by waiting for everyone to agree with you about something. If you did, you would never say anything."

Years ago, he protested the proliferation of nuclear arms. More recently, he has spoken out against the war in Iraq, including comments in the church's newsletter.

"I got some flak for it. One person told me to go back to Ireland," he said with a laugh. "I got several letters, which was fine. I wrote back."

Gleeson wrote a blistering column in the church newsletter opposing Wal-Mart's Supercenter plan. He also wrote a letter to the Rosemead City Council saying: "I hope you will not prostitute yourself to Wal-Mart, but instead consider the implications of their suggested entry into Rosemead and the people who elected you."

The pastor's tough talk was cheered by Wal-Mart's opponents. But some who support the project said they were shocked by what he was saying.

Sharon Esquivel, 60, said Gleeson used exceedingly strong language in casting support of Wal-Mart in a bad light when he attended a Rosemead City Council meeting in August.

"I thought he should have taken his collar [off] if he was going to say things like that," said Esquivel, who is a member of Putting Rosemead in a Desirable Environment, a group that supports bringing the Supercenter to Rosemead.

About the same time, Wal-Mart was also becoming an issue at the Mission San Gabriel church. Father Ralph Berg, 69, said his involvement was more limited than Gleeson's. He said he promoted registration drives at St. Anthony and made announcements at the end of Mass or through church bulletins encouraging people to support the referendum idea.

"The issue as I saw it was about the City Council making a unanimous decision over the protest of a large number of people," Berg said. "As a Catholic priest I tried to let people know what their civic responsibility was, to be involved and not just be passive citizens, to hold government accountable."

To Wal-Mart's critics, Berg and Gleeson are taking a courageous stand.

"Father Mike did what he did because he was just concerned about his parishioners," said Bert Ross, 82, a former newspaper printing employee and longtime Rosemead resident. "He was looking out for us…. [Wal-Mart] is anti-union, anti-labor and anti-employee."

But Lee Ann Dalessio of the Rosemead Chamber of Commerce said she thought the priests crossed a line.

"There's a division between church and state, and I think it should be kept that way, and this matter has gotten out of hand," Dalessio said. "What the churches have been doing is a little outlandish as far as I'm concerned."

Supporters have said Wal-Mart could bring more than $640,000 in annual sales tax receipts to Rosemead, which has not had a major grocery store since the local Ralphs closed earlier this year.

Esquivel and other Wal-Mart supporters decided a few weeks ago to send their letter of complaint to Mahony. She said the letter was written by Mike Lewis, a West Covina-based Wal-Mart consultant, and other members of her community group. A spokesman for the retail giant declined to comment on the dispute.

"It had to be done, because we wanted to let him know what his priests were doing," Esquivel said. "I just wish we could have our Wal-Mart and that the church would butt out of this.

Tod Tamberg, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Archdiocese, said that while the church neither endorsed nor opposed the priests' actions, it was typical of priests to get involved in issues they thought had moral implications.

"This is a local issue that's being dealt [with] at the local level in parishes which are part of the community in that area," Tamberg said.

"With issues that affect life and human dignity it's inescapable that they will have a moral component to them, so that the church has not only the right but the duty to speak out."

Gleeson said that he got a couple of angry phone calls about his opposition to Wal-Mart, but that most parishioners who disagreed with him were civil.

He said that in private conversations, he explained to parishioners that he believed Wal-Mart's business practices perpetuated poverty.

He said their typical reaction was: "I think Wal-Mart is wonderful, and I just disagree with you, and I don't see why you object to them."



To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (7915)2/21/2005 5:15:02 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Respond to of 361240
 
Walmart and environmental abuses: Wal-Mart and the Environment

by Lindsay Robinson

The following article details some of Wal-Mart's environmental abuses in the United States. Look for future articles about Wal-Mart's labor, human rights, and community development policies in upcoming issues of this paper.

As people in the Champaign-Urbana area await the opening of a second Wal-Mart store (a Wal-Mart Supercenter), most are completely unaware of the environmental problems that Wal-Mart can bring.

But many people in Connecticut, Washington, and Pennsylvania are angry with the retail giant for violating state water quality standards. Environmental officials in those states have complained of a host of similar problems regarding Wal-Mart construction sites. The Wal-Marts in question did not use the proper methods for clearing the site for construction. When heavy rains pelted the sites, water carried tons of silt to the nearby rivers and streams, threatening not only the life within the waterways but also the drinking water of thousands of people. In 1998 Pennsylvania's Department of Environmental Protection issued a work stop order at one site, but most of the work had already been completed.

Erosion is not the only environmental problem with Wal-Mart stores. The Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection sued Wal-Mart over pesticide and fertilizer pollution in its rivers and streams in May 2000. Connecticut claims that 11 Wal-Mart stores left pesticides and fertilizers in the parking lot, when hard rains fell on the lot, the chemicals were carried into rivers and streams, affecting the health of plants, animals, and people.

Environmentalists and community groups across the country are worried because new Wal-Mart stores are constructed at a rapid pace, with one new store opening every two business days. Most states and communities do not have enough resources to enforce their water quality standards and cannot police every construction site. The laws Wal-Mart is violating are on the books, but there is no money to enforce them. According to Wal-Mart's 2001 annual report, there are already 138 Wal-Mart and Sam's Club stores open in Illinois, not including those stores under construction, such as the new Supercenter sites in Springfield and Savoy (just south of Champaign).

Environmental inspectors in Dallas complained that the government was going to give Wal-Mart stores special treatment in a water-quality settlement. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed different inspection procedures for Wal-Mart stores only. According to James Graham, the EPA' s top water pollution enforcer, the deal would eliminate some water quality standards in order to give Wal-Mart its own official inspection procedure. The Justice Department dismissed the case, even after the statement by the EPA official, but the EPA is revising the settlement with Wal-Mart.

One of Wal-Mart's other environmentally destructive policies involves the placement of their stores. Wal-Mart and other "big box" retailers gobble up prime farmland and other natural habitat every day. While we worry about feeding the more than six billion people on this planet, our cities and counties allow the destruction of lush farmland that could provide sustenance for more people. The problem, generally referred to as "urban sprawl," continues to grow. Communities face the problem of balancing growth and jobs with the protection of the environment and the preservation of their existing economic bases. Sprawl also increases car-dependency for a community, raising the amount of greenhouse gases emitted and causing consumers to use more gas.

While Wal-Mart is busy polluting our lakes and streams, their executives are running a major campaign to show how environmentally friendly they are. Wal-Mart boasts its selection of environmentally conscious products and how much money it gives away to environmental causes. Wal-Mart made $6.3 Billion dollars last year after expenses, giving away $190 million dollars to charity with $1.3 million of that going to environmental causes. While $190 million dollars might sound like a lot of money it only makes up about of 3% of their profits, with only 0.021% of their profits going to help the environment. Wal-Mart causes more damage than it helps to clean up.

Wal-Mart is the world's largest retailer and the second largest employer in the United States, behind the federal government. Wal-Mart is huge, and the problems it is associated with are even larger.



To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (7915)2/21/2005 5:21:20 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361240
 
Here's a report...the hidden costs we all pay Walmart: democracymeansyou.com



To: Joe Btfsplk who wrote (7915)2/21/2005 5:57:54 PM
From: SiouxPal  Respond to of 361240
 
George Wigginout you rascal ya' slipped in here while I was out. Please go fuch yourself.

Sioux