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To: koan who wrote (253444)6/10/2010 8:18:43 PM
From: RetiredNowRespond to of 306849
 
LOL. Yeah. Amazing. This is worse. How are you doing, koan? Long time since I've seen you post!



To: koan who wrote (253444)6/13/2010 2:25:26 AM
From: stockman_scottRespond to of 306849
 
Gulf Needs Concrete Actions That Respect Residents' Rights

by Kerry Kennedy

Published on Saturday, June 12, 2010 by Huffington Post

CODEN, Ala. - When Gulf Coast resident Louise Bosarge heard President Obama refer to her community as "resilient," her response was poetic: "We bounce back. We always bounce back. Bouncing hurts."

Along with my daughter Mariah and a team of human rights experts from the RFK Center for Justice and Human Rights, I spent the last several days in Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama speaking with commercial fishermen, deck hands, restaurateurs, ecologists, farmers, service providers, marina workers, hoteliers, kids and more whose lives are directly affected by BP's toxic tsunami swamping the Gulf Coast and wiping out the fishing and tourism industries which have been the mainstays of these communities for decades. "Oil will be all that's left," lamented one long-time resident. "And with the politicians in the pockets of the oil companies, there will be more pressure than ever to drill, baby, drill."

Photographs of slime-soaked seabirds distract from the human tragedy suffocating the region. More concerned about its image than about the human beings impacted, BP has spent $50 million on an oil-slick ad campaign. Meanwhile, BP is strangling the livelihoods of the people of the gulf coast just as surely as its oil is eviscerating the ecosystems.

Eleven of us motored a small boat eight miles out from shore. Though far from shore, the water there appeared as though we had pulled up to a gargantuan gas dock, with a rainbow sheen covering the ocean, horizon to horizon. Our eyes stung, our throats closed and our heads ached despite the respirators we wore.

Our little boat came to a bird sanctuary which was surrounded by buoyant booms floating on the water to hold the oil off the island. But the oil, aided by dispersants, had slipped beneath the booms and puddled in a gooey brown ring around the once pristine land. We watched in horror as a pelican, smothered in molasses-like gunk, struggled haplessly to get a foothold on the rocky shore -- spreading its wings and falling back, spreading and falling, spreading and falling. As we docked the boat, the captain said "I'll be dreaming about that pelican tonight. I hope I'm not that pelican."

After generations spent mastering their trade, fishermen (already underwater with loans on boats that now stand idle) fear they will have to permanently pull up their nets. BP is attempting to buy them off with promises to pay their lost salaries, but in reality BP has cynically designed a system that makes it impossible for most fishermen to successfully make claims. BP forced many of those who came forward to sign forms releasing BP from future liability. Only through public pressure has BP agreed to rescind these forced agreements.

BP's public relations machine says it will protect the cleanup crews. However, workers were not only denied protective equipment but, after arriving for work wearing respirators, were threatened with the loss of their jobs if they chose to wear these "unnecessary" safety devices which serve only to "spread hysteria." Workers complaining of illnesses such as headaches and breathing difficulty were told by BP that they have "food poisoning" or "heat stroke." BP warned workers that if they wanted to be treated, they should see the BP doctors rather than county health officials.

Fishermen, residents and the American public had no say in the decision of a private company to conduct a colossal experiment of pouring billions of gallons of carcinogens into one of the most fertile fishing grounds on earth.

BP refuses to publicly disclose the litany of chemical agents so that patients and health care professionals can properly identify and treat related illnesses already being reported. Because of the virtual silence about the real health impacts of these chemicals, nothing has been done to prepare for the potential evacuation on the horizon.

Six weeks out, the economic backlash, with vast swaths of the fishable waters closed and vacation and convention cancellations rampant, is already manifesting itself in a worrisome spike in mental health concerns for persons who have lost virtually everything and fear for their future. Professionals reported significant increases in depression, which can be expected to lead to domestic violence, alcohol and drug use, and suicide.

Residents of the Gulf Coast have a clear sense of what should be done:

Everyone send donations to the Gulf Coast Fund, which funds community organizations across the region

BP should keep its promise and pay fair and prompt compensation to all fishermen and related business people who have suffered economic losses

BP should immediately give a bonus to fisherman of 30 percent of the value of the catch for those who continue fishing in available waters

The federal government should develop an evacuation plan for coastal communities which is consistent with international standards for the treatment of internally displaced people, including keeping families together, preserving voting rights and recognizing the right to return

The federal government, through executive order, should direct a portion of the $19 billion in allocated but unspent Katrina monies to create 100,000 green and living wage jobs along the gulf coast, as called for in the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act (H.R. 2269).

It may take decades for BP to make the Gulf "whole." In the aftermath of this oil tsunami, concrete actions that respect residents' rights are the next steps.

*Kerry Kennedy is author of Speak Truth to Power and founder of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights. She is the chair of the Amnesty International Leadership Council.

© 2010 Huffington Post



To: koan who wrote (253444)6/15/2010 5:55:05 PM
From: stockman_scottRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 306849
 
Closing BP's Escape Routes
______________________________________________________________

by Robert Weissman

Published on Tuesday, June 15, 2010 by CommonDreams.org

BP generates enough cash to absorb its liabilities from the oil gusher in the Gulf of Mexico.

But that doesn't mean it will.

One of the benefits of the corporate form is that it gives giant corporations the ability to escape liability. BP may or may not choose to capitalize on such escapes, but it would be foolish to presume that it won't. That's why President Obama's call for the company to establish a $20 billion escrow account is such a positive and needed -- if still inadequate -- step.

Consider first the liabilities that BP may face. No one really knows what the damage from the oil gusher or the overall costs to BP may ultimately be. Some analysts are now throwing around numbers of $70 billion on the upper end -- but it's not hard to see how the ultimate cost to BP could rise even higher.

The company faces civil fines of up to $3,000 per barrel of oil polluting the ocean. If the gusher lasts for four months at 40,000 barrels a day, the fine alone could hit $14 billion. If it is found that the actual oil flow is double that level, the fine could potentially approach $30 billion -- more, if the gusher lasts for more than four months.

Beyond the payments the company is making, it is going to face massive lawsuits, with damages surely in the billions and quite possibly in the tens of billions. On top of that, it may face a massive punitive damage award. Exxon challenged a punitive damages award of $10 billion in the Valdez case, and succeeded through appeals in dragging out payment for 20 years and lowering the amount to $500 million. But that was $500 million on top of compensatory damages of $500 million.

On top of all this, BP's brand -- just a couple months ago, the most valued among oil companies -- is now ruined.

Still, as hard as it is to conceptualize, BP can afford to pay $70 billion. The company made $14 billion in profits in 2009, a bad year. Before the Gulf disaster, it was on track to make much more in 2010.

BP may be able to pay $70 billion, but it surely doesn't want to. Even as the company pledges again and again to cover all "legitimate" claims, you can be sure that its attorneys are conjuring a variety of maneuvers to avoid paying. Here are five approaches they must be considering:

1. The AH Robins/Dalkon Shield Bankruptcy Scam

A.H. Robins, the manufacturer of the defective Dalkon Shield intrauterine device, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1985. Women who were victims of the dangerous device received less compensation than they otherwise would have. Meanwhile, with the company's otherwise open-ended liability demarcated in the bankruptcy process, Robins' value shot up. AHP (now part of Wyeth, itself now part of Pfizer) acquired the company at a premium, with the Robins family making off with hundreds of millions of dollars.

BP wouldn't follow the Robins' model exactly. The play for BP would not be to declare bankruptcy for the parent company, but for BP America or another subsidiary that could be tagged with the liability for the Gulf of Mexico gusher.

In advance of such a move, BP might try to move assets out of the designated subsidiary and into other subsidiaries in its vast network. Such asset shifting is not permissible, and creditors would challenge any such moves, if they could discover them. But using its labyrinthian structure, BP might hope to evade the creditors.

Even without the asset shifting effort, bankruptcy for an affiliate could prove attractive for BP.

2. The Union Carbide Disappearance

Union Carbide was the company responsible for the world's worst industrial disaster. A gas escape from its chemical facility in Bhopal, India killed many thousands (likely tens of thousands) and severely injured tens of thousands more. After settling for a paltry amount with the Indian government, Union Carbide disappeared as a standalone company. It is now a subsidiary of Dow Chemical.

Says Dow: "Dow has no responsibility for Bhopal." Moreover, "the former Bhopal plant was owned and operated by Union Carbide India, Ltd. (UCIL), an Indian company, with shared ownership by Union Carbide Corporation, the Indian government, and private investors. Union Carbide sold its shares in UCIL in 1994, and UCIL was renamed Eveready Industries India, Ltd., which remains a significant Indian company today."

BP might conceivably be acquired by another oil major. Or, more likely, it might just sell some or all of its U.S. subsidiaries. If the liability cap in the Oil Pollution Act works to protect BP from legally recoverable claims (perhaps less likely than has been reported, since the cap does not apply to a spill caused by violation of applicable federal rules), an acquiring company could simply state that it refuses to make good on the liabilities that BP now says it will voluntarily accept. A new company would also benefit from operating BP assets with a new, uninjured brand name.

3. The Shell Company Game

A variant on the Union Carbide Disappearance gambit would involve selling one or more subsidiaries' assets, but leaving the current corporate structure in place. Liability would still attach to the old subsidiaries, but it would be devoid of assets to pay -- if BP could find a way to move the cash it received for selling assets out of the subsidiary and out of reach of creditors.

Again, such a move should not be legal. But it would be a mistake to assume that formal legal rules provide guarantees when billions or tens of billions of dollars are at stake for a giant, global multinational.

4. The Exxon Hardball Approach

BP's lawyers are undoubtedly considering other, more straightforward approaches to limit the company's liability.

Under the Exxon Hardball approach, BP would follow its oil company brethren's approach to the Valdez spill. Drag out compensation payments. Challenge adverse legal rulings. Rely on a corporate-friendly judiciary to overturn or scale back any large scale jury verdicts or government-proposed fines.

5. The Big Tobacco Global Deal

Another approach might be for BP to offer a "global settlement" of all claims arising from the Gulf Oil gusher. This would follow the precedent of Big Tobacco, which in 1997 offered to put hundreds of billions of dollars on the table, and accept some regulatory restraints, to settle lawsuits for its past misconduct and effectively preclude new litigation. (This deal was ultimately scuttled.) For BP, the play would be to put a "shock and awe" amount of money on the table to resolve all claims and penalties. Its aim would be to eliminate the prospect of getting hit with outsized punitive damages or fines, and escaping payment for ecological damage that may not be apparent for many years --amounts that might vastly exceed what BP pays.

Against this panoply of available maneuvers, public officials have limited options. The Obama administration is finally doing the right thing in first, talking about the danger of BP draining company assets via dividend payments, and, second, demanding the establishment of an escrow fund. Calling attention to abusive corporate stratagems not yet underway is one of the best ways to prevent their deployment. And an escrow fund would establish a guaranteed pool of available money for victims -- establishing the fund apart from BP's control is at least as important as ensuring fair and independent handling of victims' claims.

What this and future administrations also need is a way to exert control over companies facing environmental or other liabilities of the scale now facing BP -- a kind of receivership to prevent manipulations of the corporate form to enable corporate goliaths to escape liability.

Forcing corporations to pay for the damage they cause is not sufficient to prevent them from recklessly endangering people and the planet, but it is certainly necessary. Permitting them to avoid liability and foist costs on to others is to ensure more and worse corporate catastrophes.

*Robert Weissman is president of Public Citizen, which is calling for a BP Boycott.