-- Scotts Contracting - StLouis Renewable Energy

Search This Blog

9.23.2010

Oil Spill Contained, Energy Policy Dies, Status Quo Blissfully Restored

Oil Spill Contained, Energy Policy Dies, Status Quo Blissfully Restored

The fault, dear Brutus, lies not in our stars but …
Published: September 9, 2010

As the vein of black gold enriching the Gulf of Mexico finally, or temporarily, dwindles to a trickle, what passes for public debate on American television descends all too predictably into screeching about 'blame.' Everyone knows all good movies need a villain and despite a few quiet voices not-so-helpfully reminding us that accidents happen and we should remain stoic in the throes of fate, Americans crave the simplicity and uncomplicated drama of the white hat/black hat narrative.

Certain parties, surprising no one, have nominated President Obama for the role, as if he should don a frogman outfit and sacrifice himself ala John Wayne in Reap the Wild Wind. Given the otherworldly feckless arrogance of BP CEO Tony Haywood, it would seem he craves the part, yet clueless is hardly as satisfying as sinister. Nevertheless, America has coalesced around BP as the bad guy, and given their track record not even John Adams would be eager to defend them. But someone has to, so here goes….

When an institutional arrangement that results in a predictable, almost inevitable event becomes transformed into a freak phenomenon, the result of a single bad apple so to speak, you pretty much guarantee you'll be spitting out a lot more rotten apple. Or, to invent an old saying, when you invite a bear into your house and he messes on the floor, don't blame the bear. When you don't have anyone watching over corporate accounting, or regulations on collateralized debt obligations, or you allow drilling in areas where plugging a leak strains the bounds of known engineering, you're bound to end up with Enron, AIG and now BP.  So in BP and the oil lobby's defense, they are merely the misunderstood bear. "Isn't this what you wanted," they ask? Cheap, plentiful oil for everything big and shiny and wonderful?" It must seem particularly ungrateful to turn on them after one, little accident. Was BP reckless and ill-prepared? Yes, but that's what corporate bears do.  Expecting otherwise will be a ritual of disappointment.

Yet, however satisfying and justified it is to turn BP into the latest corporate shorthand (i.e. Enron, AIG) for pure evil, it hardly tells the whole story. It just as easily could have happened to Shell, Chevron, or whoever, and next time probably will. Oil lobbyists proudly tout decades without a disastrous leak as proof that there's very little to worry about so we can all go back to the mall. Of course that's missing the point entirely, but when you're being paid handsomely to tout the virtues of a heavily polluting product that enriches tyrants and alters the planet's climate a certain imagination is required. 99% safe sounds wonderful, except for that pesky 1%. Odds, no matter how good, are still only odds. If 1% were actually zero then no one would buy a lottery ticket.

Their scruples may have withered but their strategy is sound. The oil lobby desperately wants to undermine the blame game and make sure that it's no one's fault. Fault implies responsibility, which could lead, after a series of interminable Congressional hearings, to…gasp laws. But in this case more laws and regulations are just bricks in the Tower of Babel, empty manifestations of their maker's hubris, destined to fail.  The idea that we can just tinker with the levers, a little stricter here and a bit more oversight there, and reach the nirvana of absolute safety is a naïve self-delusion, born of the fevered narcissism of over-empowered bureaucrats, given force by preening politicians craving affirmation, and, finally, tolerated by a somnambulistic public eager to be told the quiet, warm lies of bedtime stories.

Nevertheless, a villain must be found and I nominate us. Toss a rock in the air, it'll hit someone guilty. There's no pleading innocent when the evidence is as high as the nearest landfill. Every car, every building, every piece of plastic is manifestation of our collective culpability. Every time I forget to bring a tote bag to the supermarket and every time you forget to turn off your computer. We are simply not mentally prepared to face the consequences of our consumption. The shame in this is that if an entire generation of politicians hadn't fallen somewhere on a scale ranging from indifferent to corrupt, a transformative energy policy would have happened so gradually that no one would have noticed. Now? Not so much.

Now we must gnash our teeth and pull our hair as energy policy is shelved yet again due to the pathetic exigencies of contemporary American politics, where nothing, nothing, nothing is ever as important as making your opponent look bad. That this will be considered a 'victory' in certain circles is all any impartial observer needs to know to condemn this sham "democracy," where a supermajority is needed to accomplish anything more substantial than passing a resolution in favor of girl scouts. But who are we to complain – you vote a political bear into Congress, what do you expect?

David Pierotti is a proposal writer at Harvest Power. The company develops, builds, owns and operates next-generation organics recycling facilities that harvest the renewable energy, nutrients, and organic matter from discarded organic materials using best-in-class technologies for composting, anaerobic digestion, and biomass gasification.



--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

9.22.2010

End the Bush Tax Cuts for the Wealthy!




--- On Wed, 9/22/10, Andrew, Care2 Action Alerts <actionalerts@care2.com> wrote:

From: Andrew, Care2 Action Alerts <actionalerts@care2.com>
Subject: End the Bush Tax Cuts for the Wealthy!
To: "Buz Scott" <buzscott@yahoo.com>
Date: Wednesday, September 22, 2010, 1:15 PM

Care2 subscriber since Aug 2, 2010

care2 petitionsite actionAlert

Hi Buz,

The Bush tax cuts, like the Iraq War, are one of the primary drivers of our large federal deficit. And like the Iraq War, the Bush tax cuts were sold to the public through outright deception.

Congress: Don't extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy »

The snake oil the Bush administration peddled was that the tax cuts, which overwhelmingly went to the rich and the ultra-rich, would spur the economy. Now that we're facing the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, many so-called "conservatives," joined with corporatist "moderates," are singing the same tune. End tax cuts for the wealthy »

To make matters even worse, these same members of Congress are demanding deep cuts to the social safety net for the poor, the middle class, the unemployed and the elderly.

Tell Congress: Don't extend the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy »

From Care2 Thank you,
Andrew
Care2 and ThePetitionSite Team


Don't Extend the Bush Tax Cuts for the Wealthy!
Your voice will make an important difference.
Take Action!
  
Take action link: http://www.care2.com/go/z/e/AF29H/zKIL/blMjq


Become a fan of Care2 on Facebook Follow Care2 Action Alerts on Twitter

St Louis Local Heroes Honored in Washington- Medals of Valor


Local heroes honored in Washington with Medals of Valor


buy this photo J. B. Forbes 7/16/09 Thursday Maplewood Maplewood firefighters Tim Wisely, Andy Neff, Bill Appel and Mike Chellis pose for a portrait Thursday at the Maplewood Fire Station. All four were on duty one year ago with fellow firefighter Ryan Hummert when Hummert was shot and killed after the firefighters responded to a car fire. J.B. Forbes | Post-Dispatch

WASHINGTON - Two years after surviving a deadly sniper attack, four members of the Maplewood Fire Department each were awarded the Public Safety Officer Medal of Valor this afternoon.

Jefferson County Sheriff's Deputy Carl Beier, who survived an assault rifle attack three years ago, also was among Medal of Valor winners from around the country in a ceremony featuring Vice President Joe Biden and Attorney General Eric Holder

The Medal of Valor is the highest national award for public safety officers. It is given on rare occasions to those "who have exhibited exceptional courage, regardless of personal safety, in the attempt to save or protect human life."

Since 2003, 55 medals have been given out; 14 were awarded today.

"Today is a day for every man and woman in uniform to feel proud of you and, quite frankly, for you to feel proud of yourself," Biden said at the ceremony in an office building adjacent to the White House.

"You guys, really, what always amazes me is how you guys do it like it is part of your DNA. I don't know what you're made of. I think you're all crazy. But God love you for it, risking your life every day," he said.

In the summer of 2008, Lt. William Appel and firefighters Ryan Hummert, Timothy Wisely, Michael Chellis and Andrew Neff showed up in the early morning hours to fight a pick-up truck fire in the 7400 block of Zephyr Avenue.

They quickly came under fire from an unknown location. Maplewood police officer Adam Fite, who also had responded, was struck, as was Hummert, who succumbed to his head wound. 

The surviving firefighters, honored today, stayed on the scene until they were removed by a tactical team.

Amid the heroics, Neff dragged Fite to safety and stayed with him until the ambulance arrived, it was noted at the ceremony.

The alleged gunman set his house on fire and killed himself.

Maplewood Fire Chief Terry Merrill nominated the men for the award.

"With the tragedy of that day so great, it is even more important we recognize the exceptional courage and extraordinary decisiveness and presence of mind those four men exhibited under the most dire of circumstances," Merrill wrote in an e-mail. "They knowingly risked their lives for Ryan and many others that day. While their incredibly brave efforts could not save Ryan, their actions clearly prevented further tragedy."

Three years ago, Beier responded to a reported domestic dispute in an unincorporated area near Hillsboro. Soon after arriving, shots from an AK-47 rang out. Beier grabbed his shotgun from the trunk and hid behind a tree.

He returned fire and pellets form his shotgun struck the advancing gunman, halting his rampage. The gunman survived.

It was noted during the ceremony that Beier ordered other deputies away from the driveway out of fear that they would be ambushed. 

"Deputy Beier, without regard for his own life, stood his ground while under continuous fire, incapacitated an enraged suspect and protected lives."

The winners were given medals and commemorative plaques before posing with Biden and Holder for photos. Rep. Russ Carnahan, D-St. Louis, also took part.

"Because of you and your colleagues, I'm optimistic about what we can accomplish in the days ahead," Holder said.

Christine Byers of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report.



--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

EPA Selects Jefferson City for Green Development Assistance

EPA Selects Five Cities for Green Development Assistance

The Greening America's Capitals program will help cities develop and implement visions of sustainable communities and infrastructure.

Five state capitals have been selected to receive design and planning assistance in pursuing smart growth and green development projects as part of the Greening America's Capitals program. Private sector experts will visit Boston; Jefferson City, Mo.; Hartford, Conn.; Charleston, W.Va.; and Little Rock, Ark., and consult with city planners and leaders to facilitate each city's sustainable development goals.

 

Greening America's Capitals is a project of the Partnership for Sustainable Communities agreement forged between the EPA, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, and the U.S. Department of Transportation. Its ultimate goal is to inspire state leaders to expand sustainable development throughout their jurisdictions to yield unique neighborhoods that provide a variety of social, economic, environmental, and public health benefits. Beginning in 2010, the program will provide assistance to three to five communities per year.

The program will fund a team of urban planners and landscape architects to travel to each city and support them in developing visions of environmentally friendly communities that incorporate green building and green infrastructure strategies, as well as advise them on creating implementation plans.

Each city submitted a proposal outlining its project and need for design assistance.

  • BostonThe city requested help in greening its City Hall Plaza and City Hall building. The plaza's seven acres currently fail as a public green space, being mostly paved in brick and incorporating little vegetation, so the city plans to create well-defined edges and entrances, improve bicycle access and parking, connect the plaza to existing streets, increase trees and other plants to help with stormwater management, and support the green enhancements planned for City Hall and nearby buildings.
  • Charleston, W.Va.—The city plans to redesign Slack Plaza, a focal point of Charleston's downtown and the site of a major bus transfer hub, as part of a significant design shift in the district's heart. Charleston's leaders want to establish a common vision for Slack Plaza that will transform it into a multi-modal transportation hub and well-used town square, incorporating green space, establishing a sense of place, and improving safety.
  • Hartford, Conn.—The city seeks assistance in creating a redevelopment strategy for a mile-long stretch of Capitol Avenue that connects to nearby residential and retail areas and also includes the state capitol and legislative buildings, the state library, the Supreme Court, and the state armory. Redesign plans focus on the overall aesthetic character of Capitol Avenue and on public open spaces, including parks, state building grounds, green street improvements to manage stormwater, and pedestrian access and environment improvements.
  • Jefferson City, Mo.—The city plans to develop aesthetically and functionally valuable landscape architecture designs for an area of the city that is prone to flooding and is largely forgotten and abandoned: the Wears Creek and Millbottom sections. The goal is to benefit both water quality and the surrounding community by improving public access to the Missouri River, reclaiming and redeveloping brownfields and vacant land, and revitalizing the community.
  • Little Rock, Ark.—The city requested help in developing streetscape improvements for the revitalization of its Main Street corridor. Little Rock's redevelopment plans focus on key activity centers along this strip, which connects to another recently revitalized neighborhood, with a particular focus on creating new pocket parks and reusing vacant parking lots to encourage greater pedestrian activity that could support ground-floor retail businesses and a future trolley line.

For more information on the Partnership for Sustainable Communities' Greening America's Capitals project, visit www.epa.gov/smartgrowth/greencapitals.htm.



--
Scott's Contracting
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Connect with Scotts Contracting

FB FB Twitter LinkedIn Blog Blog Blog Blog Pinterest

Featured Post

Perfect Aircrete, Kitchen Ingredients.