Thursday, December 21, 2017

Not in Manchac's Backyard !



If you are upset about the proposed Syrah Resources graphite product plant at Port Manchac you should be.  It is obvious the South Tangipahoa Parish Port Commission has not done their research concerning this proposal.

There is a complete lack of information regarding the effects of the production of graphite products in the US by Syrah Resources because currently their largest production plant is in the African Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado.

Under an agreement with China, the Australian owned company, Syrah Resources, will provide 30,000 tons of graphite to Jixi BTR Graphite Industrial for the production of lithium ion batteries.

The South Tangipahoa Parish Port Commission needs to focus its attention on China to learn the true facts about the pollutive nature of a graphite product plant.

In October, 2016 The Washington Post did an investigative story on the pollutant effects of graphite dust on a town located near a plant that produces it.  The story entitled “In your phone, in their air” was written by Peter Whoriskey and can be easily Googled.

I have quoted some of its highlights below:

‘At night, the pollution around the village has an otherworldly, almost fairy-tale quality.  ‘The air sparkles,’ said Zhang Tuling, a farmer in a village in far northeastern China. ‘When any bit of light hits the particles, they shine.’

Beside the family home is a plot that once grew saplings, but the trees died once the factory began operating, said Zhang’s husband, Yu Yuan.
‘This is what we live with,’ Zhang said, slowly waving an arm at the stumps.

By daylight, the particles are visible as a lustrous gray dust that settles on everything. It stunts the crops it blankets, begrimes laundry hung outside to dry and leaves grit on food. The village’s well water has become undrinkable, too.

Zhang and Yu live near a factory that produces graphite, a glittery substance that, while best known for filling pencils, has become an indispensable resource in the new millennium. It is an ingredient in lithium-ion batteries.

At five towns in two provinces of China, Washington Post journalists heard the same story from villagers living near graphite companies: sparkling night air, damaged crops, homes and belongings covered in soot, polluted drinking water — and government officials inclined to look the other way to benefit a major employer.

In addition, plant managers and party officials sometimes sternly discouraged journalists from speaking with villagers. At three of the villages, the taxi carrying the Post journalists was followed.
Whatever the obstacles, the villagers who would talk offered remarkably consistent accounts of the pollution. The graphite, they typically said with disgust, makes everything mai tai, a regional expression meaning dirty.

Since the graphite factory opened in Zhang’s village about five years ago, the graphite has become more than a nuisance. The couple live near Jixi, a city less than 50 miles from the Russian border. The dust has covered their corn crop, so much so that walking by a row of cornstalks leaves their faces blackened. And it seems impossible to keep it out of the house — at the dinner table, it often leaves them chewing the particles in their teeth.

They worry, too, about the health consequences, especially of breathing it in. Inhaling particulate matter can cause an array of health troubles, according to health experts, including heart attacks and respiratory ailments.

But it’s not just the air. The graphite plant discharges pollutants into local waters, Zhang and Yu said — a nightly event that they can detect by smell: The discharges leave a chemical odor that irritates their noses and throats. Those emissions have not only made their water undrinkable, they said, but also kept the local river from freezing in winter. They also think the discharge poisoned the poplar trees they were growing for lumber outside their home, just beyond their coops for ducks and geese and chickens.

‘All the trees were fine until the graphite plant started,’ Yu said. ’It killed my trees.’
‘We want to move, but we don’t have any money,’ Zhang said.”

This is the reality of what could happen if this project is allowed to continue.  I’m sure that the company will respond that this is a situation that exists in China known for their lax enforcement of environmental safeguards and that they along with our state will ensure that this doesn’t happened here.  Do you want to trust this company and the state of Louisiana to protect you and the environment? Mr. Zhang in China did and look how that ended.

Sunday, December 3, 2017

We ain't stupid



Everyone in administrative positions in Louisiana state government has a boss.   It is hard for me to conceptualize that since 2008 when Mike Edmonson was appointed head of the Louisiana State Police, by Governor Bobby Jindal, no one ever heard any rumors or complaints about Edmonson’s questionable, unethical behavior.   The powers to be want us to believe that they were so well hidden that even John Bel Edwards had no knowledge of them when he chose to let Edmonson continue his reign.  How dumb does the Baton Rouge crew think we are?
 
This entire new fiasco smacks of the same type of behavior that was permitted to occur with our former head of the Angola Prison System, Mr. Burl Cain.  Again, hard to believe that Cain’s boss, James Leblanc,  head of the Louisiana Department  of Public Safety and Corrections, had no knowledge of his questionable abuse of taxpayers’ resources.   LeBlanc still remains in his job thanks again to our present governor.

The reality for the existence of these poor excuses for public servants is that they were just part of the ‘good ole boys’ culture, an informal system of friendships and connections through which men use their positions of influence by providing favors and information to help other men.  This is simply the way it is in our state government.

It is apparent that both these public servants were “nice guys” who would do a favor for you if you asked and expected only that you reward them by staying out of the day-to-day operation of their departments.   In other words, don’t hold them accountable for the way they did things as long as they fulfilled the tangible goals expected of them.

I suspect that after all the investigations are completed, Edmonson, like Cain will be permitted to quietly draw his lucrative state sponsored pension for the remainder of his life and all this mess will just fade away.  Isn’t that how it always works in Louisiana?  After all we don’t have the national reputation as being one of the most corrupt states for nothing.  Huey Long would be proud of our Baton Rouge crew.

In a just world, both these individuals should receive a court date along with the termination of their bosses, who either knew about the improprieties and ignored them, or didn’t have a clue and should have.

TOPShas lost oringinal intent



Our legislators are once again reviewing the funding for the TOPS program.  However, the Louisiana TOPS program has indeed lost its way.  It was originally funded by Mr. Patrick F. Taylor, a Texas born oilman, to reward students who had outstanding academic performance, coupled with limited family resources, with a college education.  The original proposal was offered to the students of an intercity public school in New Orleans.

TOPS now violates both intents of the original Taylor plan.  In 1989, TOPS had an income cap of $25,000, about $47,850 in today’s dollars.  Today, thirty-seven percent of TOPS recipients come from homes with an annual income of $70,000 to $150,000.  One in five comes from a family that makes more than $150,000 a year. 

 Academically, the original standard for TOPS set by Mr. Taylor was a 3.0 GPA, a B average.  When the state took over it immediately lowered the academic requirement to 2.5, a C plus, hardly outstanding academic performance. It also added the requirement of a composite score of 20 on the ACT, a national college test taken by high school seniors.  This score falls at the 50th percentile nationally, again simply an average, non-noteworthy score.

The most startling finding that clearly indicates just how bastardized the Louisiana TOPS program has become is the fact that if the GPA qualification for TOPS were returned to the original 3.0 and the ACT requirement was raised to 22 corresponding to the 63rd percentile, 80% of this year’s crop of TOPS recipients would no longer qualify.

Thanks to our esteemed legislators TOPS has become nothing more than an entitlement program for average performing students from middle and upper class families in Louisiana and a cash cow for our state’s junior colleges, trade schools, and universities.  Additionally, its present implementation is an insult to the students currently receiving the program’s benefits that would have initially qualified based upon their high academic performances, higher ACT scores, and family needs.

Originally, it was a respected, prestigious honor to be selected as a TOPS candidate.  Now it’s just an expected God- given right of Louisianans.

Once you give the masses an expected financial handout, it’s almost impossible to take it away; the downside of all entitlement programs.  TOPS continues to drain our state budget and I doubt that it will ever return to its original intent, for there’s no genuine desire to do so among our legislators and a very vocal part of the public.

If in fact this is a true assessment maybe our legislators ought to put the funding for TOPS to a vote of all their constituents to determine if they would be willing to add a special tax to fund it.  Good luck with that!