Texas


Lottery game flop stirs school fund concerns
10:27 AM CDT on Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Brad Watson / WFAA-TV

As the Texas Lottery game the Texas Two Step appears to be going broke, some are concerned that may ultimately lead to dipping into school funds to pay the jackpots …. Not enough people are buying tickets to support the guaranteed jackpot of the Texas Two Step.

For the first time since 2002, the sales and reserve fund couldn’t cover Monday’s $225,000 jackpot, which had two winners.

One North Texas lottery watchdog, Dawn Nettles of Garland, said she calculates low Two Step sales will lead the state to look to school funds to dole out the winnings. Her numbers have been right before. Nettles tracks lottery games and money in an online newsletter called www.LottoReport.com.

“Well, somebody is going to be shorted, the schools in this case,” she said. “It’s just that simple.”

But officials at the Texas Lottery says winners still get their payouts and the school fund is never touched until reserves and an emergency lottery account are tapped out.

“We hope that it doesn’t happen,” said Bobby Heath, Texas Lottery, about any risk directed towards school funds. “And we hope that we can generate enough sales through making the games, fun and exciting.”

Nettles shook up the Texas Lottery in 2005 when she revealed it advertised Lotto Texas jackpots higher than ticket sales. She said she believes the lottery should scrap guaranteed jackpots since the Texas Two Step’s number is up.

[Link]

Via Fark.



Following up on my previous post about sludge dumping in Sierra Blanca Texas: Bush Romances Atom in Texas –

[A]ggressive efforts by lobbyists representing Governor Bush worked with the utility industry to successfully push through federal legislation that could make Texas the largest low-level radioactive waste dumpsite in the country.

When George W. Bush was inaugurated as Texas Governor in 1995, one of the first federal initiatives he undertook on behalf of Texas industry was attempting to pass federal legislation creating the Texas-Maine-Vermont radioactive waste compact to fund construction of a radioactive waste dump in the small Texas border town Sierra Blanca.
[Link]

Environmental Justice Case Study: The Struggle for Sierra Blanca, Texas Against A Low-Level Nuclear Waste Site –

In 1994, the states of Texas, Maine, and Vermont entered a compact allowing the disposal of low-level nuclear waste at a proposed Texas site. This creates the tenth such compact in the United States since 1980, when a Federal law was passed requiring states take responsibility for their low-level nuclear waste, urging cooperation. This compact demands both Maine and Vermont to pay Texas $25 million to build a disposal facility. Prior to becoming law, the compact first needed to gain Congressional approval. Following its approval on September 20, 1998, the compact then required the state of Texas to license the project before moving forward. October 22, 1998, Texas officials voted to deny the compact’s proposed site located just outside of Sierra Blanca.

Sierra Blanca, Sierra Blanca Protesta small West Texas town over two-thirds Hispanic, already hosts Merco Joint Venture. This company is the town’s largest employer shipping over 400,000 tons of New York City sludge daily to a nearby ranch. Furthermore, Sierra Blanca is located only sixteen miles from the Mexico border, on top of an aquifer, and in an active Earthquake area. Residents, environmentalists, and community groups have made numerous cries of “environmental racism”, even filing a suit under Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. The groups have faced an uphill battle defending the town from becoming a nuclear disposal site. However, while the fight was won in Sierra Blanca, the compact is law and these states will seek an alternative site.

[Link]

Nuclear Information and Resource Center –

President Clinton Pulls the Trigger on Minority Community
Okays Sending Radioactive Waste to Texas Border Town

Wash., D.C. — On September 20, President Clinton violated the very spirit and letter of his own 1994 Executive order on Environmental Justice by signing the Texas/Maine/Vermont Radioactive Waste dump Compact (HR 629) into law. His signature traded the civil rights of the low-income, Mexican American people of Sierra Blanca, Texas for the nuclear power industry.

[Link]

According to Thomas @ the Library of Congress –

H.R.629
Title: To grant the consent of the Congress to the Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact.
Sponsor: Rep Barton, Joe [TX-6] (introduced 2/6/1997) Cosponsors (23)
Related Bills: H.RES.258, H.RES.511, S.270
Latest Major Action: Became Public Law No: 105-236 [GPO: Text, PDF]
House Reports: 105-181; Latest Conference Report: 105-630 (in Congressional Record H5724-5727)

[Link]

Norma Chavez campaign–

Chairwoman Chávez marches 4 days from El Paso to Sierra Blanca against the proposed Sierra Blanca Low-Level Radioactive Waste Facility.

[Link]

Lone Star Chapter Sierra Club: Position Statement on Radioactive Waste

See also: Yucca Mountain



From New York City to Western Texas: dumping the sludge.

Center for Land Use Interpretation: Sierra Blanca Sludge Ranch –

Sierra Blanca Sludge RanchBetween 1992 and 2001, as many as 45 train cars per day bought sewage sludge from New York City to this 129,000 acre West Texas property, where it is spread out on the ground like peanut butter. The waste site is a former resort called the Mile High Ranch, and is owned by a Long Island New York company, Merco Joint Venture. The contract with New York City was terminated in June of 2001, and the sludge ranch, possibly the largest in the World, is now idle.

[Link]

Toxic Texas casts a critical eye on the history of sludge dumping –

This week the Texas Toxic Tour takes us to Sierra Blanca Texas, home to the nation’s largest sewage sludge dump. Toxic TexasThe story examines how Sierra Blanca, a small town on the U.S./Mexico border, became the resting place for New York City’s sewage.

…. Until Congress banned ocean dumping of sewage sludge in 1988, New York City dumped millions of tons of its sewage into the ocean. New York sludge was too contaminated with toxic pollutants to be used and too expensive to be buried safely in a landfill. In 1992, New York City awarded Merco Joint Venture; an Oklahoma-based company tied to New York organized crime (”Flood of Money Wins an Uneasy Home in Texas for New York City Waste”, Allen R. Myerson, The New York Times, 7/17/95 and “Stink Over Sludge”, Kevin Flynn and Michael Moss, New York Newsday, 8/2/94.), a six-year contract to dispose of nearly a fifth of the Big Apples’ sewage sludge.

In 1992, after dumping began, the people of Sierra Blanca began to complain of the odor. Bill Addington“The chemical odors coming off the application area are not just a nuisance and a trespass, they’re a health hazard - hydrogen sulfide and ammonia vapors mixed with a fecal smell are indescribable - except to say that it smells like death … We noticed strange rashes and blisters in the mouth, more flu, more colds, more allergies, and asthma since they came. We’ve seen a lot more sickness - especially with the kids,” says Bill Addington, a local resident.

… In 1997, Merco applied to the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission (TNRCC) for a renewal of their sludge permit for an additional five years. The company also requested an amendment to triple the amount of sewage sprayed per acre. To support their efforts, Merco hired Gov. Bush’s former legislative director, Cliff Johnson, to lobby the Bush appointed commissioners (1997 Commissioners -Barry McBee, Ralph Marquez, John Baker) at the state regulatory agency.

Bill Addington and Millie Dodge of Sierra Blanca used this opportunity to file a motion for reconsideration with the TNRCC. In response, the TNRCC Executive Director Dan Pearson filed a brief arguing for the motion for reconsideration to be denied. Pearson, hired by the Bush-appointed TNRCC Commissioners, claimed that the Merco operation wasn’t a threat to health or the environment …. The Bush-appointed Commissioners denied the motion, saying properly treated sewage sludge posed no threat, and Merco began dumping up to 400 tons a day.

In 1999, Merco admitted that it had spread sludge from New York that had not been properly treated to reduce pathogens - a state and federal requirement. (12) Merco had previously been caught spreading untreated sludge and fined $12,800 in 1994, a sum unlikely to deter illegal dumping on a contract valued at $168 million dollars over five years.

…. Addington summed up the community feeling saying, “Sierra Blanca is in desperate need for a community health survey, a county survey, by an independent group …we feel like guinea pigs”(14)

[Toxic Texas: Link]
[Via Fark]

PR Watch reports: Merco’s SLAPP Suit Fails in Texas –

1997: An appeals court has overthrown a 1996 libel verdict won by a New York company that hauls sewage sludge against filmmaker Michael Moore’s TV Nation television program and EPA whistleblower Hugh Kaufman.

On August 2, 1994, TV Nation aired a segment titled “Sludge Train,” which followed a load of sludge from a sewage plant in New York as it was hauled by train to Sierra Blanca, Texas, where it was applied as fertilizer on ranchland owned by Merco Joint Venture, the company hired to dispose of the sludge.

It featured footage of Sierra Blanca residents who complained about odors from the sludge operation, and interviewed EPA whistleblower Hugh Kaufman, who described the ranch as “an illegal haul and dump operation” and said “the people of Texas are being poisoned.”

Merco retaliated with a libel lawsuit against Kaufman, TV Nation and its parent company, TriStar Television. After a year of litigation, a Texas jury awarded actual damages in the paltry amount of $2, plus $5 million in punitive damages.

Upon appeal, however, the circuit judges found that Merco had failed to prove its case. “…. Merco presented no proof that TriStar and Kaufman knew, or should have known, that any part of the ‘Sludge Train’ broadcast was false. Indeed, Merco failed to show any part of the broadcast actually was false.”

“TriStar and Kaufman are not liable for defamation because they refused to corroborate the Merco party line,” the judges concluded. “Defamation law should not be used as a threat to force individuals to muzzle their truthful, reasonable opinions and beliefs. To endorse Merco’s version of defamation law would be to disregard . . . constitutional protections.”

[PR Watch: Link]

National Sludge Alliance: Sludge Magic –

“The question is, why would New York City pay $800.00 per ton to ship sludge to the western states when other municipalities are paying less than $30.00 a ton for disposal?”

[National Sludge Alliance: Link]

Environmental News Service reports –

NEW YORK CITY STOPS SHIPMENTS OF SEWAGE TO TEXAS DUMP

SIERRA BLANCA, Texas, June 26, 2001 (ENS) - The largest sewage sludge dump on Earth, the 81,000 acre municipal industrial dump at Sierra Blanca, will no longer be accepting toxic sewage from New York City.

The New York Department of Environmental Protection (NYC DEP) has canceled its 15 year, $500 million contract with MERCO NYC, which runs the Sierra Blanca dump in the high desert of Texas. MERCO was in its third year of the contract, which was renewed in 1998.

MERCO earned $168 million from the NYC DEP by dumping New York City sewage at Sierra Blanca between 1992 and 1998.

Ten dry tons of sludge cake were spread on each acre of the dump each year. A minimum of 250 tons per day and a maximum of 400 tons a day were dumped over the surface of the registered 81,000 acre land application area, under the guise of fertilizing the desert land.

The sewage sludge contained several contaminants, including lead, PCBs, dioxin, pesticides and other pollutants. New York City sewage is not allowed to be spread or even landfilled in New York State, because the material fails state standards for copper and lead at many of the NYC treatment plants.

[Environmental News Service: Link]

Michael Scally observes, in a footnote to an otherwise unrelated article –

Opponents of the proposed contract award to Merco Joint Venture, the sludge contractor, noted the speed with which the contract proposal was approved by the Texas Water Commission after Merco made a $1.5 million contribution to Texas Tech University to study the “benefits” of sludge sewage disposal, approval it won without an environmental impact study or serious opportunity for public process or debate. Merco Joint Venture was subsequently tied to organized crime elements. See, Allen R. Myerson, Flood of Money Wins an Uneasy Home in Texas for New York City Waste, The N. Y Times, (July 17, 1995) at B02.

[Link]

See also Sierra Blanca: Radioactive Waste.