ABC Coke Plant in Tarrant |
The mostly Black residents of North Birmingham are suffering slow, painful deaths so that "Alabama's First Family of Coal" can wallow in its riches, according to an editorial opinion from longtime attorney and civil-rights advocate Donald Watkins. Under the headline "Blacks Died in North Birmingham So That The Drummond Family Could Enjoy Its Riches," Watkins writes:
More than 4,000 residents, 92% of whom are black, are suffering and dying long, slow, and painful deaths in North Birmingham and the City of Tarrant from cancer and respiratory problems so that the members of a prominent Alabama coal-mining family can enjoy riches derived from industrial-scale coke producing plants that poisoned the air residents breathe and the ground underneath their feet in the neighborhoods surrounding the old ABC Coke plant.
Meet the Drummond family. They are presented in the chart accompanying this article. These are the family members who benefited, directly and/or indirectly, from the wealth created as a result of a century of environmental injustices that were inflicted upon 4,000 or more residents of North Birmingham and Tarrant. (A graph of the Drummond family tree can be viewed at this link.
Sadly, black Birmingham area public officials, community activists, civil rights leaders, attorneys, and social media influencers escorted many of these North Birmingham and Tarrant residents on the marches to their deaths. These escorts gaslighted the affected residents every step of the way, from 2013 to 2022.
My July 13, 2023, article titled, "Black Leaders Helped Southern Company Condemn North Birmingham Residents To A Slow, Painful Death," describes the despicable roles each participant was assigned to play in this tragic event.
Many of the so-called "black leaders/influencers" who actually participated in the North Birmingham and Tarrant death marches are listed in the chart below. (The chart can be viewed at this link.) They literally "hijacked" the process of seeking environmental justice for these residents for the sole purpose of helping the guilty parties escape justice.
Black "leaders" sold out North Birmingham residents for a relative pittance, Watkins writes, and that has created a tragedy that hits close to home for the longtime attorney:
All total, the blacks who participated in the death marches outlined in the Secret Plan to "hijack" the environmental protection rights of the residents of North Birmingham and Tarrant were reportedly paid less than $1 million to help ABC Coke, an affiliate of the Drummond Company, escape paying an estimated $150 million in U.S. Environmental Protection Agency-mandated environmental cleanup costs for the company's role in polluting in the neighborhoods in North Birmingham and Tarrant.
ABC Coke is one of five heavy industrial polluters listed in the bottom left side of the chart depicted in the Secret Plan. Each polluter was expected to pay an estimated $150 million in cleanup costs, for a total of $750 million.
Personally, I am not going to let North Birmingham and Tarrant residents die this way without one hell of a FIGHT from me to save their lives and preserve their dignity as human beings.
These residents owe me NOTHING, but I owe them life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. I actually give a damn about their health, safety, welfare, and quality of life.
In law school, I promised Mr. Ramus Rhodes, the janitor in Farrah Hall who personally mentored me as a law student for three years, that I would NEVER allow the forces that oppose our progress in Alabama to run roughshod over the rights of poor blacks like the residents of North Birmingham and Tarrant. In the 50 years since I graduated from law school, I have NEVER broken that promise.
I am waging this fight for Mr. Ramus Rhodes. I will NEVER betray him or my commitment to his legacy.
Rasmus Rhodes |
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Published 31 July 2023 • © 2023 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd
Environmental Research: Health, Volume 1, Number 4 Citation Wuyue Yu and George D Thurston 2023 Environ. Res.: Health 1 045002 DOI 10.1088/2752-5309/ace4ea
Abstract
"With the widespread implementation of air pollution mitigation strategies for health and climate policy, there is an emerging interest in accountability studies to validate whether a reduction of air pollution exposure, in fact, produces the human health benefits estimated from past air pollution epidemiology. The closure of a coal coking plant provides an ideal 'natural' experiment opportunity to rigorously evaluate the health benefits of air pollution emissions reductions. In this study, we applied an interrupted time series model to test the hypothesis that the substantial reduction in air pollution induced by the closure of the Shenango, Inc. coke plant in Pittsburgh, PA during January, 2016 was followed by immediate and/or longer-term cumulative local cardiovascular health benefits. We observed a 90% decrease in nearby SO2 levels, as well as significant reductions in coal-related fine particulate matter constituents (sulfate and arsenic), after the closure. Statistically significant cardiovascular health benefits were documented in the local population, including a 42% immediate drop (95% CI: 33%, 51%) in cardiovascular emergency department (ED) visits from the pre-closure mean. A longer-term downward trend was also observed for overall emergency visits at −0.14 (95% CI: −0.17, −0.11) visits per week rate of decrease after the closure, vs. a rise of 0.17 (95% CI: 0.14, 0.20) visits per week before. Similarly, inpatient cardiovascular hospitalizations per year showed a decrease after closure (−27.97 [95% CI: −46.90, −9.04], as compared with a 5.09 [95% CI: −13.84, 24.02] average increase in cases/year over the prior three years). "
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