350.org’s summer heat at Brayton Point

brayton pointThe folks over at 350.org are on tour this summer, organizing protests at some of the worst power plants across the nation – and our very own Brayton Point has made the grade!

Here are the details:

On July 28th, people from all over New England will come together for a mass mobilization at the Brayton Point power plant. Brayton Point is the largest coal-fired power plant from Massachusetts to Maine. We will call for Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick to close the plant and ask him to ensure a just transition for workers and host communities from the West Virginian mines to Somerset. The mobilization will include an optional non-violent civil disobedience component.

What: Mobilization to close down Brayton Point
Where: Somerset, Massachusetts
When: Sunday July 28th (with training on the 27th)
Why: To shut down the largest fossil fuel plant in New England and ensure a just transition for workers and communities

 Organized by 350 Massachusetts Action and Better Future Action

One of 350.org’s Summer Heat Actions

Please note: They are planning civil disobedience. For those who would like to participate, you must attend a planning and training workshop the day before. Details HERE.

Brayton Point is a pollution factory. Chugging away in Somerset, Massachusetts, Brayton Point is perched along the shoulder of Mount Hope Bay, with over 77,000 people living within a few miles. 1,000,000,000 gallons of water are pumped from Mount Hope Bay into the power plant’s cooling towers.

Using about 40,000 tons of coal every three days, Brayton Point provides 20% of all the electricity for Massachusetts in just about the dirtiest way imaginable. 80% of this coal is shipped from Venezuela and Colombia, so the damage starts long before the carbon is burned in Brayton’s kilns. Much of the coal is from the worlds largest open-pit mine, El Cerrejon in Colombia, and from La Loma mine, owned by Drummond Energy, a company accused in the deaths of dozens of labor rights activists. According to diplomatic cables released to the public by Wikileaks, Drummnd was a cause of great concern for U.S. regulators due their employment of paramilitary organiztion United Self Defense Forces of Colombia to suppress workers.

According to SourceWatch, in 2006 it was responsible for 6.8 million tons of CO2 emissions. As if that’s not bad enough, it released massive amounts of other greenhouse gasses, and sent 148 pounds of poisonous mercury into our environment.

Owned by Dominion Energy, it is under contract to be sold to a private equity firm.

 

 

 

‘Immoral’ that GOP stripped food stamp program


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cicillineSpeaking about the controversial Farm Bill that also authorizes funding food stamps, Congressman David Cicilline said the House GOP “made a clear choice to protect generous subsidies for agriculture corporations at the expense of the hungry and working poor.”

He’s right. According to the New York Times: “Republicans muscled a pared-back agriculture bill through the House on Thursday, stripping out the food stamp program to satisfy recalcitrant conservatives but losing what little Democratic support the bill had when it failed last month. It was the first time food stamps had not been a part of the farm bill since 1973.”

Cicilline said about 1/5 of Rhode Island will be adversely affected by the GOP’s decision.

“Make no mistake today House Republicans are telling hungry children food banks struggling to meet the needs of their community and low-income seniors who depend on food assistance that there needs don’t matter,” he said. “They are not extraneous. This is disgraceful, it’s immoral and it’s contrary to our values as a nation.”

PSU heads to Chicago to build student movement


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Imagine education activist groups from New Hampshire to Los Angeles gathering in one place. That’s how you’d build a movement for real education reform.

This weekend, over 1000 students, teachers, parents, researchers, and activists will assemble in Chicago for the fourth “Free Minds, Free People” conference to continue building the growing “education for liberation” movement. Attendees will join in workshops and conferences with topics ranging from democratic leadership, to parent organizing, to restorative justice and the school-to-prison pipeline. Many of these workshops are student-led. And while adults are at the “Organizing Resistance to Teach for America” conference (which has gathered advance attention in publications like Prospect and The Washington Post), students will be strategizing around the creation of a sorely-needed National Student Bill of Rights.

Providence Student Union this year is supporting five students in this work, including Cauldierre McKay. In Cauldierre’s own words:

Cauldierre

“This conference is a chance to build relationships with people across the nation who are fighting for the same things we are fighting for. This is the kind of real, innovative learning experience that we should have more of in our schools.”

 

Cauldierre, four more students, and I are taking the 16 hour bus ride (each way!) with a group of youth power organizations from across the Northeast, including Boston-area Youth Organizing ProjectBoston Student Advisory Council, Young Organizers United, El Movimiento, and The City School. PSU is especially happy to be making the trip with two inspiring organizations from Providence: Young Voices and Youth In Action. The Northeast groups in particular will be working together to strengthen efforts for democratic education in our region.

I invite you to meet the rest of the team and follow all the (often hilarious) action on Twitter.

As Providence Student Union member Hector Perea said, “We’re not even to Chicago yet, and it’s already been an adventure.”