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Recipe For Disaster: One Small Town's Cry For Help

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  • Recipe For Disaster: One Small Town's Cry For Help

    RECIPE FOR DISASTER: ONE SMALL TOWN'S CRY FOR HELP
    by Shantal Der Boghosian

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2012/09/10/recipe-for-disaster-one-small-towns-cry-for-help/
    September 10, 2012

    It wasn't too long ago that I traveled through South America and Costa
    Rica to witness hundreds of people striking against the government
    to fight for basic rights--clean air and clean water. It was those
    experiences that encouraged me to pursue a degree in environmental
    engineering, with a goal to work with developing countries to help
    them access the two basic things we take for granted in the United
    States. Never did I think I would come across a small town in the
    United States fighting for the same rights, and not being heard.

    (L-R) David Bouie, Natalie Kottke, and Barbara Bouie Crossett,
    Ark., is a small American working-class town that few people have
    heard of, but one with a big environmental problem. People in this
    community have cancer; their neighbors live on respirators, and are
    breathing air allegedly being polluted by a large company called
    Georgia-Pacific. Georgia-Pacific produces household paper items like
    Brawny paper towels, Quilted Northern toiler paper, and Dixie paper
    cup products. It is also the only plant in the community and employs
    most of the town it is polluting.

    I heard about this town thanks to Erica Sardarian, co-director
    and producer of a documentary on Crossett. Erica is working on the
    documentary with her brother, Edgar Sardarian, producer and editor,
    and with Natalie Kottke, director and producer. Their goal is to bring
    awareness to what's happening in Crossett and help the town get the
    representation it deserves to improve their daily lives. According
    to Kottke, Crossett's story must be told because most of the town's
    residents can't speak for themselves for fear of losing their jobs.

    The town relies on their pastor, David Bouie, and his wife to provide
    them with a voice.

    In an interview with Kottke, Bouie told her that "people in 11 out
    of 15 homes on my small street have died of cancer." Wilma Subra,
    an award-winning chemist testing the air and water quality in the
    community, told the residents, "This facility produces a huge number
    of chemicals into the air, land, and water. They would like you to
    believe that all of it remains on site." In reality, the company
    seems to be dumping most of its waste directly into the air and water.

    Crossett is not the only town that needs to worry about the
    discharge--both water and air migrate across the land, eventually
    ending up in our own environment, thus becoming our issue as well.

    Anthony Samsel is a scientist writing a preliminary report about
    Crossett that details the progress and test results in relation to
    public health. According to him, "Between the paper mill, formaldehyde
    plant, plastic resin manufacturing, and other chemical operations,
    the potential for chemical exposure and risks to public health are
    substantial. Just looking at the paper mill operation alone sent up
    red flags. Our field tests show that the residents of Crossett are
    being chemically assaulted with hydrogen sulfide."

    Hydrogen sulfide is an extremely toxic and irritating gas that
    has a strong odor of rotten eggs. Formaldehyde is highly toxic
    with a characteristic pungent and irritating odor. The EPA has
    not investigated the environmental conditions in Crossett, nor has
    Arkansas's environmental protection office done any testing to protect
    residents from the pollutants being discharged into the air and water.

    Bouie reached out to for help in a 2011 article in the Huffington Post,
    directing his pleas to Charles and David Koch, billionaire brothers and
    owners of Georgia-Pacific. "I pray that I might be able to convince
    you to clean up this mess and relocate us like Georgia-Pacific did
    for other communities like ours. We cannot relocate on our own."

    Kottke and the Sardarians are working hard to produce the documentary
    telling Crossett's story, and their goal is to raise enough awareness
    to provoke action from the EPA and Georgia-Pacific to relocate the
    residents and clean up their town. They have set up a donation fund on
    Indiegogo (www.indiegogo.com/crossettdocumentary) for those willing
    to help the cause. If you aren't able to donate, you will still be
    a great help by spreading awareness and sharing this story.

    It makes me feel proud to see Armenians doing good for complete
    strangers. Sardarian has said that these people have become her family
    and she will do whatever it takes to give them a better life. By
    helping one town's environmental woes, she is inevitably helping
    us all!

    You can read more about the Koch Brothers at
    www.kochbrothersexposed.com, and learn facts such as this one: Koch
    Industries has an annual production capacity of 2.2 billion pounds
    of the carcinogen formaldehyde. The company has worked to keep it
    from being classified as a carcinogen even though David Koch is a
    prostate cancer survivor.

    ***

    Dirt Cake Recipe

    2 egg yolks 2 cups milk ½ cup sugar ¼ cup cocoa powder 3 tablespoon
    cornstarch 1 package Oreo cookies One small, clean flower pot Fresh
    flowers and gummy worms for decoration

    Mix the sugar, chocolate, cornstarch and milk in a saucepan and bring
    to boil, whisking constantly (Note: Custard will not thicken unless
    milk has boiled.)

    -Whisk egg yolks in a bowl until frothy, and mix ¼ cup of the milk
    mixture from the saucepan to temper the egg mixture. Pour egg mixture
    into the saucepan and continue whisking.

    -After 3-5 minutes, remove pan from heat, and continue whisking
    until mixture thickens completely. Allow pudding to cool to room
    temperature before cooling completely in the refrigerator.

    -Finely chop the Oreo cookies in a food processor. Layer in flower
    pot, starting with cookies and then pudding mixture, repeating layers
    and ending with the Oreo "dirt" layer. Garnish with fresh flowers
    and gummy worms.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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