Posted on 21-11-2003
Dark
Heart of the American Dream
by Ed Vulliamy, The London Observer, 16 June 2002
It's the most polluted state in the planet's most powerful
country. Ed Vulliamy goes into George Bush's backyard to reveal
how big oil got in bed with big politics and the price paid
by the little people
There is a perverse beauty to the landscape arraigned
below the iron bridge where Highway 255 strides the Houston
Ship Channel: great towers of light and fire as far as the eye
can behold; sinewy steel piping, plumes of smoke and flame twinkling
into a Texas twilight coloured by a shroud of pollution hanging
from the sky. The awesome prepotency of this smokescape is no
illusion, for this is an epicentre of power, oil capital of
the Western world and the most industrialised corner of the
United States. It is also the capital of a power machine perfected
in Texas, elevated to rule the nation and now unchallenged across
the planet. A machine that operates in perpetual motion - an
equilibrium of interests - between industry and politics. LaNell
Anderson, former Republican voter, businesswoman and real-estate
broker who lived many years in this land of smokestacks and
smog, calls it 'vending-machine politics: you puts your money
in and you gets your product out'.
'We don't see ourselves as a dynasty,' said George Bush
Sr as his son launched the election campaign that won him the
current presidency, raiding father's Rolodex to do so. 'We don't
feel entitled to anything.' And yet at no point in the past
50 years - the half-century since 1952 which defines the modern
age - has there not been a Bush in a governor's mansion (in
Texas or Florida), on Capitol Hill or in the White House - and
usually more than one of those at a time. The 'vending machine'
is a single family whose tango with the powers which illuminate
this endless horizon of light and flame is a dance around every
corner in the labyrinth of Texan and now national - indeed global
- politics. 'Everything they learned when they started out in
west Texas,' says Dr Neil Carman, once a regulator of pollution
in the state, 'they applied to the governor's mansion, the nation
and the world... Power in America is not so much about George
W Bush, it's about the people from Texas who put him there.'
This is the dynasty's throne, the state whose highways
are lined with the spirited advice 'Don't Mess With Texas' (originally
the slogan of an anti-litter campaign). As if litter would make
much difference: Texas counts the worst pollution record in
the US, top in the belching of toxic chemicals and carcinogens
into the air, top in chemical spills, top in ozone pollution,
top in carbon-dioxide emissions, top for mercury emission, top
in clean-water violations, top in the production of hazardous
waste. Houston overtook Los Angeles for the coveted title of
'most polluted city' in the early 90s.
'You are looking at the biggest oil refinery in the world,'
indicates LaNell Anderson. She refers to the edifice that is
the 3,000-acre Exxon Mobil plant at Baytown, near Houston, producer
of 507,800 barrels a day. Here begins a story of both dynasty
and destiny, for it was on this spot in 1917 that the Bush family's
oil connection was forged - where the Humble Oil company, which
struck black gold in the Houston suburb of that name, took root,
later to be- come the Exxon behemoth. Humble's founder, William
Stamps Farish, went on to become president of Standard Oil.
His daughter became a friend of George Bush Sr and his grandson
William Jr was taken in 'almost like family' (said Barbara Bush)
while campaigning for George Sr's entrée into Washington Senatorial
politics in 1964. Farish Jr claims to have been the first man
to whom Bush Sr confided his ambition to be president one day,
and was last year named US Ambassador to London.
At first, Anderson welcomed the benefits to a community
of the 200 oil-related industries relocated to the Houston area
by the time she and her second husband set up home in a suburb
wedged between Exxon and the Lyondell chemical plant. Neither
she nor he had any history of disease in their families. But
in 1985, her husband's daughter gave birth to a girl, Alyssa,
with a rare liver disease - she died aged six months. In 1986,
Anderson's mother became ill and died of bone cancer a year
later. The following year, Anderson and her sister were diagnosed
with rheumatoid arthritis, as was a granddaughter in 1992, and
an older sister with Crohn's disease. In 1991, her father died
from emphysema; a year later the mother of Alyssa gave birth
to a son immediately diagnosed with severe asthma. Anderson
connects the litany of disease with mishaps by her industrial
neighbours. She paraphrases their attitude thus: 'If someone
doesn't like it, they can sue us if they can - and since we
have more money than God, we will win.'
A thumbnail sketch of politics and the environment in
the United States today depicts oil as the lifeblood running
through every vein of an administration forging ahead with its
energy policy. The White House has just been forced to disclose
(after being faced with a Congressional subpoena) that it drew
up a national energy plan based on increased production without
regard to the environment or conservation, having failed to
consult with anyone other than its friends among the producers
themselves, notably the disgraced Enron. This despite the fact
that an energy crisis in California last summer caused most
analysts to draw the opposite conclusion, stressing the need
to curb a gas-guzzling America.
At the hub of this turning wheel of influence is Vice
President Dick Cheney, fresh into office from his post as chief
executive of Halliburton, the world's second-largest oil-drilling
services company, where he netted a personal fortune of $36m
in the year before leaving, with help from contacts accumulated
while serving under George Bush Sr. Just last week, however,
Halliburton joined Enron in coming under investigation by the
Securities and Exchange Commission for the same system of publishing
inflated revenues - 'aggressive accounting' - for which Enron
has become a synonym for shame. These alleged misdeeds took
place during Cheney's directorship. The company also faces a
floodtide of civil lawsuits over asbestosis_ unless a model
can be found (as has been established in Texas) to make such
resort to the law nigh impossible for anyone without money.
The entwinement of the Bush dynasty with the energy barons
of Texas has apparently humble beginnings, in the Lone Star
State's wild west, on the plains around Midland and Odessa.
This is barren land across which dust devils fly and trains
rumble like iron snakes. This is where George Bush Sr was sent
by his father, Senator Prescott Bush, to a trainee job with
the International Derrick and Equipment Company, a subsidiary
of Dresser Industries, controlled by the Bush family and selling
more oil rigs than anyone in the world. (Dresser later became
absorbed by Halliburton.)
The world first heard of Odessa on that fateful day in
December 1998 when Bush Jr was governor of Texas and the sky
turned black after an 'upset' at the Huntsman chemical plant
literally on the wrong side of the railroad tracks it shares
with poor housing, where Mexicans and blacks live. (An 'upset'
is an unplanned accident releasing pollution, not part of the
plant's normal running procedure, and which does not count in
its regulatory tally.) Lucia Llanez, who lives in this tightly
knit community of bungalows between plant and railroad, will
never forget this one: 'It was dark all over; cars on the Interstate
slowing down and putting their lights on because they couldn't
see, though it was day. There was a rumbling like trains that
rattled the windows, and people were going to hospital for watering
eyes, allergies and problems breathing. The cloud stayed two
weeks.'
The story of Huntsman goes back to the days of Bush Sr's
arrival, when Odessa was a town of what retired fireman Don
Dangerfield calls 'wildcatters'. In the 40s, the US Air Force
bombed deep holes in the giant Permian oil basin in a search
for oil which then attracted a stampede of speculators (including
those from Humble) who would, recalls Dangerfield, 'spend the
nights in a hotel, the End of the Golden West, and gamble their
lots in rooms so thick with cigar smoke you could hardly see'.
Among them was a man he remembers well: John Sam Shepherd, a
former attorney general of Texas and member of the White Citizens
Council - a political wing of the Ku Klux Klan - disgraced by
a land scandal and come to seek his fortune out West by setting
up the El Paso Products company, later Huntsman.
George Bush landed in this mayhem but quickly decamped
20 miles north to Midland, where new millionaires like him established
a country club, a Harvard and a Yale club, met at the Petroleum
Club and played golf on irrigated lawns. Midland was, recalls
Gene Collins, a member of the National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People in Odessam 'one of two towns in America with
a Rolls-Royce dealership and more millionaires per head than
anywhere'. This was where Bush Sr built his oil fortune, launched
a political career on its shoulders and raised his son George
W Bush in the art and language of power he now feigns not to
speak. The story of how Bush Sr constructed his empire is well
known, as is that of how his son George W was groomed to follow
in his footsteps. Less widely broadcast, however, are the depths
and intricacies of a system the Bush family built in bonding
with the energy industry, as the dynastic machine elevated its
methods from Odessa to the Senate, the governor's mansion in
Austin, the oil centres of Houston and Dallas, the White House
and thereafter the globe.
Neil Carman has a professorial air to him that belies
the sharpness of the surgical blade with which he tries to operate
on 'Toxic Texas'. Originally a plant biologist, he was an investigator
for the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission (TNRCC),
responsible for issuing permits for agreed levels of pollution
and enforcing environmental law. In 1989, he took on the General
Tire and Rubber Company for 'systematic violations'.
The firm hired a lobbyist, Larry Feldcamp, from the Baker
Botts law firm whose senior partner, James Baker III, was secretary
of state to then president George Bush Sr and who later, as
an attorney, secured the delivery of the state of Florida for
Bush Jr during last year's election recounts. Baker Botts advertises
itself as a 'full service firm', counting Shell, Mobil, Union
Carbide, Huntsman, Amoco on its books. The other law firm indivisible
from the energy lobby and the Bush fiefdom is Vinson & Elkins,
which acts for both Enron and the Alcoa aluminium giant, whose
former chief executive Paul O'Neill is now US Treasury Secretary.
Between these law firms and the regulatory body supposed to
face them down, says Dr Carman, 'there's a revolving door. Feldcamp's
place was taken recently by the most active attorney on the
oil scene, Pamela Giblin - one of the TNRCC's first appointees.'
Carman resigned because 'all they had to do was hire
people like Feldcamp and you were off the case. They did not
deny permits - they must have issued 50,000 permits for air
pollution during my time and refused only two, on occasions
when the public raised hell. And they don't revoke them - it's
not like drunk driving: if you get caught, they just keep reissuing.
They used to refer to these places as "industrial areas",
as if that meant they were outside the law. I called them "sacrifice
zones".'
There is another problem, unique to Texas: the 'grandfathering'
rule. Grandfathering dates back to the Texas Clean Air Act of
1971, exempting existing installations from compliance with
new regulations. The idea was that they would be modernised
or become obsolete and close. In the event, firms found that
not being obliged to spend on pollution control gave them a
competitive edge, and nearly three decades later, grandfathering
accounted for more than 1,000 plants and 35 per cent of all
pollution in Texas. Nevertheless, in the early 90s, the TNRCC
began to toughen its stance in accordance with a more aggressive
federal approach to pollution by the new Clinton administration.
Then, in 1994, Texas went to the polls to elect a new governor
- 'And when Bush took over,' says Carman, 'everything changed.'
Two groups based in Austin - Texans for Public Justice
(TPJ) and Public Research Works (PRW) - crunched the statistics
on the wave of money on which George W Bush sailed into the
governor's mansion. It was what Andrew Wheat of the TPJ calls
'something unheard of in Texas or anywhere else: $42m on two
campaigns'. Grandfathered polluters poured $10.2m into the campaign
coffers between 1993 and 1998, led by what PRW calls the 'dirty
30', including Exxon, Shell, Amoco, Enron and the Alcoa aluminium
giant. Bush himself received $1.5m from 55 grandfathered companies,
led by Enron, with a handsome $348,500 top-up from the man he
calls Kenny Boy - Kenneth Lay, the company's chief executive,
currently under criminal investigation.
Wheat's analysis of the new governor's 'personal time'
shows a revolving door for campaign donors and the energy industry.
Andrew Barrett, Bush's in-house environmental policy advisor,
began daily visits to the TNRCC in preparation for the appointment
of new commissioners: Ralph Marquez, lobbyist for the Texas
Chemical Council and former executive of the Monsanto chemical
firm, and Barry McBee, attorney with the law firm Thompson &
Knight, a major contributor to Bush funds with a host of oil-industry
clients.
Legislation based on the notion of 'self-regulation'
followed: a law enabling companies to audit their own pollution
records provided they reported them, in exchange for which there
would be absolute protection from public disclosure. Big oil
was delighted, as a memo obtained by an environmentalist group,
the Texas SEED Coalition, illustrated: a record of a gathering
in June 1977 at Exxon in Houston by 40 representatives of the
Texas oil and gas industries - written by one of their number
- said 'the "insiders" from oil and gas believe that
the governor's office will persuade the TNRCC to accept whatever
program is developed between the industry group and the governor's
office'.
It was not until Bush became president that, in its 2001
state legislature, Texas finally decided to rein in the 'grandfathered'
plants. A bill gave them until 2007 to come into line with federal
law or shut down. Even then, there was a legal challenge to
the TNRCC's science from the Houston Business Partnership, recently
entrusted with millions in federal money to clean up the Gulf
coastline. The partnership is a high-octane chamber of commerce,
throwing up a few familiar names: Exxon, Conoco, Enron, James
Baker's law firm Baker Botts - and George Bush Sr.
Most important of all - and best hidden - was Bush's
programme for Tort Reform. It was this that his father's advisor
Karl Rove (dispatched to steer Bush's presidential campaign
and now the White House itself) insisted the new governor make
his hallmark, and this is potentially the dynasty's greatest
gift to big oil. Put simply, Tort Reform means making it harder
for citizens to sue corporations. TPJ calculated that business
interests specifically isolating Tort Reform on their political
agenda poured money into Bush's gubernatorial campaigns. Soon
after being elected governor, says Andrew Wheat, Bush declared
Tort Reform an 'emergency issue'.
This meant appointing a judge to the Texas supreme court
whom President Bush is tipped to bring aboard the Supreme Court
in Washington (to which, some say, he owes his presidency).
Alberto Gonzalez wrote a decision soon after his appointment
to the Texas court which made it all but impossible for citizens
to bring class actions. 'The result,' says Shawn Isbell, a lawyer
working on environmental cases, 'is that it will simply be too
expensive to bring cases against the corporations.'
Another ruling, says Sandra McKenzie, the lawyer who
fought a long and bitter battle against the Formosa Plastics
firm, stipulates that 'anyone trying to prove a personal chemical
injury had to show that other people in a similar situation
had suffered the same reaction, according to a study in a published
journal'. The new precedents, says McKenzie, 'changed the laws
to establish a no-compromise, "take no prisoners"
approach by the Bushes'.
In 1989, George Bush presented the Governor's Award for
Environ mental Excellence to the Valero chemical refining company.
Foremost in the minds of the proud executives at the ceremony
in Austin's luxury Four Seasons Hotel was their 'refinery of
the future' at Corpus Christi, on the Gulf, at the far end of
the coastal strip that runs through Houston to the Louisiana
border.
Alfred Williams gets a better view of the refinery of
the future across the freeway from the garden of his mobile
home than Governor Bush did from the Four Seasons. He can smell
it better too - the inimitable stench on the muggy delta air
that signifies the cooking up of cheap crude-oil 'feed stock'
to produce its chemical by-product and treating the neighbourhood
to a dose of sulphur dioxide.
When Williams, an ex-Vietnam Marine, moved here in 1972,
'this was all farmland'. He now delivers an impassioned requiem
for his garden, with its peach trees dead or buckling over.
The light of a quicksilver moon catches the plume of sulphur
along what they call Refinery Row.
'I'm in my golden years,' he reflects. 'But I can't sell
my house because no bank will give a loan without 40 per cent
down. And they won't relocate me, as I'd do if they offered.
'It started with having to wipe residue from off of my
car. Then the iron on my rooftop here started to get corroded,
and the trees were dying. Sometimes I have to come inside because
my eyes are burning.'
Williams filed a civil suit against Valero, steered by
attorney Shawn Isbell. The court in Corpus denied Williams class
action status in accordance with the zeitgeist, but Isbell managed
to discover how the refinery of the future was so poorly crafted
that Valero had (unsuccessfully) sued the companies which had
built it. She also found out how the Texas system of overlooking
'upsets' works. Since 1994, Valero had suffered more than 480
'upsets', but the TNRCC records each set of emissions separately
- for example, Valero's sulphur-dioxide emissions for 1977 show
up on the commission's website as 166.4 tons, while the reality
including 'upsets' is closer to 700 tons. Nevertheless, says
Isbell, 'I've seen the TNRCC go harder after a pig farmer than
I have after these kinds of companies.'
Williams keeps a notebook by his phone to record the
'upsets' over the road. He reports them to the TNRCC. But, he
says, 'I call them rainbows: they are shut at night and on the
weekend when the sulphur is released, and they only come when
the storm has come and gone.'
Cornelius Harmon is a cab driver in Corpus, and takes
a drive along Refinery Row, down a road he calls the 'buffer
zone'. It divides a wasteland of former housing - where those
relocated because of pollution by another plant, Koch, once
lived - from the mostly black and Hispanic community of Hillcrest.
'Are you gonna tell me,' posits Harmon, 'that the hand of God
Almighty drew a line down this road and He says: "Over
yonder side is contaminated and this side is fit for folks to
live ?" And what have we got here? Well, I'll be doggone
if it's not a school, with children playing in the smell. The
people who run these things, they give our kids a new pair of
sneakers and go to church and think they're going to heaven.
But at the pearly gates, they're going to find St Peter in his
Afro saying: "Whassup cuz? Seems like you're trying to
get into the wrong place."'
Time came for destiny to fulfil itself, for the son to
stand for the high office in Washington which the Bush dynasty
and its backers saw as having been usurped by Bill Clinton.
The story of what carried George W Bush to the White House is
well known: the most ruthlessly efficient campaigning machine
ever assembled - by Karl Rove - with all the family's best connections
filling a treasure chest that broke all records. As they returned
to number-crunching in Austin, Texans for Public Justice and
Public Research Works found little to surprise them save the
machine's speed and efficacy. Within a month, Bush had raised
hundreds of thousands of dollars, with Enron leading the field
and two law firms giving $146,900 - most prominently Vinson
and Elkins, attorneys to Enron and the Alcoa aluminium giant,
and James Baker's company, lawyers to the oil industry.
When Bush came to pick his cabinet, almost all pivotal
positions went to Bush Sr's inner sanctum, apart from the posts
of commerce secretary (Don Evans, longtime buddy of Bush Jr's
and a fellow Midland oil man) and treasury secretary (Paul O'Neill,
currently touring the globe with Bono of U2, and former chief
executive of Alcoa, the world's biggest producer of aluminium).
Alcoa held a stockholders meeting to send O'Neill off
with a torrent of eulogies and an annual pay packet worth $36m,
but three speakers spoiled the party. Two were trade unionists
from O'Neill's troubled plant at Ciudad Acuna in Mexico, challenging
the chief executive's claim that conditions at their factory
were so good 'they can eat off the floor'. The third was the
soft-spoken Texan Ron Giles, drawing attention to the biggest
of the state's 'grandfathered' polluters - the Alcoa smelting
plant at Rockdale. If the Rockdale plant were a single state,
it would count 40th for pollution among the 50 in the union,
belching more than 100,000 tons of toxins in 1997.
The smokestacks of the largest aluminium smelter in North
America fit incongruously into the pastoral ranch land northeast
of Austin. And they seem especially odd as backdrop to the 300-acre
ranch where Wayne Brinkley's family has raised cattle since
the late 1800s, but over which hangs a stench wafting across
the moonscape of Alcoa's lignite mine.
Brinkley looks as much the Texan as President Bush in
his boots and Stetson - 'Only difference is,' he says, 'I am
one, and Bush is not.' In his office is a hog, stuffed and mounted,
and an awesome collection of vintage knives and firearms. On
his desk is a survey by the independent Research Analysis Consultations
group showing that concentrations of magnesium, calcium and
aluminium register 'very high' around Brinkley's barn, and sodium
and titanium over his fields. 'My son had cancer when he was
just a young kid,' he says in a voice like sandpaper. 'They
tried to buy us out. They keep offering various deals saying
I can't talk to anyone about this for 35 years, and then they
changed it to forever. But why should I leave? My family's been
here 100 years; they've been here 50. They should do it by the
book, and keep it clean for the rest of us.'
Alcoa continues regardless, feted by Wall Street for
'dazzling' returns. But in the last light of a warm evening,
quiet rebellion stirs in the community room of a little town
called Elgin. A group of local people, Neighbors for Neighbors,
have obtained records that show Alcoa to be cheating, making
improvements to its production plant worth some $45m without
parallel investments in pollution control. As a direct result
of the Neighbors' exposé, the company was investigated by a
TNRCC with no place to hide this time.
Neighbors for Neighbors, enjoying statewide coverage
and acclaim for its pluck, is itself suing the company. Billie
Woods, Neighbors' president, says that Alcoa has responded by
pressing ahead with its plans for a new lignite mine that would
carve up 15,000 acres of farmland. The company has also made
court applications to enter and search the homes of Neighbors
activists. The request was denied, but the matter moved the
usually conservative Daily Texan newspaper to demand: 'Stop
the Alcoa Gestapo!'
Yesterday Texas, today Washington, tomorrow the world.
With Bush family business back home in the US presidency, it
now moves, in the form of the father, to the apex of global
finance. The Carlyle Group defines the next phase of power:
a Washington-based private equity fund with a difference. It
is headed by Frank Carlucci, former CIA director and defense
secretary under Ronald Reagan and lifelong friend of George
Bush Sr. Bush (also once director of the CIA) sits next to Carlucci
on the board with a portfolio specialising in Asia and does
not hesitate to communicate with his son on concerns of regional
relevance to Carlyle such as Afghanistan or the Pacific Rim.
Bush Jr was once chairman of a Carlyle subsidiary making in-flight
food.
On Carlucci's other flank is the ubiquitous James Baker
III. Chairman of Carlyle Europe is John Major. The group's new
asset management is headed by Afsaneh Beschloss, former treasurer
of the World Bank. Carlyle has grown quickly to be worth some
$12bn, specialising in energy and defence, with particular attention
to the oil-producing Gulf states. Among its most eager investors
is Prince Bandar, Saudi ambassador to Washington and his father
Prince Sultan, the kingdom's defence minister. The group's most
spectacular recent coup was to reap $400m in a stock sale of
its subsidiary United Defence Industries, maker of the Crusader
artillery system which most military experts argued was redundant,
but which won $470m in development money from the Pentagon and
whose future in the US arsenal still hangs in the balance after
a series of recent meetings between Carlucci and Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld. Within a month of 11 September last year, Carlucci
was meeting with Rumsfeld and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz, and
10 days later offered an assessment which exactly predicted
the endless-war scenario: 'We as Americans,' he said, 'have
to recognise that terrorism is more or less a permanent situation.'
'What's the secret?' chided William Conway, a co-founder
of the group. 'I don't think we have any secrets. We are a group
of businessmen who have made a huge amount of money for our
investors.' 'I never bought into this conspiracy theory about
the Bush family, the energy companies or the Carlyle Group,'
says Michael King, seasoned political editor of the Austin Chronicle
, who has observed the phenomenon for decades. 'It is perfectly
clear what they're aiming at from what they do in public: managing
the global economy to their own advantage, and doing a pretty
good job of it.'
On 11 September, while Al-Qaeda's planes slammed into
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, the Carlyle Group hosted
a conference at a Washington hotel. Among the guests of honour
was a valued investor: Shafig bin Laden, brother to Osama.
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