Greed Explains the Disasters and the Lying Afterwards

By Leo Gerard Campaign for America's Future
June 14, 2010

http://www.ourfuture.org/blog-entry/2010062414/greed-explains-disasters-and-lying-afterwards

(This post is by Leo W. Gerard, international president
of the United Steelworkers and by Cecil Roberts,
international president of the United Mine Workers of
America)

As oil mucked the Gulf of Mexico and families mourned
11 dead rig workers, BP officials proclaimed that the
corporation's priority always was safety.

This tracked the tack taken by Massey Energy, whose
officials also declared safety was paramount after an
explosion in the corporation's Upper Big Branch mine
killed 29 workers.

CEOs commonly make such incongruous assertions to
protect profits after corporate-caused disasters.
They're driven by the same factor that is fundamental
to the catastrophes - greed.

Nothing wrong with that, right? Not in a society that
has converted greed from a vice to a virtue. Not in the
place that inspired the book, "Greed is Good: The
Capitalist Pig Guide to Investing." Surely it's no
problem in the land where "Greed" has its own game show
on Fox and where Ayn Rand, the "money-is-the-root-of-
all-good" philosopher, reigns as Republican queen long
after her death.

Americans worship God on the Sabbath and the rich every
other day. Billionaire Warren Buffett's word is
investment gospel. Americans gave Wall Street banksters
hundreds of billions in bailout money -- protecting
their multi-million dollar bonuses. But in the midst of
the Great Recession caused by Wall Street recklessness,
America has repeatedly delayed renewal of unemployment
benefits and now is terminating federal health
insurance support for the furloughed middle class.

Middle class workers are the ones who die in coal mines
and on oil rigs.

Afterwards, CEOs say anything to save the bottom line -
the one that will determine their bonuses.

Discussing the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster, Massey
CEO Don Blankenship told stock analysts in a conference
call late in April:

"Some of the implications have been that we don't focus
on safety or we put dollars in front of safety and
nothing could be further from the truth."

Though the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA)
issued 1,342 safety violation notices to Upper Big
Branch over the past five years, Blankenship explained
that's just life in the coal business:

"Violations are unfortunately a normal part of the
mining process."

In addition, Blankenship said the titles of two Massey
programs proved safety was supreme:

"The naming of those two programs speaks for itself: S1
- safety is job one; P2 - production is job 2. That's
been the case for my entire tenure."

Still, 29 miners are dead. And dozens died at Massey
mines in the past decade. Three died at Upper Big
Branch between 1998 and 2010. The Massey dead include
two workers who suffocated in a mine run by Massey
subsidiary Aracoma Coal Co. on Jan. 19, 2006, just
three months after Blankenship issued a memo ordering
underlings to produce coal to the exclusion of other
activities, such as building ventilation systems called
overcasts. Aracoma officials pleaded guilty in
December, 2008, to removing and failing to replace
ventilation devices, the lack of which contributed to
the suffocation deaths.

And Massey workers aren't as sure as Don Blanekship
that safety is job one. Several spoke to NPR about it.
Teddy Cole, who worked a dozen years at Upper Big
Branch, said Blankenship prioritizes production:

"It's supposed to be safety first, but to me, it was
production first."

Former co-worker Brian Jerral agreed:

"A lot of times, it's production first and safety
third."

Adam Vance, who worked at two Massey mines, described a
culture of greed:

"They cover [themselves] with their safety meetings,
but the main thing Massey's out for is to get that
all-mighty dollar. If the coal ain't running, they
ain't making no money."

And it's a lot of money for Massey -- $1.02 million a
day in 2008.

Massey miner Ricky Lee Campbell 24, of Beckley, W.Va.,
told reporters about his safety concerns on April 7.
Massey suspended him a week later, then fired him. He
has filed a federal whistle-blower complaint.

Similar to Massey, BP officials claim safety is job
one.

Shortly after BP named Tony Hayward CEO in 2007, he
told the Houston Chronicle:

"I think we have the opportunity to set a new benchmark
in industrial safety. . .We have to have a work
environment where people don't get injured or killed,
period."

That was significant since an explosion two years
earlier had killed 15 workers and injured another 170
at BP's Texas City, Texas oil refinery, and federal
regulators blamed the catastrophe in part on cost cuts
initiated by Hayward's predecessor. The following year,
BP admitted oil leaks into Alaska's Prudhoe Bay were
caused partly by cost cutting.

Despite Hayward's safety assertions, another 11 workers
are dead. And survivors told CNN that PB routinely cut
corners and pushed production despite potential safety
problems. They also told CNN co-workers had been fired
for raising concerns about dangerous practices that
could delay drilling if remedied and that BP had
insisted on an unsual process shortcut on the day of
the blast.

Immediately after the rig explosion, BP contended its
under-Gulf pipe was spewing only 1,000 barrels of oil a
day. Fairly quickly, it revised that estimate to 5,000
barrels, but continued to refuse to make public its
live video of the oil-churning pipe.

After a freedom of information request and
Congressional pressure forced BP to release the video,
federal officials estimated as much as 40,000 barrels
are being discharged daily.

Still, BP's Hayward flatly denied the existence of
underwater oil plumes, saying:

"The oil is on the surface. There aren't any plumes."

And he discounted the effect of the unleashed oil on
the environment:

"The Gulf of Mexico is a very big ocean. The amount of
volume of oil and dispersant we are putting into it is
tiny in relation to the total water volume."

Hayward had a good (greed-based) reason to deny access
to the video, discount the amount of oil spewing into
the sea and defy the assessment of government and
university researchers who confirmed the plumes of
dispersed oil stretching for miles beneath the ocean
surface. BP will be fined based on the number of
barrels of oil its well disgorges into the gulf -
somewhere between $1,100 and $4,300 a barrel --
depending on whether the government can prove gross
negligence.

David Leonhardt, an economics columnist for the New
York Times, described BP's Texas City, Gulf of Mexico
and Alaska crises this way:

"Much of this indifference stemmed from an obsession
with profits, come what may."

Greed.

It's one of the seven deadly sins. When it afflicts
corporate CEOs, it's deadly to workers.

Honest profit is fine. But it's perverse to celebrate
greed, to elevate it over human life.

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