Newswire: Diane Wilson, environmental activist arrested for blocking entrance to Galveston USACOE office, ends 36 day hunger strike to stop dredging of Matagorda Bay, Texas

Diane Wilson sitting in a coffin blocking entrance to USACOE in Galveston

By: Chase Rodgers, Victoria Texas Advocate

Diane Wilson, bonded out of jail on Thursday, May 13, 2021, after she was arrested during a demonstration against the scheduled dredging of Matagorda Bay in coastal Texas. Police arrested Wilson, Wednesday afternoon by pulling her away from a boat and a black coffin, she and others protestors had placed in the roadway, blocking the entrance to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACOE) office in Galveston, Texas. Galveston police arrested Wilson and a second activist, Annette Wright, charging them with obstructing a highway or passageway, according to Galveston police public information officer. Wilson was with a group of supporters asking the Corps to halt the proposed channelization of the bay to allow big tankers to reach a proposed crude oil export facility to be owned by Max Midstream, an oil pipeline company at Port Comfort at the head of the bay. Wilson says dredging will stir up mercury in the bay’s sediment and cause further harm to the local fishing industry, including a new effort to organize a fishing cooperative in the area. The mercury was deposited in the bay by Alcoa Aluminum which operated a plant from 1965 to 1981 and discharged inorganic waste water into the bay, according to EPA. The EPA has designated the area as a Superfund site. Wilson has been on a hunger strike since April 7 to dramatize as a Superfund site opposition to the proposed dredging. After her arrest and release, Wilson ended her 36-day hunger strike pledging to continue working to stop the dredging. The Matagorda Bay Foundation and others have written a detailed letter to the Corps requesting reconsideration of the dredging project and citing problems with a rushed Environmental Impact Statement in the waning days of the Trump Administration. The Corps in an official statement said the project was approved by Col. Timothy Vail, Commander of the Galveston District in 2019 and meets all “Federal environmental laws and compliances” and is in the pre-construction engineering phase, with a December 2021 starting date. The demonstration, Wilson said was to spark a dialogue with Vial who had not responded to requests for a meeting. The activists are asking that Vail and others in the USACOE chain of command, consider a supplemental environmental impact report be conducted and that the Corps revoke their approval of the project.

Newswire: Diane Wilson, environment justice activist enters fourth week of hunger strike to stop dredging in Matagorda Bay, Texas

Diane Wilson

By: John Zippert, Co-Publisher, Special to the Greene County Democrat

Diane Wilson, a fourth-generation fisher from Seadrift, Texas enters the fourth week of a hunger strike to protest the dredging of the ship channel in Matagorda Bay, coastal Texas, about one hundred miles south and east of Houston. Wilson, a 72-year-old grandmother, is the San Antonio Bay and Estuarine Water keeper who has been an environmental guardian of the San Antonio, Matagorda and Lavaca Bay areas on the Texas Gulf Coast. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACOE) has reactivated a plan to dredge the ship channel in Matagorda Bay to serve Max Midstream, a pipeline company that plans to build a crude oil export terminal at Port O’Connor at the eastern head of Matagorda Bay. The dredging will involve deepening the 26-mile channel by 8 feet and widening it by 150 feet, which involves dredging 14 million tons of mud from the seafloor. The dredging is complicated because it touches upon an EPA Superfund site, which was polluted with mercury by Alcoa in the past. The original USACOE Environmental Impact Statement, compiled in 2009 for a LNG export terminal project, that was not built, provided for placing the dredged materials to create new wetland marshes, islands and oyster reefs offshore. This is similar to dredging projects in Galveston Bay and other Texas coastal areas. The USACOE revised its plan to allow placing the dredged materials on the western side of the bay, covering a third of the existing oyster reefs, beaches used for recreation and generally impairing commercial and recreational fishing in the Matagorda Bay complex. The USACOE also accelerated the permitting process for the dredging at the request of Max Midstream and Texas politicians supporting export of the state’s fracked petroleum resources. Wilson said, “ I felt I had no choice but to start my hunger strike. I saw no way to stop this fast-tracking of the dredging of my beloved bays in Texas to provide for a crude oil export terminal, that some oil and gas people say is not even needed. I want to alert the community to the dangers of this dredging to health, fishing and recreation. I want the dredging to stop and President Biden to reinstate the ban on exporting oil that Trump lifted.” Wilson says that this is her eighth hunger strike. She participated in a 56-day strike, her longest, in Washington D. C. to try to close the Guantanamo Bay prison. Wilson, was also a plaintiff in a 2019 case against the Formosa Plastic Corporation, for polluting Matagorda Bay with microscopic plastic pellets. This case resulted in a $50 million dollar settlement against Formosa to help restore and improve the environmental quality of Matagorda Bay. The settlement includes $20 million to support the development of a fishing cooperative to revive the traditional economy of the coastal area. “The U. S. Army Corps of Enginers have never been helpful to the environment unless we force them to pay attention to these issues. I am on this hunger strike to stop this harmful dredging of the bay. The state of Texas regularly gives tickets to fishers for harvesting oysters that are smaller than 3 inches but now it is planning to dump mud on and destroy 700 acres of oyster reefs. This expedited plan to dredge the bay will kill our efforts to develop this fishing cooperative,” said Wilson The Federation of Southern Cooperatives/Land Assistance Fund, based at its Rural Training and Research Center, in Epes, Alabama, has been contracted, as part of the legal settlement, to provide technical assistance in developing the commercial fishing cooperative. Cornelius Blanding, Federation Executive Director said, “We have been working with fishers in the Matagorda Bay area to develop a cooperative. This dredging, without suitable environmental protections, will imperil this important grassroots economic development and revitalization effort. We have reached out to our contacts in the Biden Administration to ask them to stop this dredging until a new EIS is developed and approved. We are especially concerned about the disturbance and dispersal of mercury in the bay as well as the destruction of oyster reefs and shrimp breeding estuaries ” A group of environmental organizations, connected with Earthworks, held a protest rally, together with kayaks in the bay, at the end of the Lavaca Bay Causeway, the site of Diane Wilson’s hunger strike, on Sunday, April 25th. This rally was held to call attention to her hunger strike and urge the USACOE and President Biden’s Administration to stop the dredging and the export of crude oil. Persons interested in supporting Diane Wilson’s hunger strike and campaign to stop the dredging and export of oil may contact her through: http://www.facebook.com/unreasonablewoman or email at wilsonalamobay@aol.com.

Newswire: Forth Worth, TX police officer charged with murder in shooting Atatiana Jefferson in her home

By BlackmansStreetToday

Atatiana Jefferson

Aaron Dean, a Fort Worth, Texas, police officer who shot to death a Black woman during what was supposed to be a wellness check, has resigned from the police department.

Interim Fort Worth Police Chief Ed Kraus named Dean and announced his resignation this morning during a Monday morning news conference. Later in the day, Dean was arrested and charged with murder in the shooting death of Atatiana Jefferson .

Dean shot to death Atatiana Jefferson, 28, on Saturday by firing a gun through the bedroom window of her mother’s home. Jefferson died at the scene. Kraus said he intended to fire Dean, but he submitted his resignation. Dean faces criminal charges as well as possible civil rights violations and “no longer has the protections of state civil service law,” Kraus said.

The department had placed Dean on administrative leave following the shooting. Dean had been a member of the Fort Worth police department since April 2018.

Dean never identified himself as a police officer and he never knocked on Jefferson’s door to learn if she was okay, Kraus said.

Jefferson was playing video games with her nephew when the deadly shooting occurred. A neighbor called the police to make a wellness check because the front door was open.
Lee Merritt, the attorney for the Jefferson family, said the door was left open to cool down the house.

Jefferson graduated from Xavier University in New Orleans, with a BS degree in biology and was planning to apply for medical school.