tv [untitled] January 2, 2012 5:31pm-6:01pm EST
5:31 pm
arms at the glass imposed by the french as targets invade your brain and central front and financial sector as well to advance battles to come to the crucial oil supply route. on the conflict in syria takes a new twist as i'll be good seven say the regime has posted this is a bunch point opposition strongholds as demanded in the peace plan to be open eyes ational towards that since my visits to the shooting at protesters killing at least a hundred and fifty people since tuesday. on those the headlines up next the story of a catastrophic environmental disaster and i'll special report talk creek. were right at the eight hundred foot elevation level right here and a lot of the mine discharges are coming out. right at a hundred foot level. i. mean you can tell that when the the red water mixes with the clear water that's the
5:32 pm
difference. although this looks cleared scummed still got a lot of metals in it because it's discharging out of the chad piles. the sides of the mine because the minerals then are submerged beneath the water and that's isolated from oxygen oxygen is the key. there back when they're first filling up there was a lot of oxygen available in the mines and that was causing oxidation of the models which in turn creates basically sulfur oh so if you're casting you have torque creek which starts at in kansas runs through the mining belt become contaminated down that which is just south of picher it then rooms on the east side of commerce runs through the center of miami only into the osho river. on instagram like let's just say it's been doing that since eighty three nothing but orange yucky smelly contaminate.
5:33 pm
this watershed has been clocking five million gallons a day since there have been clocks and if water rolls into the mines or slides off a chap pilot flows out from the underground it's real bad news. isaac newton says the reaction to the mining is a lifetime polluted water. in this mine system swallows any groundwater hole and then coughs up one's blood. in a look at these problems and say this has been here for a long time. it's not just twenty five years in superfund it's it's since money. and we all benefited from that money either directly or indirectly. it was a good thing for the united states but this is the legacy. kind of an obligation the fix. if you drive through picher right now
5:34 pm
and drive down the road nothing's changed nothing is really change so. they put us on the m.p.l. list it's a disgrace and it's sad but no one has done anything about the water the air but i'm ashamed right now of the army protection agency the bureau of indian affairs the department the interior because they've spent all this time talking to us telling you this you know what they think we want to hear but if you drive through pitcher and it drive down douse the road it looks the same as it did when they turned off the pumps and they walked away no one cares about the people that live there. this is not a safe place to live it's a good place there's good people here but it's not fit there been whispers about
5:35 pm
buying this place out since it was named the superfund in eighty three i mean horrible water all this mine waste direct danger to children but they couldn't get the help they needed and should have been easier to put a buyout together whether it's a dioxin scare they want to build a lake or highway somewhere buyouts happen all the time and human health dangers here seem to qualify but starkly grabs it instead an ace in the hole oklahoma senior senator jim inhofe was chair of the environmental and public works committee in the senate this committee oversees and directs the e.p.a. and inhofe oversaw the committee as far as environmental buyout money goes in off was the faucet and you have a place like this in your home state you're chairing the kind of committee that can actually help people and you refuse well we could also know what he was cooking the problem was that in office a soldier of industry fact is in-house brother even used to work for the insurance agency owned by the mining companies in half as indeed with polluters so he can't
5:36 pm
just order a buyout because that would prove this land is not fit for people and it's not fit and someone's got to pay for what got done and that could get expensive so they just pay and hope to make this buyout talk disappear and the citizens have to stay but to prove that he was working for auto mechanic folks he put together an eighteen million dollars cleanup plan to stand in for a buyout made everyone wait three years while they pulled it together he was going to move all the chat they were in the math on the planet same day it was released if you're in fifty trucks a day all day they would take forty years just to move the jet forty years moving the chair will cost two hundred twenty five million not eighteen but complete by i was estimated at fifty million and everyone knows inhofe not much of a science man could it be that manmade global warming is the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the american people i believe it is. but it turned out he wasn't
5:37 pm
a math guy either but then came news that not even enough could spin. if you got away from mine he. didn't hear a new movies or anything that really was always a pop and he just said. and then you surprised that pitcher isn't just all failing and they looked at water and i looked at lad and all the trouble is they forgot to look at subsidence risk which is of course the undermining that goes along with hard rock mining you know it turns out that the earliest significant undermined which really shouldn't be a surprise to anybody since they took out i don't know two hundred fifty million tons of or maybe more you know this underground mining was done sometimes clear up to where they had to what until they saw a tree roots when you have a several hundred foot mine room that's going on with the surface guess what it's
5:38 pm
going to collapse on these days and that land that you're seeing out there it's all undermined in pitcher and card and more people are live and they could wake up one day in their house today collapsed in the morning. they didn't care what to do that the city pitcher is just sitting on pillars and. the pillars and oh oh medium sized cave in now this is mania. this is a sample are and why it's the biggest cave in and the area that you're field right here is probably i will say another one hundred fifty foot deeper than what the water is right now. but i think there is
5:39 pm
a public policy issue here of if you can account for all the risk and environmental side you should be in charge well i've been around these my whole life and i'm still scared i mean there's just there's just no forgiveness if anything happens around these things. if you start going down that's it your history. it sounds crazy but those holes are actually a blessing mistaken afford to move everyone out and often already pounded his gavel that the current problems weren't bad enough so things had to get worse to get anything done. several areas collapse that summer in off finally agreed to a study to prove the extent of the undermining. not that need to be proven another study felt exhausting you know it felt tired to have to prove that the land was actually undermined and more holes were coming but it was a material chance to get a buyout so nobody feeds this two million dollar study you can't
5:40 pm
ignore the dead or what the data shows in regards to the severity of the underground mining that was done up here you cannot dispute it in any way as we were able to get political support to evaluate their risk then it became obvious that people shouldn't live there it's best for in the long room because not to worry about any more kids being raised in this environment . you know we got to put them into that what we are doing is we are going in finding comparables outside the project area. and keeping keep in mind superfund site is a bigger area than the project area project area is that area that i told you about the forty square mile area that was in that subsidence team study they're finding properties outside that area and then giving them comparable value for their
5:41 pm
property the trust has tried to make some provisions to make sure that everybody gets a minimal decent level of housing so in other words if you live in a in some standard housing we don't want to give you just enough money to go live in substandard housing in miami are somewhere else people get an appraisal and and i don't care if you live in a five hundred thousand dollars house again appraisal and you go i really thought my house was worth more than you know and so what i keep telling people is be realistic in reality if you took that house in the condition that it's in take it and stick it in my oklahoma can sign on the front yard how much do you really think you're going to get for that house. kind of interest and we've been so busy trying to do the appraisal issues and those kind of things to get people out that are very firm values i mean that's heart and. like with any appraisal but everybody's happy with what they're phrase that. it's that it's a chance for these people that they really would never have otherwise i'd
5:42 pm
like to stay braced for my life fast here because had i feel like i got maybe a year or two years you know maybe not even had septic god but years i got it but not right i hate to move you know hybrid you. stuff on the walls and pictures and get to have to get rid of the. different things that's about it would be nice to have a nice house you know but i'm not able to take care of her and if they hoarded him you know so. yeah they much but it's home and it's got to be hard leaving home practically being made to leave this places are just on their health and their children so it's one of their property values but it's still home and once the bio reaches critical mass there won't be any more fire department anymore polies anymore like tricity or water stores. it'll
5:43 pm
just be paved country lined with rusted street signs and when you go through all that and are told the one place you can't live is home you deserve a by a process that is dignified and clean. so the trust was appointed to represent the citizens during the buyout process and it's here that they carry out orders from the federal government and all appraisal issues and cut checks for the homes and i'm just making a little short statement i was offered fifteen dollars a square foot for my business and there's no way that you can build and many stories based and i know it's not gigantic it's just forty buildings and but it is nice i'm not for a moment you go look at it we're staying in from our house and for the base package the gunshop the house the land three lots eighty thousand dollars and there's no way you go to mom and replace this for eighty thousand dollars it's
5:44 pm
impossible. to hundred two thousand the fair yes and i don't think i can actually go to my man replies of one hundred two. and i went to all of trying to find out why and they said well that's just what we're part of that they're pros or have been in business for twenty five years they should know what they're doing all of them were there though. the appraisal company cinnabar services out of tolls is doing shoddy work. and the trust is paying them one point eight million dollars to do shoddy work they're rude to the people they have consistency and the trust will not hold them accountable. to listen now wait a second i i listened what you guys listen we have people want to say this is not like the first by well we did the same things we put something out for bid we hired a contractor we have gone in and and gotten their appraisals and we've had them
5:45 pm
review i mean and in all honesty the values are higher in this buyout than they were in the first one and what you see in the news record here's today's news record trust the fans buy out approach the trust is circling the wagons you know the target is supposed to take care of these people and they're not doing it are there going to be people who feel like they were do more yes. what i kinda sure is that there's been no conspiracy on the part of anyone to get higher values for certain people now let me finish. what there is is a lot of innuendo and accusation and yet there is no proof. ok we're coming up on jenelle's brother this is again a hard. gray have his lap siding hundred fifteen thousand
5:46 pm
that house own house that's been moved three times the house probably at least eighty years. ok this house on the left longs to messi and sammy bates and they've been offered seventy thousand cinnabar said there is nothing wrong with the beats appraisal so i use a trans why did you not tell me we did we asked for your problem you could we but you didn't raise. that doesn't mean that we get treated you just because we did worse and i rated lower there's something wrong with the beat appraisal so let's leave it the same and. i don't know what that means we got three new cops property . it is significant that you brought. that. marquee to like you me and tell me you didn't find anything room. to go there.
5:47 pm
thank you. the appraisers probably have a tough with this town. there are some poor people here there are some bad looking homes and i'm sure those create some challenges but you know missing sammy's house is the same size as the hearts missing sami's is much newer and even if you're blind in a little crazy and think these homes are in similar condition and they can bedroom isn't a bedroom if it's not close to a bathroom there's still a forty five thousand dollar difference in a town where the average home is fifty eight grand that's almost the cost of a whole other house this is the kind of appraisal work to trust as behind and they said mrs home on her couch and say maybe we gave the hearts too much i mean we made a mistake i did before my own and in the same breath they thing missing sammy got a good run five thousand dollars if you're it's not a hollywood story and where does this leave those who've already worked a lifetime and of course said ok i'll ever pay back a chapter eleven and ninety two years old. and i say i did then it. jackie
5:48 pm
bird see and she called me the other day she's so worried about the move and she's the one she got no neighbors run across the street sell she's god and she don't know about her house since they offered two hundred two thousand on it i think because she said tell me so i don't know how she's gone. they offered eighty four years young jackie busy twenty two thousand dollars for her home. it doesn't matter what her home is like or can you move on that. she says gentleman the purpose of this letter is to explain why i do not have a bill of sale when i was twenty one i bought my home in picher oklahoma in the fall of one thousand nine hundred three from doing fields for three hundred seventy five dollars i've lived here for almost sixty three years i'm now almost eighty four years old and have lived in the neighborhood seventy seven years longer as far
5:49 pm
as i know than anyone now living or dead it is with much regret that i will have to leave my home at this late time in my life but i cannot stay without police protection sewer service utilities and safe neighbors please let me be among the last to go. how do you expect an eighty year old woman who's lived in that house for sixty years who's on a fixed income. how do you expect her to move out of the superfund site on twenty thousand dollars now you know it's easy for outsiders to come and look at nasa oh my gosh a house in worth five thousand dollars that's right but that's at ladies home that's all she has and now you're going to take it away from er and now you've got
5:50 pm
to make or get in there to get out of here then the funny thing is we can come in here and spend seventy thousand dollars to dig up her yard but we can't give her enough money to move out of town on fourteen hour when he she was up on the hill cross. her and her this is what environmental problems look like part they look like people problems environmental problems are people problems as long as gravity still holds us here. they aren't separate except if you're over here. and these folks have been stolen from their land raped their names drug through the mud but they are tough as hill. break everything else you can grab that these people ain't breaking on your science on your say so run your legislation of the month hell yes they get red headed mouths when things seem counterfeit what else do you have and there ain't much. just your word or so and you're back. one
5:51 pm
hundred years later they're still here still fighting for their health and their cool spot of their. whether it's fair weather and they are going this will not be home anymore. and a hundred years after the first pickaxe struck oklahoma go they're handing this place back to the quapaw appreciate your here's the war superfund site in the country. talk route has even started. you know just because the buyouts go on doesn't move over just what they can buy these people out which is that what they're going to do but the tribes going to be here forever because the government's not going to give them any more land you can see that with all this mine why it's covering the landscape it's really not news in the sixty's eagle pitcher was pressing for
5:52 pm
to get out of their leases you know and to move in they also offered to cook the. back in the mines and the department of interior denied stating that their quapaw lands were no longer any good for anything they were ruined for agriculture is you know their purpose that the only economic derivative left to their lands was the gravel on the surface and that they could sell their gravel when they start realizing that chad had heavy metals that it was was an environmentally hazardous part of interior realize that that's a liability. since they manage the asset for the tribe if they allow that to be so then they would incur liability because if this chat were sold and put somewhere else that place might become a superfund site they're lucky there's so little left today there's no telling what
5:53 pm
the epidemic would look like if there were five times as much lead poaching their young polluting creeks making the ground tremble but eighty years later there's it's seventy five million tons eighty years of kids best through struggling in school. here gone this chad didn't just heard the kids who tested i. lead was here in mountains before anyone was running test. so not only is the chad left on the indian lease where the tribal member can't use the land then they found out they couldn't sell it either so their land became useless as a result this chad's been just sitting here for eighty nine hundred years you know we're being restricted for more sales but the money indians are not this check causes lead poisoning that's not an opinion it ruins this very land that was given
5:54 pm
to the quapaw to replace what they gave up in the b i a made sure this chat stayed right here the b.a.a. said these are the people who are going to bleed because of this waste and what is now so clear about this function is that damaging the land is not a separate act from damaging a culture. the whole reason that the government gave the tribe just one day and was to replace the land where they came from you know that the quapaw tribe occupied most of what is now arkansas. you know and i feel bad for the people that are living over in picher. i feel bad that they're going to have to move i feel bad that they're going to have to be relocated but you know what quote those didn't want to leave or good song.
5:55 pm
so. it's giving bad out here. but not saying hardly any birds squirrels you know. ducks yes you know i don't know what's going on here this this is like rachel carson's and i mare today you know we're having a silent follow you know where are the birds where's the wildlife. just don't see this is really unusual i've never been on this river and seen it you can even hear a bird chirping you know. i think the worst story would have to be.
5:56 pm
5:57 pm
hundreds of towns and cities had diminished even died when industry pulls up stakes but these downs in oklahoma began to die because industry arrived. way back when it would have been impossible to know the dimension of destruction they'd be left with or who would be hurt by it back then jobs trumped everything maybe they still do back then they had no concept of the future. but now we are the heirs of our grandparents miss. and there we are about to shoot the porch light out on this town how many more times can we strike lead or uranium or oil before there's no more country.
6:00 pm
the top stories are nazi brugge on the authorized of the law giving the power to detain people indefinitely without charge of trial if classed as terror suspects critics crying foul claiming the new bill violates placing democrats of clients to good seats elsewhere around the world. warning to the west as iran successfully test fires long range missiles during naval exercises of the persian gulf they've got me for public says it's prepared to head back a few times this comes as the u.s. imposes further sanctions targeting the ukrainian central bank and financial sector . tends to cut off a crucial zero supply route in response.
19 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on