U.S.: Climate protesters arrested at sit-in outside Rep. Boucher’s office in DC

Capitol Police arrested 15 protesters outside the office of Rep.
Rick Boucher (D-Va.) on Thursday as the debate over the Waxman-Markey
climate and energy bill continued.

The protesters, from the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, held a
sit-in outside Boucher’s office to protest his role in getting more
support into the bill for coal. Boucher, who represents a coal-heavy
region of southern Virginia, has been a key player
in getting billions in incentives for coal into the bill, as well as
weakening some of its standards. The protesters blocked the doors to
Boucher’s office, holding signs that read “No more coal” and singing a
modified version of “We Shall Overcome.”

CCAN director Mike Tidwell,
a Grist contributor, was among those arrested. “This is a climate
mugging of the American people,” said Tidwell before his arrest.
“Waxman-Markey is becoming a coal industry welfare bill.” (See Grist’s breakdown of where green groups stand on the bill.)

A spokesperson for the organization said the protest, which comes on
the last day of debate of the Waxman-Markey bill in the Energy and
Commerce Committee, is not really about the bill itself or the markup
process to date.

“It’s really a statement about Boucher and the leadership he has
assumed in gutting the bill and giving billions of dollars to
polluters,” CCAN communications director Anne Havemann told Grist after
the protest.

Boucher has been very open throughout the process about his talks
with coal companies about the bill. “In the course of conducting other
negotiations, I have had continued conversations with coal companies,
both locally and nationally, including the chief executive officers of
CONSOL ... which operates the largest mine in Southwest Virginia, and
Michael Quillen, the chief executive officer of Alpha, which is our
region’s largest coal producer,” Boucher said recently.
“I have been in discussions with Mike Morris, the chief executive
officer of AEP, and Tom Ferrell, who is chief executive officer of
Dominion, which is Virginia’s largest electricity supplier.”

But Boucher hasn’t made himself quite so accessible to foes of coal,
prompting the sit-in today. “He doesn’t meet with groups like us,” said
Havemann. “We’ve tried for months.”

 

[from Grist:http://www.grist.org/article/2009-05-21-climate-protestors-arrested/ ]

Reply

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.