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"THE ONLY THING NECESSARY FOR THE TRIUMPH OF EVIL IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING"
--Burke

Friday, April 10, 2009

Carlyle Group


How come ASARCO will only pay pennies on its debt and come out looking
squeaky-clean --- while parent company's Ferromex (partnered with UP railroad) and CSX railroad want
to take over a huge amount of the continental-shipping, and route
non-union-managed freight right through the Asarco contamination at Santa Teresa NM?? And why didn't anyone tell us about this? Carlyle Group owns 20% of Grupo Mexico, all of CSX, and the lead-person at USA Carlyle Realty group used to be in charge of a Sanders company. That is an impressive string of coincidences.

Why didn't anyone tell us about this, or that the local highway authority had planned to put an elevated toll-road right through the worst of the ASARCO contamination--- by building it right on top of Paisano right next to the smelter stack (and on top of our water-supply?). The MPO has approved those funds. Said that they'd hold ASARCO's "feet to the fire".

[pub. under Fair use]


Thursday, April 9, 2009

DOJ's new OPR Ms. Brown

"Previous to her work at the Department, Brown was a litigation associate at the Washington, D.C. office of Dickstein, Shapiro & Morin (now Dickstein Shapiro) from 1984 to 1989."  see:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/usnw/20090408/pl_usnw/attorney_general_eric_holder_names_new_leadership_for_atf__executive_office_for_u_s__attorneys__and_office_of_professional_resp

Her old law firm  is connected to John B. Breaux through the CSX railroad (he is a director since 2005), and (now retired) Senator Breaux shows a relationship to Asarco-- through the lobby firm of Patton Boggs LLP  (Breaux was a special advisor)

[Carlyle Group. Recall that in 2002, it purchased the International CSX Lines Division for $300 million, see http://www.utulocal1548.org/UP_s_Intentions.doc]

 

S&P warns liquidity problems ahead for Grupo Mexico


Mineweb - BASE METALS - S&P warns of liquidity problems for Grupo ...
A multi-billion court decision finding Grupo Mexico and its subsidiaries culpable in the fraudulent transfer of millions of shares which helped send Asarco into bankruptcy could hurt the companies' financial future. ...
Mineweb - Daily news headlines - http://www.mineweb.com/


Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The GNEB 12'th report skips the ASARCO disaster

  www.epa.gov/ocempage/gneb/gneb12threport/English-GNEB-12th-Report.pdf

- not very neighborly of the committee (many whom are from this region) to entirely skip mention of the Asarco smelter whose groundwater plume has now reached the Rio Grande and our international Hueco Bolson.

Is this the type of scientific reporting our new Administration deserves?  I don't think so.   The new administration deserves better than this.

GNEB 11th report has no mention of the ASARCO El Paso disaster

Neither the secret haz-waste remaining here or the collapse of ASARCO's
rubber lake into our drinking water during 9/06 was mentioned.

Is this report "being a good neighbor" to the Paso del Norte citizens?

Grupo Mexico's Ferromex (bidding on 45 yr freight contract through Santa Teresa), CSX, BNSF, and CARLYLE group

http://www.utulocal1548.org/UP_s_Intentions.doc
"To stay informed go to WWW.UTU.ORG

JUST WHAT ARE UP'S INTENTIONS?

(The following opinion article explores the political connections of Union Pacific Railroad and speculates on intentions of Union Pacific to acquire rail routes in Mexico as a prelude to merging with either CSX or Norfolk Southern as well as Canadian Pacific. The article was published Jan. 8 in a transportation law journal.)

Is Union Pacific (UP) in the hunt for Mexico’s largest and most prized railroad -- Kansas City Southern de Mexico (KCSM) --– now leased by Kansas City Southern Railway (KCS)?

What UP possesses to make this a reality -- and which BNSF Railway, also in the hunt, may not possess -- are the political connections in Mexico.

For sure, BNSF has the cash to make an unsolicited bid for stock control of KCS; but BNSF may not have enough political muscle to obtain Mexican government approval for control of KCSM.

It is said that with the right political connections in Mexico, one might achieve most anything. And while UP may be short of cash, it is rich with political connections.

Indeed, all it might take for UP to snatch control of KCSM is an unsolicited bid for KCS by a cash-rich private equity firm friendly to UP -- such as the Carlyle Group; followed by a break-up of KCS, with KCSM being transferred to UP with the help of politicos in Mexico.

So important are those political connections south of the border that even were BNSF to make an unsolicited bid for KCS, the KCSM routes could still be transferred to UP.

You see, it’s highly unlikely the U.S. Justice Department, Federal Trade Commission or even Surface Transportation Board could assert any jurisdiction over UP’s acquisition of a purely Mexican based railroad -- assuming those agencies, given UP’s superior political connections north of the border, would even blink an eye.

KCSM –-- whose 50-year concession KCS acquired from Mexican conglomerate Grupo TMM – is Mexico’s most coveted railroad, running from Mexico City to Laredo and serving vital Mexican ports, including the booming West Coast port of Lazaro Cardenas. 

UP’s acquisition of KCSM is the sort of transaction over which 19th century rail barons Jay Gould and Cornelius Vanderbilt would have salivated.

With U.S. West Coast ports nearing capacity, and Lazaro Cardenas, on Mexico’s west coast, poised to become a major North American  inbound container port, control by UP of KCSM would give UP domination over Asia-Pacific land-bridge traffic destined to teeming Mexico City, Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas, Houston and Kansas City; and set the stage for a merger between UP and either CSX or Norfolk Southern, creating the first Atlantic-to-Pacific transcontinental railroad.

Likely to follow would be a BNSF merger with the remaining East Coast railroad, creating a transcontinental rail duopoly in the United States.

A WHO’S WHO OF POLITICAL CONNECTIONS

And before you predict a transcontinental rail marriage would not gain regulatory approval, recognize that the U.S. Surface Transportation Board is the sole arbiter of domestic rail mergers, and the STB and its predecessor Interstate Commerce Commission have been facilitators of numerous other major rail mergers, including the 1996 UP-Southern Pacific merger that was strongly opposed by the Justice Department and other federal agencies.

For UP, the grab of KCSM would be equivalent to a month of Sundays.

Is this merely pie in the sky? Well, let’s look at the players -- all UP friends, who comprise a tangled web of well-connected rain makers and politicos.

Begin with UP and its Washington, D.C. law firm, Covington & Burling.

Add to the mix the Carlyle Group, a privately held $19 billion international investment firm with close ties to Bush presidents 41 (a former Carlyle adviser) and 43, as reported by Britain’s Guardian newspaper and U.S. investigative reporter Jerome Corsi.

Stir in other political allies of the Bush family, as well as Mexican politicos, and the tangled web takes on the look of carefully connected dots.

Recall that Covington & Burling, in September 2003, hired Linda Morgan, former chairman of the Surface Transportation Board, who supported UP’s 1996 merger with Southern Pacific, and who indicated to the Washington Post in 1997 that she favored a railroad duopoly in the U.S.

Morgan went to Covington & Burling after Covington partner Mike Hemmer, who headed Covington’s transportation practices group, departed in 2002 to become UP’s chief legal officer.

Morgan also sits on Canadian Pacific’s board of directors, suggesting rather than a U.S. transcontinental rail dupoly, a North American transcontinental rail duopoly is on the horizon.

Focus now on the Carlyle Group. Recall that in 2002, it purchased the International CSX Lines Division for $300 million, then unsuccessfully sought -- in a plan backed by the Bush administration -- to sell its port-terminal operations to a Middle East government-owned entity for some $1.2 billion.

Among the Carlyle Group’s U.S. principals are Richard Darman, the first president Bush’s budget director, and Jim Baker, the first president Bush’s secretary of state and a partner in the Baker Botts law firm that has a long-history of acquisition projects in Mexico.

In November 2006, UP created a new board seat for Thomas "Mack" McLarty, president of Kissenger McLarty & Associates (we’ll get to them) and a senior adviser to the Carlyle Group. Previously, McLarty was President Clinton’s chief of staff and later Clinton’s special envoy to Latin America

And just four months before McLarty  went to the UP board, Andy Card, with ties to Carlyle Group principals, was elected to the UP board. Card was the first president Bush’s transportation secretary -- a job he acquired with assistance from former UP chairman Drew Lewis, also a former transportation secretary -- and was the second President Bush’s first chief-of-staff.

Also, let’s not forget that Vice President Dick Cheney is a former UP board member.

Moreover, the Carlyle Group is no stranger to KCSM. In 2003, the Carlyle Group itself unsuccessfully sought to acquire a 51 percent interest in KCSM (then known as TFM). KCS won the bidding war. In fact, Carlyle even inspected the lines of KCSM as part of what was termed, "due diligence."

There’s more.

THE MEXICAN POLITICOS

Back in October 2003 --  just weeks after Morgan went from the STB to Covington & Burling --  Kissinger McLarty & Associates entered a global strategic alliance with Covington & Burling. The Kissinger is Henry, the former Nixon administration globe-trotting secretary of state.

This was about the time that Kissinger McLarty & Associates -- specifically, Mack McLarty -- was advising BNSF on strategic transportation issues in Mexico. Apparently, McLarty jumped ship to UP, leaving, according to a source, BNSF Chairman Matt Rose in a snit.

Now comes the Nov. 21 appointment of Luis Tellez, former head of the Carlyle Group’s Mexico operation, as Mexico’s secretary of transportation, with regulatory oversight of Mexican rail operations. Tellez is a former chief of staff to Mexican President (1994-2000) Ernesto Zedillo, who previously served on UP’s board of directors.

As for Tellez, he previously was on the board of directors of Grupo Mexico, which controls a smaller Mexican railroad, FerroMex, that just happens to be 27 percent owned by UP. Interestingly, Tellez joined the Carlyle Group in Mexico as an adviser just prior to Carlyle’s unsuccessful 2003 attempt to acquire control of KCSM.

KCSM AND LAZARO CARDENAS

Here is why KCSM is so coveted a prize:

*  KCSM controls all tracks into and out of the Port of Lazaro Cardenas.

*  The Port Lazaro Cardenas is blessed with a deepwater channel sufficient to handle the largest of container ships;

*  KCSM already has acquired land adjacent to the port under a zero-price, long-term agreement;

*  Port operator Hutchinson Wampoa is investing in a 10-fold port-capacity expansion;

*  Wal-Mart, whose second biggest market is Mexico, has it’s eyes on Lazara Cardenas as a crucial North American port of entry.

*  Analysts at UBS project KCSM revenue from Lazaro Cardenas rail traffic will soar from some $30 million in 2007 to almost $100 million by 2015, and $255 million by 2025;

*  In terms of lifts, UBS projects an almost two-million 20-foot equivalent container throughput by 2025, compared with some nine million currently at Long Beach/Los Angeles, 1.8 million at Seattle, and some 1.5 million at Oakland. The U.S. West Coast ports, meanwhile, already are operating at near capacity with little room for expansion;

*  The rail route from Lazaro Cardenas to Chicago or Kansas City is roughly equivalent in length to the rail routes from congested Long Beach; is 600 miles shorter to Houston and closer to Atlanta. The port also is the closest to the population-dense Mexico City;

*  CP Ships, NYK Lines, Maersk and APL already serve the port; and,

*  Lazaro Cardenas enjoys a substantial labor-cost advantage -- its per-lift costs being some 30 percent cheaper than at U.S. West Coast ports.

Indeed, KCSM, with its sole rail access to the Port of Lazaro Cardenas, is a modern-day Hope diamond; but prying it loose from KCS may be equivalent to freeing Excalibur. And that is why UP’s superior political connections are essential

BNSF remains interested; but UP, while not awash in cash as is BNSF, has something more valuable --  its new-found cash-rich Carlyle Group and Carlyle’s similarly extraordinary political connections. No wonder BNSF’s Matt Rose is so irritated.

Who said railroads had become a mature and financially boring industry?

(The preceding opinion article was published in Association Highlights, a publication of the Association of Transportation Law Professionals. The article does not necessarily express the opinion of the association.)"

 

1992 A"sarco May Sell All of Its Stake in Mexican Firm" (Grupo mexico)

"Asarco May Sell All of Its Stake in Mexican Firm
Keller, John J. Wall Street Journal. (Eastern edition). New York, N.Y.: Jul 1, 1991. pg. C5

NEW YORK -- Asarco Inc., seeking to focus more of its funds on expanding its U.S. operations, said it is considering an international public stock offering or the private sale of some or all of its investment in Mexico Desarrollo Industrial Minero S.A. de C.V. (Medimsa).

Asarco, which traces its roots back to its Mexican mining investments in 1899, owns 31.2% of Medimsa, Mexico City, a nonferrous metals mining company operating 13 mines and seven metallurgical plants in Mexico."

..."At the end of 1990, Asarco valued its Medimsa investment at $288.2 million. A sale would virtually pull Asarco out of Mexico, if a branch office of its specialty chemicals business based in West Haven, Conn., isn't counted. The rest of Medimsa is owned by Grupo Mexico, a Mexican conglomerate."

....." In the past three years, Asarco has helped fund Medimsa's [i.e. Grupo Mexico's] acquisition of Mexicana de Cobre and Mexicana de Cananea, the country's two major copper-producing companies."....."To account for the potential sale of Medimsa, the spokesman said Asarco has changed from the equity method of accounting for its interest in the company to the cost method, effective with the second quarter of 1991."

[in 1992 ASARCO El Paso installed the two largest contop furnaces in the world and began secretly and illegally burning hazardous waste for profit.   Carlyle Group now owns about 20% of Grupo Mexico]

Copyright Dow Jones & Company Inc Jul 1, 1991 [reproduced for fair use]

Friday, April 3, 2009

Interesting comment ...

"These guys offer the model of how to export all the profits from mining out of the country to offshore accounts, then declare bankruptcy and fine ways to pay as little as possible in federal bankruptcy court. And somehow, just a few weeks ago prior to an EPA audit, coworkers made frantic rushes to the shredder with this facilities permits and their Notice of Violation for not having a permit. When inquired as to the purpose of such shredding, I was informed that they were duplicates, when I pointed out they were three different permits, and the nature of the NOV was for not having a permit, I took the permits to my desk for closer examination, i was five feet from my desk when the frantic co-worker apprehended those documents and made a mad dash for the shredder... I joked... he go shred those now... Gee isn't that facility one of your cases? Uh, no... uh lie." 
http://www.scribd.com/doc/13327882/Asarco-Offers

Thursday, April 2, 2009

American Mining Corp ordered to return stock to ASARCO

"April 2, 2009
Judgment to order stock returned to Asarco
ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press Writer

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - A federal judge in Texas has ordered a subsidiary
of mining giant Grupo Mexico SAB to return stock in a Peruvian mining
company once owned by Tucson-based copper miner Asarco LLC, now going
through bankruptcy reorganization.

An attorney and company officials said the damages award to Asarco -
including the return of stock - was valued at more than $6 billion."

http://www.dailymail.com/ap/ApTopStories/200904021332

also see
http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSN0225608820090402

"MEXICO CITY, April 2 (Reuters) - Grupo Mexico shares plunged 15 percent
on Thursday after a U.S. court ordered the company to surrender the bulk
of its stake in Southern Copper and pay more than $1 bln in
damages.....Grupo Mexico... has said it was still interested in taking
back control of Asarco."

TCEQ ASARCO (El Paso) Update

Many thanks to TCEQ regional director Ms. Gardner and the honest people within the TCEQ who are trying to get out some information/data to the public, including word about the Asarco Rio grande groundwater-plume.  

We [TCEQ] have added a [ASARCO] Remedial Investigation documents page for viewing and downloading. To go directly to that page, follow this link.

The link to the main ASARCO webpage is here.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Lomas de paleo, the moving of the north-south rail lines to Santa Teresa, and the accompanying building of roads

Lomas de paleo, the moving of the north-south rail lines to Santa Teresa, and the accompanying building of roads....

All are within the toxic-waste shadow of ASARCO El Paso.   Grupo Mexico who owns ASARCO is presently bidding on a 45 year contract (to be awarded this summer) to bring rail freight from the new Baja Mexico port of Punta Colonet across northern Mexico up through the Santa Teresa Port-of-entry next to ASARCO.

Grupo Mexico controls over half the freight right of way in Mexico through Ferromex.   This new seaport will be larger than the USA L.A. seaport, and non-unionized.

Despite all the military and monies being brought to Cd. Juarez, the illegal concentration camp run by the Zaragozas is inexplicably allowed to patrol with machine guns (illegal for civilians to carry) and the government is reportedly on the side of the family trying to take Lomas de Paleo land from its remaining owners.   

This land is about 2 miles away from the ASARCO smelter stack, and has to be quite polluted by the secret toxic wastes.

Meanwhile Acerlor Mittal  has quietly purchased the tiny steel-plant just 30 miles north of where this port-of-entry is; and, Freeport McMoran bought up Phelps Dodge and is located in the 30-mile plume-area that ASARCO would have reached.

We were an environmental sacrifice-zone.   We are still an environmental sacrifice zone.  

Google Web Alert for: Lomas de paleo
LOMAS DE POLEO: BORDER LAND BATTLE SIZZLES | World War 4 Report
... Freeman affair opens window on intra-elite paleo-neocon wars ... Lawyers for the Zaragozas contend the land in Lomas de Poleo was legally purchased by ...

Friday, March 20, 2009

Mexico has proved oil reserves for nearly 10 years

Google News Alert for: PEMEX
Mexico has proved oil reserves for nearly 10 years
istockAnalyst.com (press release) - Salem,OR,USA
Pemex said the reserves total 43.562 billion barrels of equivalent crude. Among them 14.307 billion barrels are proved, 14.516 billion are probable and ...
See all stories on this topic

Freeport McMoran continuing to sponsor daylong conference for girls in Science

University of Arizona News (press release)
Supporting Girls Through Science
University of Arizona News (press release) - Tucson,AZ,USA
Middle and high school girls from more than 120 schools across Arizona will participate in the daylong conference, which is sponsored by Freeport McMoRan ...
See all stories on this topic

Asarco shuts down Amarillo rod and cake plant next to PANTEX

Google News Alert for: asarco
Asarco shut Texas copper plants this week
Reuters - USA
NEW YORK, March 20 (Reuters) - US copper miner Asarco LLC shut its rod and cake plants in Amarillo, Texas and is planning periodic slowdowns at the copper ...
See all stories on this topic

Grupo Mexico (who owns Asarco and wants to retain ownership; and, who controls over 50% of the Mexico Ferromex rail right-of-way) is bidding on a 45 year contract to carry rail-containers from the new Mexico Baja seaport of Punta Colonet across northern Mexico and up through the Santa Teresa NM Port of Entry, in the toxic-shadow of ASARCO El Paso.  That contract should be awarded early this summer.


TCEQ new website admits that ASARCO contamination has reached the Rio Grande

The people from the TCEQ who posted this data deserve our support and thanks in my opinion. The bad side is that they haven't shown any data on the illegal/secret toxic waste that the EPA let us know ASARCO incinerated for years; and, they waited until the Bankruptcy is about finished.

"Surface Water Impacted by Contaminated Groundwater: Based on surface water analytical data, the contaminated groundwater appears to have reached the Rio Grande."

http://www.tceq.state.tx.us/remediation/sites/asarco.html


Fig. 2 from that website shows the area of groundwater plume.

The Canal Street water treatment plant is about 2 miles downstream from this point.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

website with Asarco remediation information


In your request and follow-up email regarding Mr. Wilkinson's files, you only requested "emails, correspondence or phone logs" on the specified subjects.  By replying that Mr. Wilkinson does not have such items on those subjects, we did not mean that he does not have any information on those matters.  For example, our previous correspondence of 3/12 referred to the remedial investigation reports (available in the regional office) that reference former pond 6, which is now repository cell #3.  Mr. Wilkinson's manager is Jason Wang (email: jwang@tceq.state.tx.us; phone: 512/239-2242).
 
As to notification on the state air and ore-handling permits, this notification was sent out recently by the agency.  You had also inquired about the status of permits that are still listed as active.  Several of these remain active as they are related to the remediation of the site.  However, Permit Numbers 28678, 30490, 32641, 33100, 37039, 37353 are permits by rule that are associated with the previously voided permits and thus, are also void.  TCEQ records will be updated to reflect this status.
 
On a final note, we had previously mentioned that we were planning on having a website with information on the ASARCO remediation.  The site is now live and the address is: http://www.tceq.state.tx.us/remediation/sites/asarco.html.
 
Sincerely,
 
 
Michael S. Chamberlain, J.D.
Legal Assistant

Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Office of Legal Services
General Law Division, MC-173
P.O. Box 13087
Austin, Texas  78711-3087
512-239-0478
Fax: 512-239-0606
michambe@tceq.state.tx.us

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Senate ratifies Calderón's picks for Pemex board members, Mexico

Google Blogs Alert for: PEMEX
Senate ratifies Calderón's picks for Pemex board members, Mexico
 ...
By David Biller
Mexico's senate on Tuesday afternoon ratified the four presidential nominees for the professional advisor posts at state oil company Pemex, a spokesperson in the senate press department told BNamericas. The four professional advisors ...
Business News Americas - Top Stories - http://www.bnamericas.com/

20090317 UPDATE 1-Asarco files reorganization plan March 16'th

"Google News Alert for: asarco Asarco files reorganization plan for Sterlite sale"

"Reuters - USA Tue Mar 17, 2009 12:30pm EDT By Emily Chasan

NEW YORK, March 17 (Reuters) - Bankrupt U.S. copper miner Asarco LLC has filed a new bankruptcy reorganization plan that proposes how the company will reorganize itself under a $1.7 billion deal with India's Sterlite Industries ......

Under the reorganization plan filed with the court late on Monday, Asarco said it plans to pay administrative claims, priority tax claims, priority claims, secured claims and convenience claims." [what about Toxic waste??]

"Asarco creditors holding general unsecured claims and unsecured asbestos personal injury claims will be entitled to vote on whether to accept the reorganization plan, according to court papers....

The case is In re: Asarco LLC, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of Texas, No. 05-21207. (Editing by Andre Grenon"

Four EDTs for the destruction of chemical weapons

"The Army's ability to meet public and congressional demands to destroy expeditiously all of the U.S. declared chemical weapons would be enhanced by the selection and acquisition of appropriate explosive destruction technologies (EDTs) to augment the main technologies to be used to destroy the chemical weapons currently at the Blue Grass Army Depot (BGAD) in Kentucky and the Pueblo Chemical Depot (PCD) in Colorado. The Army is considering four EDTs for the destruction of chemical weapons: three from private sector vendors, and a fourth, Army-developed explosive destruction system (EDS)."

Link


Did ASARCO El Paso ever incinerate Low Level Radioactive Wastes (LLRW) ?

How can we know that the facility never burned the stuff? Has anyone ever seen TCEQ/EPA or ASARCO site data for polonium, actinides etc from either the pond sediments or from protected areas (like attics) that collect dust??

"Google Alert:
Low-level waste emerges as hurdle for new nuclear reactors"

"New York Times - United States
US low-level waste comes from a wide range of places, including hospitals and laboratories, but the greatest -- and most toxic -- volume is produced by the ...
See all stories on this topic"