
9 minute read
News
from Oct. 15, 2015
‘Leaders’ dump patients and lawsuit
Nevada officials have agreed to pay $400,000 to the city of San Francisco in settlement of a lawsuit over 24 mental patients dumped in that city by Nevada. The state’s conduct was discovered and reported by the Sacramento Bee, which found more than 1,500 cases of dumping around the nation through the use of one-way bus tickets.
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The scandal was deemphasized in Nevada news coverage, likely because the story was broken by an out-of-state press entity. Neither the state or officials of Rawson-Neal Psychiatric Hospital in Clark County—where the patients had been housed—were highly visible in dealing with the case. Gov. Brian Sandoval initially addressed the matter through spokespeople and prepared statements and commented personally only when confronted by a TV news crew at a public event—and then he defended the practice as “good quality of care.”
The San Diego Union-Tribune last week editorialized, “We comment regularly on government actions that are ill-considered, poorly handled or of questionable value. But rarely is our target simply obnoxious. But that’s the best description for what’s been done by a psychiatric hospital in Las Vegas operated by the state of Nevada. … This was not Nevada’s finest hour.”
BLM keeps quiet, again
Author Terri Farley said last week the Bureau of Land Management was unresponsive when she was writing her new book about wild horses and young people who try to protect them.
“I know people that are staffers for BLM that I’ve gotten along with great, people that I feel have some integrity, and they know what they’re doing and the care about what they’re doing,” she said. “However, everyone who wanted to talk to me had to go through D.C.”
This everything-goes-vertical policy has long drawn complaints from reporters in the West, because it often denies them the most informed perspective, from the BLM people in the field. The problem was especially acute during the April 2014 Bunkerville standoff.
Farley said, “And I have a stack of emails and phone messages—‘We’ll get back to you’; ‘Oh, could you put your questions in writing?’ ”
Moreover, she said that after a long period of being ignored by BLM spokespeople, once she announced on Facebook that the book was finished, they came running.
She said she pushed back the press date in hope of getting comments from BLM. She was able to pull old quotes from her notes or use quotes from news coverage, but those were only substitutes for an on-point interview. She did send written questions without success.
“And I really did make the book as balanced as it was possible to do without them talking to me,” she said. “But then after I posted it on Facebook that the book was gone and no more changes could be made, I got an email answering my questions.”
Even then, she said, the answers to her questions were mostly taken from material on the BLM website.
More from the Farley interview can be found in our “15 minutes” feature on page 35.
The family business
Among participants in the protest against a Nevada mining corporation’s Guatemala activities this week (see story at right) was a local second-generation protestor.
Kit Miller of Washoe Valley, who lived for a time in Guatemala, was in town for the opening at the University of Nevada, Reno library of her mother’s papers, so she joined the protest. Her mother was women’s rights leader Maya Miller, who also worked in Guatemala and other South American nations on human rights issues.
—Dennis Myers
Guatemalans and Renoites gathered at the Reno arch to protest against Tahoe Resources Inc., a mining company. Others protested Columbus Day.
Common cause
Silver state residents protest Guatemala silver mine
The mayor-elect of a Guatemalan town tried to deliver a letter of protest to a Nevada by mining company in Reno this week, Dennis Myers but was ordered off the property. Mayor-elect Llan Carlos Davila of Santa Rosa de Lima represents one of eight towns in the Santa Rosa Department (province) of Guatemala that have voted to ban chemical mining. However, the mine operated in the region by Tahoe Resources Inc. of Reno is at neighboring San Rafael las Flores, and its officials have not allowed a similar vote, according to Carlos Davila. His town of Santa Rosa, population just under 6,000, is 17 kilometers or about 10 miles from the mine.
Ira Gostin Tahoe Resources Inc.
The Tahoe Resources Inc. website is www. tahoeresources.com. A site dealing with the local residents’ grievances is at goldcorpoutofguatemala. com
Carlos Davila, also representing the Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa, began the day with a protest held by local supporters who joined him at the Reno arch, where he spoke and met with reporters.
“What we’re demanding is that the company respect our decisions, respect the results of the consultations that we’ve carried out, and we want people to know that this company is contaminating our water and our natural resources,” he said.
Material distributed at the protest said both police and the Guatemalan military have employed repression on the corporation’s behalf. Carlos Davila said both the National Police and the military are controlled by the central government, which is in turmoil at the moment with the resignation of the president, a vice president, and a presidential candidate. Following the Sept. 3 resignation and jailing of President Otto Perez Molina, Tahoe Resources president Kevin McArthur issued a statement saying the change “is not expected to affect our Guatemalan operations.”
In February, Norway’s central pension fund dropped Tahoe Resources from its portfolio after a report from its ethics committee found “an unacceptable risk of the company contributing to serious human rights violations.”
The region in Guatemala at issue is bucolic and picturesque, described by a British Broadcasting Corporation report as “Guatemala’s southern agricultural heartlands where most families eke out a living growing maize, beans, coffee, avocados, cabbage, bananas and peaches. The region’s distinct cheeses are produced from small herds of cattle seen dotted around the surrounding mountains where Tahoe also owns mining licenses. Here live thousands of Xincas, Guatemala’s non-Mayan indigenous people.”
On April 13, 2014, 16-year-old Topacio Reynoso—leader of a youth group organizing against the mine—was shot and killed in Mataquescuintla, one of the anti-Tahoe Resources communities. Her father was seriously injured. Numerous worker-oriented websites call the incident a murder, though Gostin told the Nation magazine, “We find it repugnant that anyone would try to align that tragic incident with anything to do with the mine. It is totally unconnected and unrelated, and we send our sympathies to the family.”
When the protestors arrived at the Tahoe Resources headquarters in an office building on Kietzke Lane, about 20 of them filed into the lobby of the corporation and asked to speak to someone in authority.
Thirteen weeks ago, some of these same local activists had protested nearby, at Hobby Lobby. That store’s managers welcomed them onto the property, chatted with them about their grievance—a Supreme Court ruling that exempted some corporations from provisions of the Affordable Care Act—accepted copies of their literature and sent bottled water out to them to help with the July heat.
The experience at Tahoe Resources was different. After they waited for a few moments, corporate vice president Ira Gostin—a former local Associated Press reporter—came out and said without preamble, “You have 30 seconds to leave the premises or you will be arrested. This is private property. You’re trespassing. I’m not going to tell you twice.”
That kind of dried up the dialogue. But amid some crosstalk while the mayor-elect and his translator waited, local leader Bob Fulkerson and others tried to convince Gostin to engage with the group.
Unidentified person: “We wanted to come here and we want to tell you, do you know what is happening in Guatemala right now, sir?”
Gostin: “I asked you to leave. I asked you to leave. I didn’t ask to have a dialogue with you.”
Fulkerson: “We’d like to have a dialogue with you, though, about the fact of what Tahoe Resources does to the people and communities in Guatamala.”
Gostin: “Well, since you’re completely uninformed—” (Laughter in two languages.)
Fulkerson: “What is it that we’re uninformed about? We have the mayor of the community here and other members of the community who have told us first hand of the violence, of the water contamination, of the land contamination, that you and Tahoe Resources are doing.”
While Fulkerson spoke, Gostin walked to a telephone and called the police. Another member of the
group then read a bill of particulars to which the receptionist listened while Gostin spoke to police, then the group departed with a chant of “We’ll be back.” A few minutes after they left, a Reno Police car drove through the parking lot.
Later, Gostin said, “Showing up in our lobby and disrupting our business is not the way to do it.” He said the mine employs 850 people and benefits another 3-5,000 Guatemalans indirectly. He said he was reluctant to go on the record against general accusations but said the Norwegion pension plan “maybe didn’t dig deep enough.”
Gostin said Guatemalan critics of the mine have been invited to tour it and declined and that he had invited Fulkerson on earlier occasions to meet with him without success.
The Tahoe Resources dispute is far from the only controversy surrounding corporations doing mining in Nevada. Their overseas operations are chronically under criticism for their treatment of local populations and ecologies, though those disputes seldom get news coverage in the state, and Nevada officials are reluctant to say anything that will rock the boat.
Last month, a row of dark blue Nevada suits including Brian Greenspun, Michael Roberson and Brian Sandoval lined up with Barrick Gold officials to laud the corporation’s opening of an office in Henderson— the day after Barrick admitted that it had vastly under-reported a toxic spill into the Potrerillos River at its Veladero mine in Argentina. The admission by Barrick came after a second prosecutor started looking into the incident and resulted in a judge ordering a halt to the mine operation. Barrick originally said the spill was about 224,000 liters, but it actually exceeded a million.
In April, Barrick agreed to pay compensation to 11 tribal women and girls who accused police and security guards at the company’s mine in Papua New Guinea of rape, the latest of payments previously made to 137 women.
In 2006, Denver-based Newmont Mining—another Nevada operator—paid a $30 million settlement for alleged mercury and arsenic dumping in Indonesia.
Like most U.S. mining corporations, Tahoe Resources was originally a Canadian entity. According to the Nevada Secretary of State’s office, Tahoe Resources Inc. has been incorporated in the state since Feb. 2, 2010. It first partnered in the Guatemala mine with Goldcorp Inc., but Goldcorp sold off its holdings in the venture in June. Ω
GOSTIN
Silence
Students, faculty and other members of the campus communities observed a moment of silence and additional ceremonies on Oct. 8 at Truckee Meadows Community College in Reno (shown here) and Western Nevada Community College in Carson City to signal sympathy and solidarity with Umpqua Community College in Oregon, where a gunman killed nine people on Oct. 1.




