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The Koch name that controls ALEC is also a big ****i-g polluter...... this is the Koch name that apparently wants to over throw the USA government ...

Razoo

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Koch Industries, Inc. Oil Spills Settlement | Enforcement | US ...
https://www.epa.gov › enforcement › koch-industries-i...


May 15, 2017 — Koch Industries Inc., will pay the largest civil fine ever imposed on a company under any federal environmental law to resolve claims related to ...

01/13/2000: KOCH INDUSTRIES TO PAY RECORD FINE ...
https://archive.epa.gov › epapages › newsreleases


Most of the spills at issue in the settlement occurred in Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas. In one case, almost 100,000 gallons of oil was spilled in Texas and caused a ...

Inside the Koch Brothers' Toxic Empire - Rolling Stone
https://www.rollingstone.com › politics › politics-news


Sep 24, 2014 — The company ranks 13th in the nation for toxic air pollution. Koch's climate pollution, meanwhile, outpaces oil giants including Valero, Chevron ...

Koch Industries Pollution - Greenpeace USA
https://www.greenpeace.org › usa › climate-deniers › k...


Koch Industries is a major polluter, with ongoing incidents and violations of environmental laws. Even when complying with the law, Koch companies can get ...

Koch Industries to Pay Record Fine for Oil Spills | EHS Today
https://www.ehstoday.com › archive › article › koch-in...


Koch Industries $30 million fine to resolve claims relating to more than 300 oil spills from its pipelines, is the largest civil fine ever imposed on a company.

Koch Industries' $30 Million Fine Is Biggest-Ever Pollution ...
https://www.wsj.com › articles


Jan 14, 2000 — The most damaging spill -- 90,000 gallons -- caused a 12-mile oil slick on Nueces Bay and Corpus Christi Bay in Texas. According to the EPA, the ...
 
Republicans: Dr. Seuss cancel culture! The ignorance in that party is dangerous and criminal. I'd understand if one of them didn't post to this thread agreeing the pollution is terrible. But not one will post.
 
The Greenpeace Airship A.E. Bates flies over the location of Charles Koch's secret political strategy meeting in Rancho Mirage, California in January, 2011.
© Gus Ruelas / Greenpeace
Evidence published by Mother Jones senior editor Daniel Schulman in Sons of Wichita, the first biography on the Koch family, includes accusations from former Koch employees that violations of environmental law were systematic up to the highest levels of management. Koch’s resistance to federal investigations of environmental violations went as far as spying on federal officials involved in lawsuits against Koch. In discussions of possibly making Koch a publicly-traded company, a lawyer for Koch warned that taking the public would land all of Koch’s executives and board members in jail.
  • A Koch-owned cellulose facility in Taylor County Florida was responsible for two successivechlorine dioxide chemical leaks in May, 2014.
  • Koch Pipeline Company spilled 17,000 gallons of crude oil (400 barrels) near Austin Texas in October, 2013. A road had to be built to access the spill site for cleanup, which contaminated livestock ponds. Months before the spill, Koch Pipeline was gifted it’s second annual “Environmental Performance Award”from the American Petroleum Institute, the top U.S. oil and gas lobbying organization.
  • Subsidiaries of Koch Carbon have accumulated massive piles of petroleum coke in U.S. cities like Detroit and Chicago, where the toxic dust has blown into peoples’ homes from a 5-story-tall pile of petcoke. Petcoke is a byproduct of refining tar sands that is usually burned like coal. Petcoke, which is more carbon-intensive than coal, is typically exported and burned in other countries with little to no air or climate regulations. While Detroit’s mayor ordered Koch to move its petcoke pile, Chicago regulators and politicians have not acted with the same urgency despite sustained local protests from community members, nurses, andthreats of lawsuits from environmental groups. In response, Koch claims it will add protections to its unlined pile, which could take two years.
  • Facing “enormous” cleanup costs for soil and groundwater contamination and high crude oil prices, Flint Hills announced in 2014 that it would permanently close its North Pole refinery outside of Fairbanks, Alaska. Koch blames contamination on the refinery’s previous owner, Williams Companies.
  • Ongoing, permitted releases of hazardous chemicals including benzene, sulfuric acid, hydrogen cyanide from Koch’s oil refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas, where refinery communities experience high rates of illnesses known to be associated with the chemicals released.
 
  • Millions of gallons of toxic paper mill waste from Koch-owned Georgia-Pacific facility in Crossett, Arkansas. A 2011 complaint to regional and national Environmental Protection Agency offices, filed by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) and Ouachita Riverkeeper, alleged that Koch’s plant was “Discharging 45 million gallons per day of paper-mill waste, including ammonia and chloride, and metals such as zinc, copper, and mercury.” The EPA dismissed the complaint on the grounds that Koch’s pollution was permitted. PEER and Ouachita noted that, “Koch Industries has persuaded the State of Arkansas to issue the Georgia-Pacific mill a permit that in essence removes water quality standards for the creek, on the self-fulfilling grounds that it can never be restored to a biologically viable stream.”
  • In 2009, the US Justice Department and EPA announced in 2009 that Koch Industries’Invista subsidiary would pay a $1.7 million penalty and spend $500 million to fix environmental violations at facilities in seven states, in an agreement with the US EPA and Department of Justice.
  • In May 2001, Koch Industries paid $25 million to settle with the US Government over a long-standing suit brought by Bill Koch – one of the brothers bought out in 1983 – for the company’s long-standing practice of illegally removing oil from federal and Indian lands. The value of oil that brother Bill Koch accused Koch Industries of stealing was worth $133 million – over $255 million in 2014 dollars.
 
  • In late 2000, the company was charged with covering up the illegal releases of 91 tons of the known carcinogen benzene from its refinery in Corpus Christi. Initially facing a 97-count indictment and potential fines of $350 million, Koch cut a deal with then-Attorney General John Ashcroft to drop all major charges in exchange for a guilty plea for falsifying documents, and a $20 million settlement. Informing the federal case, a former Koch employee blew the whistle on the company for allegedly falsifying its emissions reports, downplaying the amounts of toxic chemicals it released.
  • In 2000, the EPA fined Koch Industries $30 million for its role in 300 oil spills that resulted in more than three million gallons of crude oil leaking into ponds, lakes, streams and coastal waters.
  • In 1999 a Koch subsidiary pleaded guilty to charges that it had negligently allowed aviation fuel to leak into waters near the Mississippi River from its refinery in Rosemount, Minnesota, and that it had illegally dumped a million gallons of high-ammonia wastewater onto the ground and into the Mississippi.
  • Koch’s negligence toward environmental safety has led to tragic losses of life. In 1996, a rusty Koch pipeline leaked flammable butane near a Texas residential neighborhood. Warned by the smell of gas, two teenagers drove their truck toward the nearest payphone to call for help, but they never made it. Sparks from their truck ignited the gas cloud and the two burned alive. The National Transportation Safety Board determined that “the probable cause of this accident was the failure of Koch to adequately protect its pipeline from corrosion” and the ineffectiveness of Koch’s program to educate local residents about how to respond during a pipeline leak.
The inability of Koch companies to avoid pollution incidents stands in contrast with Charles Koch’s “Guiding Principles” of his trademarked corporate management theory, “Market-Based Management,” which states, “Strive for 10,000% compliance with all laws and regulations, which requires 100% of employees fully complying 100% of the time.” This also excludes from consideration the ways in which Koch is permitted to legally pollute.
 
Koch Outspends Exxon-Mobil on Climate Denial

The Wonk Room has long detailed the role of the billionaire brothers of Koch Industries, Charles and David Koch, in destroying American prosperity.

In public, the Kochs like to burnish their reputations by buying museums and opera halls. In private, however, they’ve outspent Exxon Mobil to fund organizations of the climate denial machine, as Greenpeace details in a new report:

Although Koch intentionally stays out of the public eye, it is now playing a quiet but dominant role in a high-profile national policy debate on global warming.

Koch Industries has become a financial kingpin of climate science denial and clean energy opposition.

This private, out-of-sight corporation is now a partner to Exxon Mobil, the American Petroleum Institute and other donors that support organizations and front-groups opposing progressive clean energy and climate policy.

In fact, Koch has out-spent Exxon Mobil in funding these groups in recent years. From 2005 to 2008, Exxon Mobil spent $8.9 million while the Koch Industries-controlled foundations contributed $24.9 million in funding to organizations of the climate denial machine.

This report, “Koch Industries: Secretly Funding the Climate Denial Machine” documents roughly 40 climate denial and opposition organizations receiving Koch foundation grants in recent years, including:
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2010/03/30/174616/koch-denial-machine/

Union of Concerned Scientists
http://www.ucsusa.org
 
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