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20 Arrested at Crestwood Midstream Gate in MLK Day Blockade

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Jan 192015
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | January 19, 2015

Contact: Sandra Steingraber, 607-351-0719

 20 Arrested at Crestwood Midstream Gate in MLK Day Blockade as Part of Continuing Civil Disobedience Campaign Against Seneca Lake Gas Storage; total arrests in 3-month campaign hit 200

Arrestees Include Former Tompkins County Legislator Pamela Mackesey, Who Marched with MLK in 1963

Action Follows on the Heels of Mothers/Grandmothers Blockade on Friday

Watkins Glen, NY – Wearing blue T-shirts proclaiming “We Are Seneca Lake” over their coats and parkas, 20 protesters formed a human blockade on the driveways of both the main gate of Crestwood Midstream on Route 14 and a smaller gate a quarter mile south. After a 3.5-hour blockade, during which they turned away two trucks, the protesters were arrested at 2:00 p.m. by Schuyler County deputies. All were charged with trespassing and released. All were ordered to appear in court on February 18.

Forty other protesters rallied in support along the shoulder of the highway.  Four other protesters were originally part of the blockade but left the scene early or dispersed and were not arrested.

Led by singer-songwriter, Edith McCrea, the blockaders sang Civil Rights-era songs and held banners with messages honoring Martin Luther King, Jr. on the national holiday that celebrates his birth:  “We Are Seneca Lake and We Have a Dream” and “Clean Air, Clean Water = Civil Rights. Justice Requires Action.”

Former Tompkins County legislator Pam Mackesey, 69, who marched as a teenager with Martin Luther King, Jr., said, “We all need to stand up to protect our environment and the future of the world. It’s outrageous that Crestwood can jeopardize the future of this part of the county. The Fingers Lakes belong to all of us. I was there in the March on Washington in 1963, and almost nothing is the same from that time expect for one thing: the fight for justice and equality for all of us.”

Marty Dodge, 72, of Canandaigua in Ontario County said, “I am here to do what I can to prevent Crestwood from destroying this lake.  It just doesn’t belong here.”

Seth Thomas, 34, of Lodi in Seneca County, said, “I’m protesting gas storage because I was born and raised here. I’m in the wine industry, so this is a direct threat to our way of life.”

The 20 blockaders arrested today are:

 

Mike Black, 62, Lakemont, Yates County

Leslie Brack, 47, Ithaca

Caroline Byrne, 38, Ithaca

Deborah Cipolla-Dennis, 49, Dryden

Jodi Dean, 52, Geneva

Marty Dodge, 72, Canandaigua

Celeste Froehlich, 37, Ithaca

Lyn Gerry, 58, Reading

Jennifer Johnson, 68, Corning

Nancy Kaspar, 56, North Rose

Pam Mackesey, 69, Ithaca

Edith McCrea, 46, Ithaca

Ed Nizalowski, 67, Newark Valley, Tioga County

Jean Olivett, 68, Danby

Kirsten Pierce, 45, Burdett

David Sanchez, 26, Rochester

Sarah Schantz, 61, Odessa

Coby Schultz, 54, Springwater

Seth Thomas, 34, Lodi

Kip Wilcox, 70, Ithaca

 

This morning’s protests follow Friday’s blockade of 13 mother and grandmothers. The women blocked the entrance into Crestwood for 5.5 continuous hours in bitterly cold temperatures, preventing all traffic from entering or leaving the faciltiy. No arrests were made. At 4 p.m. the women dispersed.

Those who risked arrest on Friday are:

Jane Russell, 63, Poultney, Steuben County, mother and grandmother

Peggy Aker, 57, Trumansburg, mother and grandmother

Kim Cunningham, 58, Naples, Ontario County, mother and grandmother

Tobi Feldman, 47, Ithaca, mother

Gretchen Hildreth, 38, Ithaca, mother

Barbara  Kazyaka, 53, Spencer, Tioga County, mother

Jean Olivett, 68, Ithaca, mother and grandmother

Stephanie Redmond, 38, Ulysses, mother

Susan Soboroff, MD, 69, Ulysses, mother and grandmother

Ann Sullivan, 67, Ithaca, mother and grandmother

Monica Daniel, 54, Enfield, mother and midwife

Sara R. Ferguson, 44, Ithaca, mother

Jennifer Wapinskil-Mooradian, 42, Trumansburg, mother

 

The two blockades come at a time of mounting questions about the ability of the Reading Court to offer impartial hearings to the civil disobedients and signs that the court is overwhelmed by the growing number of cases.

During a special Tuesday 2 pm court session, 32 We Are Seneca Lake blockaders arrested in earlier actions faced arraignments that went on for more than five hours. It was a chaotic scene. For the third consecutive court session, the public was locked out of the Reading Town Hall that serves as the courthouse.  Those waiting to enter the court, including defendants, were forced to wait outside in dangerously low temperatures.

Ten defendants, when called to the bench Wednesday night, learned that they had a surprise second charge against them (disorderly conduct). Court was recessed for 45 minutes so that the court clerk could enter the paperwork of 8 defendants into the computer. An empty water cooler meant defendants and members of the public alike had no access to drinking water during the more than five-hour court session. One court observer drove to Watkins Glen to purchase water and cups for the gathered crowd, and deputies allowed attendees to drink water in the inner rooms of the Town Hall where they had been excluded earlier in the evening.  Several defendants learned that their cases were being transferred to other courts.

 

Read more about the arrested protesters at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/seneca-lake-defendes/.

Read more about the persistent bias of the Reading Town Court: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/26/a-report-from-the-frontlines-in-the-war-against-fracking/#.VJ7OU5npvxE.facebook

Read more about widespread objections to Crestwood’s gas storage plans: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/26/nyregion/new-york-winemakers-fight-gas-storage-plan-near-seneca-lake.html?_r=0.

Background:

Protesters have been blocking the Crestwood gas storage facility gates since Thursday, October 23, including a rally with more than 200 people on Friday, October 24th. On Wednesday, October 29, Crestwood called the police and the first 10 protesters were arrested. Since then, protests have been ongoing, with more arrests each week.More information and pictures of the actions are available at www.WeAreSenecaLake.com.

The unified We Are Seneca Lake protests started on October 23rd because Friday, October 24th marked the day that major new construction on the gas storage facility was authorized to begin. The ongoing acts of civil disobedience come after the community pursued every possible avenue to stop the project and after being thwarted by an unacceptable process and denial of science.The protests are taking place at the gates of the Crestwood compressor station site on the shore of Seneca Lake, the largest of New York’s Finger Lakes.

The methane gas storage expansion project is advancing in the face of broad public opposition and unresolved questions about geological instabilities, fault lines, and possible salinization of the lake, which serves as a source of drinking water for 100,000 people. Crestwood has indicated that it intends to make Seneca Lake the gas storage and transportation hub for the northeast, as part of the gas industry’s planned expansion of infrastructure across the region.

*Note that the WE ARE SENECA LAKE protest is to stop the expansion of methane gas storage, a separate project from Crestwood’s proposed Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage project, which is on hold pending a Department of Environmental Conservation Issues Conference.

As they have for a long time, the protesters are continuing to call on President Obama, U.S. Senators Schumer and Gillibrand, Governor Cuomo, and Congressman Reed to intervene on behalf of the community and halt the dangerous project.In spite of overwhelming opposition, grave geological and public health concerns, Crestwood has federal approval to move forward with plans to store highly pressurized, explosive gas in abandoned salt caverns on the west side of Seneca Lake. While the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has temporarily halted plans to stockpile propane and butane (LPG) in nearby caverns—out of ongoing concerns for safety, health, and the environment—Crestwood is actively constructing infrastructure for the storage of two billion cubic feet of methane (natural gas), with the blessing of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

 

More background, including about the broad extent of the opposition from hundreds of wineries and more than a dozen local municipalities, is available on the We Are Seneca Lake website at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/press-kit/.

 

# # #

 Posted by at 5:59 pm

Jan. 19, 2015 MLK blockade photos

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Jan 192015
 
 Posted by at 1:02 pm

WRITE ON: Shrubbery over citizens

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Jan 172015
 

WRITE ON: Shrubbery over citizens

Posted: Friday, January 16, 2015 5:05 pm

The Town of Reading’s elected officials have failed a real-world civics test three times in less than a month.

They locked the public out of the Reading Town Hall — a town hall paid for, maintained and heated with taxpayers’ dollars — on Dec. 17, on Jan. 7, and then again Tuesday, each time leaving as many as 50 people outside in bitter winter cold.

On Jan. 7 and Tuesday, the wind chill dropped the effective temperature to well below zero.

While people shivered outside, a judge in a toasty-warm courtroom (with very limited seating) heard cases against people facing trespassing charges for blocking the gates at the Crestwood salt-cavern gas storage site on Route 14.

But the spacious (and also well-heated) town hall room was kept vacant, except for two Schuyler County Sheriff’s Deputies, charged with keeping the people outside from entering the building while also guarding the courtroom.

Until the weather turned really cold in December, the town hall meeting space outside the courtroom was open to these same citizens, many of whom were either waiting to go into the court themselves or there to support arrestees.

But according to one town official, board members got their knickers in a twist when someone accidentally stepped on some decorative plants outside.

Town Supervisor Marvin Switzer said the town board told him it won’t stand for people damaging “the shrubbery” and ordered the lockdown of the hall.

How the town’s shrubbery is protected by locking citizens out of a public building in the middle of winter is a tangle of such illogic it seems impossible to unravel. Impossible unless the town board’s deliberate, mean-spirited action has its real roots in board members’ pique at the Crestwood protesters.

Since the massive natural gas and liquid propane gas storage project was first proposed, the Town of Readinghas behaved as if persons unwilling to join them as boosters of salt-cavern gas-storage are annoyances, not concerned citizens with a differing opinion.

Early in the debate several years ago, the town planning board suspended all public comments about gas storage. Other topics were welcome for comment, for questions or to engage the planners in discussion. But any utterance mentioning gas storage would rile the chairman to angrily demand silence.

That Reading slap at the free speech clause of First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution has been eclipsed with this freeze-the-public maneuver. It’s a not-very-subtle attempt to thwart the public’s constitutional right to assemble.

In addition to locking people out on Dec. 17, no parking signs were posted on the roads around the town hall, ostensibly for safety reasons. More likely they were to discourage people from attending court or a peaceful anti-gas storage rally because the signs haven’t appeared in Reading for other recent events.

In the wake of these disgraceful incidents, the members of the Reading Town Board need to brush up on their civic responsibilities as elected representatives whose duty is to serve the public, not just those people they choose to favor based on politics.

Differences of opinion about the safety and suitability of the Houston-based company’s natural gas and proposed LPG storage facility are part of the healthy give and take of democracy.

Had the Schuyler County Legislature done its civic duty four years ago and led discussions and debate about the project, the nearly 200 people arrested for trespassing might not be visiting the Reading Court at all.

But it didn’t and so now it’s time for the Town of Reading to reread (or read for the first time) the pertinent sections of the U.S. Constitution and then adjust its civic priorities.

Priority should be given to the health and welfare of citizens and for the lawful right of citizens to assemble, not to protect ornamental shrubbery.

Fitzgerald worked for six newspapers as a writer and editor as well as a correspondent for several news services. He lives in Valois and Watkins Glen with his wife. They are owner/operators of a publishing enterprise called *subject2change Media. His “Write On” column appears Fridays. He can be contacted atMichael.Fitzgeraldfltcolumnist@gmail.com.

Photos of Mad Mom Action January 16, 2015

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Jan 162015
 
 Posted by at 11:05 am

January 13, 2015 Arraignment Photos

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Jan 142015
 
 Posted by at 1:18 am

Ten Arrested in New Year’s-themed Blockade at Crestwood Midstream

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Jan 092015
 

Ten Arrested in New Year’s-themed Blockade at Crestwood Midstream

Total Arrests in Ongoing Civil Disobedience Campaign is 180 as We Are Seneca Lake Enters Third Month of Actions

 

Watkins Glen, NY – Snow was beginning to fall and wind chill drove temperatures into single digits in when 43 protesters with We Are Seneca Lake rallied at the gates of Crestwood Midstream at 11 AM this morning.

After a round of New Year’s toasts with sparkling apple cider, ten protesters, wearing party hats and blowing noise makers, formed a human blockade on the driveway of the main gate and held banners that read “Happy New Year!  Resolved: Stop Crestwood” and “Out With the Old: Gas is So 2014.”

Protesters blocked and turned away one truck at 12:15 PM. Deputies arrived at 12:45, arrested all ten and charged them with trespassing. Blockaders were processed and released at the Schuyler County Sheriff’s Department.  All ten were ordered to appear in the Reading Town Court on January 21. Nine of the ten arrestees are residents of Tompkins County, including biologist Dan Flerlage, 63, who teaches science at the Lehman Alternative School.

Flerlage, who lives in the Town of Enfield in Tompkins County, said, “Corporations have a job to do, and that is to make money, and the government has a job to do, which is to keep their money-making efforts sane … When government fails to do its jobs, it becomes our job.”

 

Maryl Mendillo of Aurora in Cayuga County, said,

“When the community follows all the avenues available to address a danger and are ignored by corruption and money the appropriate response we are left with is putting our bodies in the way.”

 

Ellen Harrison, 66 of Caroline in Tompkins County, said

“I’m here because I object to the whole fossil fuel industry at this time. From climate change issues to the impact it has on people’s lives where they’re extracting fossil fuels, it’s a nightmare. It’s time to put a stop to it.”

 

Jessica Evett-Miller, 36, of Brooktondale in Tompkins County, said, “I’m here for my daughter and for the next generation …. I can’t stand idly by while Seneca Lake and the community around it becomes a sacrifice zone in a completely ill-conceived attempt at extracting more fossil fuels out of our earth and burning them. So this storage facility seems to me to be just a part of a bigger picture that really we need to rise up and try to stop.”

 

Bringing the total arrests in the ongoing We Are Seneca Lake civil disobedience campaign to 180, the ten arrests this morning come at a time of mounting questions about the ability of the Reading Court to offer impartial hearings to the civil disobedients and signs that the court is overwhelmed by the growing number of cases.

During the Wednesday night arraignments of 24 We Are Seneca Lake blockaders arrested in earlier actions, Town Justice Raymond Berry opened the proceedings by announcing that some defendants would be transferred to other courts.  Hearings are scheduled into July.

Several defendants, when called to the bench Wednesday night, prefaced their own statements with requests that Justice Berry recuse himself on the grounds of apparent improprieties, including reports of private conversations between the judge and the district attorney on Dec. 17, and that he is not a law-trained judge.

Others objected to the closed-courthouse policy that barred members of the public, who were waiting for a seat to open up inside the packed courtroom, from gathering in the public meeting hall inside the courthouse and forced them outside in bitterly cold temperatures.

 

Tompkins County legislator and 2014 Congressional candidate Martha Robertson served as a court observer and registered her own objections, at an accompanying press conference, at the closed courtroom policy. Robertson called on the Town of Reading to open their Town Hall to the public.

Those arrested today are:

Ellen Harrison, 66, Caroline, Tompkins County

Jens Wennberg, 79, Dryden, Tompkins County

Jessica Evett-Miller, 36, Brooktondale, Tompkins County

Kevin McKinzey, 40, Trumansburg, Tompkins County

Sabrina Johnston, 48, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Dan Flerlage, 63, Enfield, Tompkins County

Kelly Morris, 55, Danby, Tompkins, County

Mariana Morse, 66, Caroline, Tompkins County

Maryl Mendillo, will not provide age, Aurora, Cayuga County

Alicia Alexander, 62, Ithaca, Tompkins County

 

Read more about the arrested protesters at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/seneca-lake-defendes/.

 

Read more about the persistent bias of the Reading Town Court: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/26/a-report-from-the-frontlines-in-the-war-against-fracking/#.VJ7OU5npvxE.facebook

Read more about widespread objections to Crestwood’s gas storage plans: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/26/nyregion/new-york-winemakers-fight-gas-storage-plan-near-seneca-lake.html?_r=0.

Background:

Protesters have been blocking the Crestwood gas storage facility gates since Thursday, October 23, including a rally with more than 200 people on Friday, October 24th. On Wednesday, October 29, Crestwood called the police and the first 10 protesters were arrested. Since then, protests have been ongoing, with more arrests each week.More information and pictures of the actions are available at www.WeAreSenecaLake.com.

The unified We Are Seneca Lake protests started on October 23rd because Friday, October 24th marked the day that major new construction on the gas storage facility was authorized to begin. The ongoing acts of civil disobedience come after the community pursued every possible avenue to stop the project and after being thwarted by an unacceptable process and denial of science.The protests are taking place at the gates of the Crestwood compressor station site on the shore of Seneca Lake, the largest of New York’s Finger Lakes.

The methane gas storage expansion project is advancing in the face of broad public opposition and unresolved questions about geological instabilities, fault lines, and possible salinization of the lake, which serves as a source of drinking water for 100,000 people. Crestwood has indicated that it intends to make Seneca Lake the gas storage and transportation hub for the northeast, as part of the gas industry’s planned expansion of infrastructure across the region.

*Note that the WE ARE SENECA LAKE protest is to stop the expansion of methane gas storage, a separate project from Crestwood’s proposed Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage project, which is on hold pending a Department of Environmental Conservation Issues Conference.

As they have for a long time, the protesters are continuing to call on President Obama, U.S. Senators Schumer and Gillibrand, Governor Cuomo, and Congressman Reed to intervene on behalf of the community and halt the dangerous project.In spite of overwhelming opposition, grave geological and public health concerns, Crestwood has federal approval to move forward with plans to store highly pressurized, explosive gas in abandoned salt caverns on the west side of Seneca Lake. While the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has temporarily halted plans to stockpile propane and butane (LPG) in nearby caverns—out of ongoing concerns for safety, health, and the environment—Crestwood is actively constructing infrastructure for the storage of two billion cubic feet of methane (natural gas), with the blessing of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

 

More background, including about the broad extent of the opposition from hundreds of wineries and more than a dozen local municipalities, is available on the We Are Seneca Lake website at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/press-kit/

 Posted by at 6:59 pm

Photos from Jan. 9, 2015 Blockade

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Jan 092015
 

Jan 9, 2015 10 Seneca Lake Defenders were arrested blockading the gates of Crestwood. The names of the Defenders are on our Defender page. There have been a total of 180 arrests, with 147 Seneca Lake Defenders arrested since the We Are Seneca Lake campaign started.

 Posted by at 6:30 pm

Three Degrees of Injustice : Press Release January 8, 2015

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Jan 082015
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | January 8, 2015

Contact: Sandra Steingraber, 607-351-0719

Three Degrees of Injustice

24 We Are Seneca Lake Protesters Arraigned on Wednesday; Public Left Outside in Bitterly Cold Temperatures; Tompkins County Legislator Martha Robertson Challenges Locked Courthouse, Serves as Court Observer;

Inside the Court, Justice Berry Informs Defendants that Some Will Receive Change of Venue, as Arrests Mount in Ongoing Civil Disobedience Campaign

Watkins Glen, NY – The outside temperature was three degrees Fahrenheit—with wind chills of minus 10 degrees—when 24 defendants, their families and supporters, members of the interested public, and members of the press arrived for arraignments in the Town of Reading courthouse last night. Among the crowd was Tompkins County legislator and 2014 Congressional candidate, Martha Robertson of Dryden, who came to serve as a court observer.

The defendants all faced charges of trespassing—and, in one case, resisting arrest—as part of an ongoing civil disobedience campaign called We Are Seneca Lake against a Houston-based energy company, Crestwood Midstream, which seeks to bury highly pressurized gases—methane, butane, propane—in abandoned salt caverns along the banks of Seneca Lake. So far, 170 arrests have been made.

The crowd of about 60 people on Wednesday night was told by Schuyler County deputies that the courthouse building itself was off-limits to the public by order of Reading Town Supervisor Marvin Switzer. Those waiting for a seat to open up in the single small courtroom inside, which has a capacity of 49 people, would be forced to wait outside in the dangerously cold temperatures. They were also ordered off the sidewalk in the lighted area in front of the door.

Defendants were arraigned in two court proceedings, one at 5 PM and another at 7 PM. At 5 PM, the court did not fill to capacity, and all interested observers and members of the press were allowed to enter the courtroom. At 6 PM, with first court proceeding still in session, the courthouse doors were locked, and all those arriving, including defendants with 7 PM arraignments, were prohibited from entering the building.

By 7:30 PM, no more people were left standing outside the building, but it was not clear if all who wanted to observe in the court had been able to enter the courthouse or some had given up and left. Weather advisories that night warned that more than 30 minutes outside could result in frostbite to unprotected skin.

[This was the second occasion that members of the public had been barred from the facility during court proceedings. On the Dec. 17 hearings for other Crestwood trespassing defendants, the 5 PM hearing was entirely closed to press and public while some people in the courtroom, though far fewer than the 49 people allowed by fire code. The rest of the public was prevented from entering the building and, instead, stood in the parking lot in the cold. Temporary no-parking signs were also posted on the adjacent state highway, restricting access to nearby parking.]

Meanwhile, inside a packed courtroom, Reading Town Justice Raymond Berry opened both of the 5 PM and 7 PM hearings by announcing that some defendants would be receiving letters that announced that cases would be transferred to new courts. At the 5 PM hearing, Judge Berry said the decision to change the venue had originated from the District Attorney’s office.  At the 7 PM hearing, Berry said it was a county court decision. He offered no further information.

With most defendants pleading not guilty, hearings were scheduled as far out as July.

Several defendants, when called to the bench, prefaced their own statements with requests that Justice Berry recuse himself on the grounds of apparent improprieties, including reports of private conversations between the judge and the district attorney on Dec. 17, and that he is not a law-trained judge.

Mark Scibilia-Carver told the judge that people outside were risking frostbite and registered his objections, on the record, to the inhumanity of barring members of the public, who were waiting for a seat to open up inside the courtroom, from gathering in the public meeting hall inside the courthouse.

At 6 PM, Robertson joined We Are Seneca Lake organizer Sandra Steingraber in an appeal to two deputies at the door to allow members of the public inside, emphasizing the bitter cold and the people’s fundamental right of access.

“This is a public facility,” Robertson reminded the deputies. “There are a lot of cold people out here, and I see that there is a public meeting space available inside for them to gather.” Deputy Kirk Smith told Robertson that he was “following orders” and that the facilities were ordered closed by the Town of Reading.

Shortly after 6 PM, We Are Seneca Lake organizers held a rally and press conference on a snowy strip of lawn adjacent to the building and focused on the theme of trampled civil liberties, both inside the court and out.

The press conference was temporarily delayed when cameras refused to function and had to be warmed up inside heated cars. Several participants used a sleeping bag to create a wind block for the speakers.

In her remarks, Robertson read aloud from the Tompkins County Resolution Opposing Underground Hydrocarbon Storage Adjacent to Seneca Lake, of which she is a legislative architect. She said the Crestwood facility is “an issue not just for the people of Schuyler County or for the people who border Seneca Lake directly because frankly in the upstate New York region, we are all Seneca Lake.”

Addressing the exclusion of the public from the building where courtroom proceedings were ongoing, Robertson called on the Town of Reading to open their Town Hall to the public, saying, “This is the Town Hall of the Town of Reading. The taxpayers paid for this building. The taxpayers are heating this building—and it’s warm inside.  The taxpayers turn the lights on and they are paying the Sheriff’s deputies who are following the orders of Supervisor Switzer who says this is actually not a public building tonight because the members of the public who are here are not allowed.  I think that’s an abuse of power.”

Robertson then read aloud from section 4 of the Judiciary Law in the State of New York that mandates courts to be public:

“The sittings of every court within this state shall be public, and every citizen may freely attend the same, except that in all proceedings and trials in cases for divorce, seduction, abortion, rape, assault with intent to commit rape, criminal sexual act, bastardy or filiation, the court may, in its discretion, exclude therefrom all persona who are not directly interested therein, excepting jurors, witnesses, and officers of the court.”

Robertson said, “It is vital that the public ask, ‘What is Justice Berry afraid of?’ It is time for the public to see what is happening here and for the public to be allowed in without reservation.”

Also speaking at the press conference, Paul Passavant, PhD, a professor of Constitutional Law at Hobart and William and Smith Colleges, said that being turned out into the cold was emblematic of the civil liberties issues the group had gathered to discuss, including secretive court proceedings three weeks earlier and overheard ex parte conversations between Schuyler Count Assistant District Attorney John Tunney and Justice Raymond Berry about how to sentence the civil disobedients.

Passavant described being prevented by deputies from entering the Town of Reading courtroom on December 17, when he had accompanied We Are Seneca Lake defendant Laura Salamendra to her own arraignment.

[Salamendra’s 5 PM court proceedings were closed to the public and the press. At that private hearing, Salamendra pled guilty to trespassing, was given a maximum $325 fine, and, when she refused to pay, was issued a judgment lien rather than being sent to jail.]

Passavant summarized the Supreme Court’s ruling in Richmond Newspapers v. Virginia (1980), which described the fundamental importance of open public access to trials in the United States.  “As Chief Justice Burger wrote, ‘People assemble in public places not only to speak or take action, but also to listen, observe, and learn….  [A] trial courtroom also is a public place where the people generally—and representatives of the media—have a right to be present, and where their presence historically has been thought to enhance the integrity and quality of what takes place.’  Excluding us from attending the court proceedings three weeks ago makes it difficult for us to have confidence in the integrity of this court’s proceedings.”

Passavant asserted that “people in this town, this county, and this region are poorly served by the legal system that we have witnessed here” and questioned how the local governments of Reading and Schulyer County could be depended upon to serve as a “secure repository for the public trust with respect to the Crestwood project to store volatile gases in salt caverns on the shores of Seneca Lake.  Government holds public in low regard, as evidenced by leaving us out in the cold.”

Sandra Steingraber described to the crowd her Jan. 6 phone conversation with Supervisor Switzer, who told her, “If you do not have any business in the courthouse, we are not letting you in.”

Steingraber said that Switzer informed her that the policy to close the Reading Town Court building was made “by consensus” with the other members of the board as an ordinance. However, he could not recall the date of this decision nor would he provide Steingraber a written copy of the ordinance.

Switzer’s description of the closed courthouse policy, said Steingraber, seemed vindictive and specific to We Are Seneca Lake as a political group, and, as such, was in violation civil liberties. Among the several reasons he provided for closing the courthouse to the public during hearings that involved protesters, Switzer alleged that “you people” do not “have respect for building,” and said that they had tracked in dirt on the carpet.

By contrast, Reading Town board member Beverly Stamps told Steingraber on Jan. 6, that there was no such policy and that no board decision to close the building to the public had been made. Alleging that the town hall is not a courthouse, Stamps told Steingraber that “people shouldn’t be in there in the first place.”

Leaving the courthouse after the 5 PM arraignments, Ray Schlather, an attorney in Ithaca representing defendant Christopher Tate, addressed to the outside gathering of supporters and press.

“It’s high unusual and frankly unfair, if not unconstitutional, for these folks to be prevented from attending open public court proceedings,” said Schlather. “Whatever is necessary to ensure that the public courts are open to the public, all of the public…will be done. It is absolutely fundamental. It is part of the bedrock of our Constitution. It is part of the bedrock of all civilized nations of the world to have open public proceedings. Our job as citizens, our job as attorneys, as officers of the court, is to ensure that those fundamental principles prevail. We intend to proceed in all manners to protect those rights.”

Twenty-four We Are Seneca Lake defendants were arraigned on Wednesday, Jan. 7 in 27 separate hearings. All plead not guilty with two exceptions. Pete Angie, who did not plea, and Ross Horowitz, who pled guilty and requested a dismissal of charges, or reduced or minimal fine, on the grounds that he was at the protest in his capacity as a photographer. His sentencing was deferred until Jan 21.

The 24 defendants are:

Daryl Anderson, 61, Hector, Schuyler County

Pete Angie, Ulysses, Tompkins County

Kerry Angie, 62, Aurora, Cayuga County

Katie Barrett, 55, Syracuse, Onondaga County

Shirley Barton, 66, Mecklenberg, Schuyler County

Alex Colket, 36, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Jeff de Castro, 60, Trumansburg, Tompkins County (two charges of trespassing)

Timothy Dunlap, 60, Hector, Schuyler County

Richard Figiel, 68, Hector, Schuyler County (charged with trespassing and resisting arrest)

Ross Horowitz, 72, Danby, Tompkins County

Catherine Johnson, 52, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Richard Koski, 71, Trumansburg, Tompkins County

Margaret McCasland 68, Lansing, Tompkins County (two charges of trespassing),

Catherine Middlesworth, 49, Syracuse Onondaga County

Daphne Nolder, 29, Hector, Schuyler County

Jean Olivett, 68, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Beth Peet, 47, Hector, Schuyler County

Kirsten Pierce, 44, Burdett, Schuyler County

Sue Schwartz, 38, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Mark Scibilia-Carver, 62, Trumansburg, Tompkins County

Scott Signori, 47, Hector, Schuyler County

Audrey Southern, 31, Burdett, Schuyler County

Christpher Tate, 52, Hector, Schuyler County

Susan Ahrayna Zakos, 39,  Ithaca, Tompkins County

Read more about the arrested protesters at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/seneca-lake-defendes/.

 

Read more about the persistent bias of the Reading Town Court: http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/12/26/a-report-from-the-frontlines-in-the-war-against-fracking/#.VJ7OU5npvxE.facebook

Read more about widespread objections to Crestwood’s gas storage plans: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/26/nyregion/new-york-winemakers-fight-gas-storage-plan-near-seneca-lake.html?_r=0.

 

Background:

Protesters have been blocking the Crestwood gas storage facility gates since Thursday, October 23, including a rally with more than 200 people on Friday, October 24th. On Wednesday, October 29, Crestwood called the police and the first 10 protesters were arrested. Since then, protests have been ongoing, with more arrests each week.More information and pictures of the actions are available at www.WeAreSenecaLake.com.

The unified We Are Seneca Lake protests started on October 23rd because Friday, October 24th marked the day that major new construction on the gas storage facility was authorized to begin. The ongoing acts of civil disobedience come after the community pursued every possible avenue to stop the project and after being thwarted by an unacceptable process and denial of science.The protests are taking place at the gates of the Crestwood compressor station site on the shore of Seneca Lake, the largest of New York’s Finger Lakes.

The methane gas storage expansion project is advancing in the face of broad public opposition and unresolved questions about geological instabilities, fault lines, and possible salinization of the lake, which serves as a source of drinking water for 100,000 people. Crestwood has indicated that it intends to make Seneca Lake the gas storage and transportation hub for the northeast, as part of the gas industry’s planned expansion of infrastructure across the region.

*Note that the WE ARE SENECA LAKE protest is to stop the expansion of methane gas storage, a separate project from Crestwood’s proposed Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage project, which is on hold pending a Department of Environmental Conservation Issues Conference.

As they have for a long time, the protesters are continuing to call on President Obama, U.S. Senators Schumer and Gillibrand, Governor Cuomo, and Congressman Reed to intervene on behalf of the community and halt the dangerous project.In spite of overwhelming opposition, grave geological and public health concerns, Crestwood has federal approval to move forward with plans to store highly pressurized, explosive gas in abandoned salt caverns on the west side of Seneca Lake. While the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has temporarily halted plans to stockpile propane and butane (LPG) in nearby caverns—out of ongoing concerns for safety, health, and the environment—Crestwood is actively constructing infrastructure for the storage of two billion cubic feet of methane (natural gas), with the blessing of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

More background, including about the broad extent of the opposition from hundreds of wineries and more than a dozen local municipalities, is available on the We Are Seneca Lake website at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/press-kit/.

 Posted by at 5:46 pm

Santa Arrested at Seneca Lake!

 Press Kit  Comments Off on Santa Arrested at Seneca Lake!
Dec 222014
 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | December 22, 2014

Contact: Sandra Steingraber, 607-351-0719

Santa Claus, Mrs. Claus and 7 Elves Arrested Today Blocking Crestwood Gas Storage Facility, Marking 170 Arrests in Two-Month-Old Civil Disobedience Campaign 

Arrests Follow on the Heels of 28 Arrests Last Wednesday, Led by Many Prominent Local Musicians

Watkins Glen, NY – Carrying banners that declared “Christmas Against Crestwood” and “Methane in Your Stocking is Worse Than Coal,” nine area residents dressed as Santa Claus and his North Pole ensemble were arrested this morning and charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct at Texas-based Crestwood Midstream’s gas storage facility gates on the shore of Seneca Lake as the ‘We Are Seneca Lake’ civil disobedience campaign enters week 9 of blockades to stop construction at the gas storage facility.

Santa Claus was the only one of the nine to be handcuffed and searched before taken into custody.

Mr. Claus (Stefan Senders of Schuyler County) was quick to assuage concerns that his arrest would delay his upcoming world tour, saying, “Don’t worry, boys and girls, I’ll be out of jail in time to deliver your presents.”

Chief elf Stephanie Redmond, who was not arrested on Monday, addressed concerns about outsiders participating in the ongoing protests, saying, “Some refer to us North Pole residents as ‘outsiders.’ But after Christmas is over, we elves vacation here at Seneca Lake. We like the wineries, and we come every year as tourists.”

Today’s arrests follow 28 arrests last Wednesday in a blockade lead by prominent local musicians. Members of the Irish folk band, The Grady Girls, along with acclaimed banjoist Richie Stearns and fiddler Rosie Newton, were among those arrested last Wednesday, along with assorted jazz, classical, and roots musicians. While blockading a large truck, the musicians sang, danced, played instruments, and held banners that read “This Land is Our Land” and “Gas/Water: Which Side Are You On?”

Referring to legendary folk singer Pete Seeger, singer and banjo musician Richie Stearns, 56, said, “When I was deciding whether to get arrested or not, I saw a sticker on my own car that said, ‘What Would Pete Do?’”

Singer Marie De Mott Grady, 29, of The Grady Girls, said, “Everyone has a duty to stand up and say something. Music inspires people, and people might pay attention if they know a musician is taking action.”

All total, 170 arrests have now occurred at the gates of Crestwood since the campaign began on October 23. There have also been multiple rallies with hundreds of people and numerous winery owners, local businesses and health professionals.

The 9 Finger Lakes residents arrested today are: 

Stefan Senders, 55 (as Santa Claus), Schuyler County

Charlotte Senders, 18, Schuyler County

Kim Cunningham, 58, Heron Hill Winery, Naples, Ontario County

Ilona Marmer, 68, Montour Falls, Schuyler County

Jean Olivett, 68, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Hope Rainbow, 24, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Gabriel Shapiro, 18, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Bill Carini, 53, Newfield, Tompkins County

Chrys Gardener, 53, Newfield, Tompkins County

The 28 arrested on Wednesday, Dec. 17 are:

Richie Stearns, 56, Trumansburg, Tompkins County

Rosie Newton, 25, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Asa Redmond, 40, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Stephanie Redmond, 38, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Barbara Pease, 68, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Charles Greenrider, Chandler, 58, Fort Bragg, CA

Coby Schultz, Springwater, Livingston County, 54

Tom Seaney, 65, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Jodi Dean, 52, Geneva, Ontario County

Edgar Brown, 60, Naples, Ontario County

Kirsten Pierce, 44, Burdett, Schuyler County

Crow Marley, 55, Hector, Schuyler County

Ann Sierigk, 57, Hector, Schuyler County

Chris Tate, 52, Burdett, Schuyler County

Heather Hallagan 41, Mecklenburg, Schuyler County

Elisa Evett, 69, Brooktondale, Tompkins County

Nancy Miller, 68, Dryden, Tompkins County

Judy Pierpont, 70, Dryden, Tompkins County

Alicia Alexander, 62, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Marie De Mott Grady, 29, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Josh Dolan, 37, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Leah Grady Sayvetz, 25, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Andrew Lem, 19, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Martha Stettinius, 50, Ithaca, Tompkins County

Dan Rapaport, 54, Newfield, Tompkins County

Judy Abrams, 66, Trumansburg, Tompkins County

Mimi Gridley, 59 Glenora, Yates County

Read more about the arrested protesters at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/seneca-lake-defendes/.

 

Background:

Protesters have been blocking the Crestwood gas storage facility gates since Thursday, October 23, including a rally with more than 200 people on Friday, October 24th. On Wednesday, October 29, Crestwood called the police and the first 10 protesters were arrested. Since then, protests have been ongoing, with more arrests each week.More information and pictures of the actions are available at www.WeAreSenecaLake.com.

The unified We Are Seneca Lake protests started on October 23rd because Friday, October 24th marked the day that major new construction on the gas storage facility was authorized to begin. The ongoing acts of civil disobedience come after the community pursued every possible avenue to stop the project and after being thwarted by an unacceptable process and denial of science.The protests are taking place at the gates of the Crestwood compressor station site on the shore of Seneca Lake, the largest of New York’s Finger Lakes.

The methane gas storage expansion project is advancing in the face of broad public opposition and unresolved questions about geological instabilities, fault lines, and possible salinization of the lake, which serves as a source of drinking water for 100,000 people. Crestwood has indicated that it intends to make Seneca Lake the gas storage and transportation hub for the northeast, as part of the gas industry’s planned expansion of infrastructure across the region.

*Note that the WE ARE SENECA LAKE protest is to stop the expansion of methane gas storage, a separate project from Crestwood’s proposed Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage project, which is on hold pending a Department of Environmental Conservation Issues Conference.

As they have for a long time, the protesters are continuing to call on President Obama, U.S. Senators Schumer and Gillibrand, Governor Cuomo, and Congressman Reed to intervene on behalf of the community and halt the dangerous project.In spite of overwhelming opposition, grave geological and public health concerns, Crestwood has federal approval to move forward with plans to store highly pressurized, explosive gas in abandoned salt caverns on the west side of Seneca Lake. While the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has temporarily halted plans to stockpile propane and butane (LPG) in nearby caverns—out of ongoing concerns for safety, health, and the environment—Crestwood is actively constructing infrastructure for the storage of two billion cubic feet of methane (natural gas), with the blessing of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).

 

More background, including about the broad extent of the opposition from hundreds of wineries and more than a dozen local municipalities, is available on the We Are Seneca Lake website at http://www.wearesenecalake.com/press-kit/.

 

# # #

 Posted by at 11:19 pm

Photos of Dec. 22, 2014 blockade

 Photos  Comments Off on Photos of Dec. 22, 2014 blockade
Dec 222014
 
 Posted by at 12:19 pm