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Mike Elk

Mike Elk

Posted: August 31, 2010 11:33 AM

A lot of attention recently has been focused on one of President Obama's top advisers on Social Security -- former Senator Alan Simpson (R-WY), after he described Social Security as being "a milk cow with 310 million tits". Perhaps attention should be focused instead on a much more sinister one of President Obama's personal appointments to serve on his deficit commission.

Meet Honeywell CEO David Cote -- the most dangerous man in America. Cote is so dangerous that he's willing to risk nuclear fallout in order to demand that uranium workers agree to cutting their retiree health care and pension plans.

Honeywell runs the only conversion facility in the world that can distill pure uranium in Metropolis, Illinois. On June 28, Honeywell locked out its union workers during contract negotiations because the union, United Steelworkers (USW) Local 7-669, refused to accept the company proposal to eliminate retiree health care and pension plans for new hires and increase workers' out-of-pocket health care to $8,500 a year. Good health care coverage for retirees is especially important to uranium workers who suffer rates of cancer ten times higher than the general public due to their daily interaction with radioactive material; thus, the workers refused to give in to demands to cut their retiree health care coverage entirely.

In a major concession, however, the uranium workers' union refused to go on strike in the interests of keeping the plant safe and agreed to continue working under an extension of their current contract. Honeywell, which is already making record profits, decided they could make even more if they played hardball with their workers and risked a nuclear disaster.

So Honeywell locked out the local uranium workers with decades of experience operating the Metropolis uranium enrichment facility. Instead, Honeywell hired hastily trained "scabs" (replacement workers) to run the plant. Honeywell uranium worker John Paul Smith described the plan to run the plant on poorly trained scab labor as "a serious gamble." The Metropolis uranium plant is the only uranium enrichment facility in the world that can distill uranium, and it would be impossible to train workers fully on how to run such a complex facility.

"Basically, Honeywell CEO David Cote has a gun to the head of the local community," said Mark Dudzic, who has decades of experience negotiating with the nuclear industry as a long time organizer with the old Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers International Union (OCAW). One local resident Jerry Baird described the anxiety the community is feeling. "If they remember everything, it'll probably run. If they don't, they'll probably kill us all."

"Honeywell CEO David Cote is subtly threatening the lives of an entire community in order to increase Honeywell's profits," said Dudzic. When the Mafia threatens people this way, the FBI calls it extortion; when a corporation does it, it gets called labor relations.

Cote's threats to our nation's security don't just stop there.

Honeywell does billions of dollars of business with the Pentagon as a military contractor. As a member of the Deficit Commission, it is Honeywell CEO David Cotes' role to make sure that the commission doesn't examine cutting waste in the military contracting process that Honeywell benefits from.

This despite a recent study by a bipartisan commission that showed that $1 trillion could be cut easily from the defense budget. A different report by the House Armed Services Defense Acquisition Reform Panel this spring showed that the military contract process has so little oversight and is so wasteful that it's actually harmful to our national security. Cote has instead pushed back against calls by Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK) to cut waste in the military by suggesting instead that the military cut the pay of its troops overseas (many of whom are already relying on food stamps) and make them pay for their own health care.

Honeywell CEO David Cote's decision-making process personifies the shortsighted mentality of those calling for cutting Social Security. The families of the 52 million Social Security beneficiaries, whose benefits would be cut, would be forced to take money out of the economy and financially provide for their loved ones. Men like Honeywell CEO David Cote are so dangerously shortsighted that they are willing to risk things like an economic recession, or nuclear fallout that hurt everyone, even big corporations, over the long run.

Honeywell CEO David Cote was the president's appointment to serve on the Deficit Commission, but a man who would threaten an entire town with nuclear annihilation in the name of corporate profits has no place deciding Social Security's fate.

Honeywell CEO David Cotes belongs on an episode of the Sopranos, not the President's Deficit Commission.

 

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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
06:49 PM on 08/31/2010
Sounds like something that happened in Bophar, India in the 80's.
Now it's happening in America. If you don't believe it just look at how the government ( if it still IS a government­) protected BP in the Gulf
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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
07:18 PM on 08/31/2010
That was Bhopal, India...so­rry ( Union Carbide)
03:41 PM on 08/31/2010
Oh, really? Did you even *try* to find any nuclear expert to corroborat­e your assertion that what Honeywell did - while despicable in terms of how they treated their workers - actually endangered the community? Union officials are excellent people to speak on labor relations with corporatio­ns, but they are not nuclear experts.

Stop asserting things as facts when you do not know them to be. You did the same thing with respect to accusing David Cote of trying to cut military pay. The Hill report you link to did not assert it as fact - it said that a source had said so. There was no independen­t confirmati­on, nor was the source named. Just what journalist­ic ethic allows you to assert an unnamed source's informatio­n, reported as such, as fact?
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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
06:30 PM on 08/31/2010
Goes to motive....­........yo­ur honor
05:10 PM on 09/01/2010
Here are some facts about this lockout: Not only are the steel workers locked but the union contractor­s and independen­t inspectors were kicked out as well. The real danger at that facility is not the Uranium, but the HF. HF is a deadly acid, and a major release of it could kill thousands of people in both Metropolis­, Ill. and Paducah Ky. The Shaw Group, which manages the replacemen­t workers, just received a $6.7 million fine because of failing to report safety incidents. Rumor down here is that Honeywell is trying to use a 90 day strike to have their sales contracts cancelled so they can also raise their prices.

Honeywell'­s MTW facility is one of four plants in the world and the only one in the USA that converts Uranium Ore into Uranium Hexafluori­de. UF6 is what is enriched and turned into fuel rods. It is dangerous, expensive, and due to the price drop of Uranium, not profitable­.
05:07 PM on 09/02/2010
UK135 is absolutely right, it is the chemicals both HF and Fluorine that pose any threat to the community. There cannot be any 'fallout', the uranium is not enriched nor is is an atomic bomb ready to explode, it is yellowcake reacted with HF and Fluorine to make UF5. The NRC does not even enforce their Safety Concious Work Environmen­t (SCWE) provisions at this site as they do not deal with enriched uranium or byproducts of fission.

This story isn't much of an event though, I mean who trained the union workers? The same people training the Shaw workers! The competent salaried engineers at the site. A much bigger story about this plant is the EPA investigat­ion which is in the hands of a grand jury in St. Louis at the moment. The company has illegally stored over 8 million pounds of highly caustic material contaminat­ed with uranium. Drums storing the material are failing all over the storage pad, this material ends up in the Ohio River. The material exceeds the ph limit for hazardsous waste under RCRA. Honeywell claims to have made a self disclosure about this, why doesn't the press find out whether Honeywell has honored the commitimen­ts it made to the regulatory agencies as a result of that disclosure­? Where's the concern for the community regarding highly caustic material mixed with uranium ending up in the Ohio River? Where's the NRC????
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Mike Elk
01:34 PM on 08/31/2010
I appreciate the offer, sometimes my dyslexia gets the best of me.
12:55 PM on 08/31/2010
Mike....yo­u need a proofreade­r. I'm available.