Southeast Convergence for Climate Action shuts down Bank of America

August 13, 2007

***5 arrest­ed protest­ing Bank of America’s invest­ments in coal and cli­mate change***

As a cul­mi­na­tion of the South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action, activists took a bold direct action against Bank of Amer­i­ca over con­cerns regard­ing their invest­ment through­out the coal cycle and their pro­mo­tion of cli­mate injus­tice. Although there was much spec­u­la­tion regard­ing a protest action at the Progress Ener­gy Sky­land coal-fired pow­er plant, pro­tes­tors sur­prised the down­town office of Bank of Amer­i­ca.

Bank of America climate placard
Bank of America cops
Climate Justice Now banner
August 13, 2007

***5 arrest­ed protest­ing Bank of America’s invest­ments in coal and cli­mate change***

As a cul­mi­na­tion of the South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action, activists took a bold direct action against Bank of Amer­i­ca over con­cerns regard­ing their invest­ment through­out the coal cycle and their pro­mo­tion of cli­mate injus­tice. Although there was much spec­u­la­tion regard­ing a protest action at the Progress Ener­gy Sky­land coal-fired pow­er plant, pro­tes­tors sur­prised the down­town office of Bank of Amer­i­ca.

Two activists locked down inside the main lob­by and oth­er activists block­ad­ed the entrance to the down­town branch of Bank of Amer­i­ca. The protest includ­ed a large, live­ly group of con­cerned cit­i­zens dressed as canaries and polar bears. Activists car­ried signs and ban­ners that read: “Bank of Amer­i­ca Stop Fund­ing Cli­mate Change,” “Bank of Amer­i­ca Stop Moun­tain­top Removal,” “No Coal, No Nukes, No Kid­ding” “Bank of Amer­i­ca Cli­mate Crim­i­nal.”

Bank of Amer­i­ca has lent hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars to com­pa­nies that run and are plan­ning to build new pow­er plants, such as Flori­da Pow­er and Light. Between 2005 and 2007, Bank of Amer­i­ca facil­i­tat­ed near­ly $1 bil­lion in loans to Massey Ener­gy and Arch Coal, two of the largest com­pa­nies respon­si­ble for the destruc­tive prac­tice of moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing. This form of min­ing lit­er­al­ly blasts the tops off of moun­tains to get at thin seems of coal that lay beneath. Moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing has per­ma­nent­ly destroyed over 500 square miles of moun­tains and buried over 1,200 miles of streams in West Vir­ginia alone.

As of 2005, Progress Energy’s Sky­land was the fifth largest pur­chas­er of Massey Energy’s coal. Progress Energy’s Sky­land plant is a pur­chas­er and burn­er of moun­tain­top removal coal as well as the largest point source of pol­lu­tion in Bun­combe Coun­ty.

Locked down

The South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action aimed to pro­mote a just, rapid, nuclear-free tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fuels; to pro­mote envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice by sup­port­ing com­mu­ni­ties that are fight­ing dirty ener­gy devel­op­ments in their back­yards; and to encour­age direct actions as a means for chal­leng­ing cor­po­rate pow­er and empow­er­ing move­ments to stop cli­mate change.

“I attend­ed the con­ver­gence to build my skills for orga­niz­ing and tak­ing action on cli­mate change,” said Joey Lit­tle­ton, a con­ver­gence par­tic­i­pant. “This is a great place to network–there are activists from all over the south­east region with a wide breadth of expe­ri­ence on envi­ron­ment and social jus­tice issues. I enjoyed the strat­e­gy ses­sions; I came here to get involved with the move­ment to stop cli­mate change.”

The South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action is hap­pen­ing simul­ta­ne­ous­ly with a Cli­mate Con­ver­gence on the west coast focused on fight­ing liq­ue­fied nat­ur­al gas ter­mi­nals, and in con­junc­tion with the UK Camp for Cli­mate Action tak­ing place at London’s Heathrow air­port.

“Glob­al­ly and local­ly, change will come from com­mu­ni­ties, not from benign politi­cians and cor­po­ra­tions who hope to prof­it off the cli­mate cri­sis with feel-good ‘solu­tions’ that do noth­ing to chal­lenge a fun­da­men­tal­ly unjust and unsus­tain­able sys­tem,” said Mary Olson, direc­tor of the South­east office of Nuclear Infor­ma­tion and Resource Ser­vice and co-orga­niz­er of the con­ver­gence.

Today a mas­sive police oper­a­tion was deployed in Bun­combe, Hen­der­son, and Tran­syl­va­nia Coun­ties to pre­vent activists from protest­ing a dirty pow­er plant respon­si­ble for cli­mate change. Dozens of uni­formed and under­cov­er cops sur­round­ed the site of the South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action as a police heli­copter hov­ered over the site.

In addi­tion, dozens more police were deployed at Progress Energy’s Sky­land coal pow­er plant to pre­vent legit­i­mate protest against dirty ener­gy and cli­mate change. “This shows which side of the cli­mate debate the gov­ern­ment is on. They have spent tens of thou­sands of dol­lars to pro­tect the coal indus­try today. Clear­ly if the gov­ern­ment want­ed to address cli­mate change, they would be send­ing the police in to arrest the heads of Progress Ener­gy for per­pet­u­at­ing the great­est threat human­i­ty has ever faced — cli­mate change,” an anony­mous polar bear said.###

CORRECTION

We would like to clar­i­fy state­ments that were made about the Asheville Police Depart­ment (APD) using taz­ers against par­tic­i­pants in the action against cli­mate change and moun­tain­top removal at Bank of Amer­i­ca yes­ter­day.

The Cli­mate Con­ver­gence sent out a press release say­ing that peo­ple locked down inside the bank were sub­ject to elec­tro­cu­tion shocks from taz­ers, based on the accounts of wit­ness­es inside the bank. Now that the pro­tes­tors are out of jail, we have learned that this was an inac­cu­rate con­clu­sion based on rea­son­able sus­pi­cion. One pro­test­er was heard scream­ing while pinned down by large group of offi­cers and sub­ject­ed to excru­ci­at­ing pain com­pli­ance holds right after the police were heard yelling back and forth to each ask­ing “Who has a taz­er? Get a taz­er!” Many of the offi­cers on the scene were equipped with elec­tro­cu­tion devis­es, along with rub­ber bul­lets, chem­i­cal weapons, dogs, and train­ing in tor­ture tech­niques. In addi­tion, a cer­ti­fied Emer­gency Med­ical Tech­ni­cian (EMT) who attempt­ed to check on the safe­ty of the pro­test­ers after hear­ing shouts from offi­cers about taz­ers was not allowed to do so.

The APD has a his­to­ry of using taz­ers, wide­ly rec­og­nized as a form of tor­ture and the cause of sev­er­al deaths around the coun­try, on non­vi­o­lent pro­test­ers. In light of increased use of para­mil­i­tary tac­tics by local police forces in civil­ian sit­u­a­tions, such con­clu­sions are to be expect­ed. We report­ed infor­ma­tion we thought to be accu­rate at the time; in light of new infor­ma­tion, we apol­o­gize for any inac­cu­ra­cies we report­ed.

In Defense of a Liv­ing Plan­et,

###
Addi­tion­al­ly, the South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action made the fol­low­ing state­ment:

List of Demands

Rec­og­niz­ing that cli­mate change is already here, we hold cor­po­ra­tions and gov­ern­ments account­able for the effects on com­mu­ni­ties, peo­ple and the liv­ing earth. There­fore, we demand:

1. That Bank of Amer­i­ca com­plete­ly divest from the coal indus­try and oth­er dirty, cli­mate-chang­ing ener­gy com­pa­nies.
2. A 90% reduc­tion of green­house gas emis­sions by 2050.
3. An imme­di­ate halt to any plans for new nuclear and coal pow­er plants and a com­plete redi­rec­tion of research and devel­op­ment mon­ey toward con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy and clean, renew­able ener­gy projects.
4. An imme­di­ate end to moun­tain­top removal coal min­ing and oth­er forms of strip min­ing.
5. A just, rapid tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fuels and nuclear pow­er by 2020.
6. A shift to com­mu­ni­ty con­trolled, small-scale sys­tems of ener­gy pro­duc­tion, trans­porta­tion, and food pro­duc­tion and dis­tri­b­u­tion.
7. An end to the pri­va­ti­za­tion of the atmos­phere through mar­ket-based mech­a­nisms such as car­bon trad­ing.
8. Cli­mate Jus­tice Now!

From: The South­east Con­ver­gence for Cli­mate Action — http://www.climateconvergence.org/southeast/