Clear It with Sidney | Hillman Foundation

Clear It With Sidney

The best of the week’s news by Lindsay Beyerstein

Clear It with Sidney

Sidney Winner Amanda Hess Featured in Media Bistro

This month’s Sidney Award-Winner, Amanda Hess, is featured in Media Bistro’s 10,000 Words column.

Media Bistro is a major trade publication. It’s great to see Hess’s expose of the sexist harrassment of female journalists having an impact within the industry. Kudos to Media Bistro for highlighting the issue and Hess’s important work on the topic.

The author of the profile, Alan Krawitz, is collecting his readers’ experiences with online harrassment. If you have a story of harassment or bullying online, tweet it to @10000words and keep this important conversation going. Add the hashtag #Sidney, so we can follow along. 

 

Kleen Getaway: Fines Quietly Lowered for Lethal Gas Explosion

Fines levied against Kleen Energy, the company responsible for the fiery deaths of six workers in a pipe-cleaning accident in 2010, were quietly lowered by 88%:

After six workers were killed in a massive gas explosion at the Kleen Energy plant in Middletown four years ago, federal investigators tallied hundreds of violations at the site and issued $16.6 million in penalties against more than a dozen companies — the third-largest workplace-safety fine in the nation’s history.

“The millions of dollars in fines levied pale in comparison to the value of the six lives lost and numerous other lives disrupted,” U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said at the time. “However, the fines and penalties reflect the gravity and severity of the deadly conditions created by the companies managing the work at the site.” [Courant]

The fines were lowered because Kleen convinced OSHA that many of its “willful” violations should be downgraded to a less-expensive category of infraction because Kleen was relying subcontractors to tell them how clean their pipes. 

[Photo credit: danmachold, Creative Commons.]

#Sidney's Picks: Science of Sex Toys; Al From's Boast; and the UAW Vote

The Best of the Week’s News

  • Will Volkswagen workers in Tennessee say “yes” to the United Auto Workers?
  • It wasn’t just the bridge: Chris Christie’s political career is a study in slime.
  • So, now we know who to blame: Al From claims he personally stopped the Democratic Party’s “headlong dash into social democracy.”
  • A famous anti-choice doctor in West Virginia appears to have fabricated lurid tales of women with “botched abortions” flocking to his emergency room.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

What's at Stake in the Volkswagen UAW Vote?

Hillman judge Harold Meyerson explains what’s at stake in this week’s historic unionization vote at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee. 

 

[Photo credit: A VW plant in Germany, by roger4336, Creative Commons.]

Amanda Hess Wins Feb Sidney Award for Exposing Online Abuse of Female Journos

Amanda Hess wins the February Sidney Award for her provocative essay, “The New Civil Rights Issue: Why Women Aren’t Welcome on the Internet” in Pacific Standard. Get the Backstory with Lindsay Beyerstein.

Sidney's Picks: Filthy Water Towers, an Historic UAW Vote, and More

The Best of the Week’s News

  • If they look like decrepit relics from the 19th Century, that’s because they are! New York City’s rustic-looking rooftop water towers are unregulated vats of filth.
  • In a historic vote, Volkswagen workers in Tennessee will decide next week whether to join the United Auto Workers.
  • 1 million Texans have fallen into the Medicare coverage gap because their state refused to expand the program under Obamacare.
  • The Koch Brothers left a confidential document at their last donor confab, now Mother Jones has it.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

"The Iron Closet": Gay In Russia on the Eve of Sochi

What is it like to be gay in Russia today? Jeff Sharlet reports on LGB life in Russia on the eve of the Sochi Olympics for GQ

 

[Image credit: ME!O, Creative Commons.]

Juveniles Serving Life Without Parole

Social justice journalist Beth Schwartzapfel has an important piece on juveniles sentence to life without parole (LWOP) and the legal fight to eliminate LWOP for young offenders:

A common perception is that these kids are “the worst of the worst,” and indeed, many juveniles sentenced to life have done terrible things. But HRW estimates that a quarter of them were, like Jennifer, convicted of “aiding and abetting” or of felony murders. Almost 60 percent had no prior criminal convictions. More than 70 juveniles were just 13 or 14 years old at the time of their crime — some so small when they arrived in prison that all the uniforms were too big for them. Anecdotally, many, like Jennifer, had been subjected to abuse and neglect, their childhoods marred by instability, poverty and violent or criminal behavior by the adults in their life. [AJAM]

The Supreme Court has already declared mandatory LWOP for juveniles to be unconstitutional and a handful of states have eliminated it as a punishment for young offenders. 

[Photo credit: shingst, Creative Commons.]

#Sidney's Picks: VW Plant May Unionize; Botched Bloodwork; Snowy Owls

The Best of the Week’s News

  • A Volkswagon plant in Tennessee is poised to become the first unionized auto plant in the American South.
  • How the myth of the “Negro Cocaine Fiend” shaped U.S. drug policy.
  • South Carolina is the slowest state when it comes to delivering results on the potentially life-saving blood tests that all babies get during their first days in the hospital.
  • The Polar Vortex is like a portal from another dimension, sucking snowy owls in to our reality.

 

[Photo credit: Wander Mule, Creative Commons.]

Self-abortion and Miscarriage Management in Texas

Texas’s draconian new abortion law has left the 1.2 million women of the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas without an abortion provider. While pro-choice groups challenge some parts of the law in court, Valley women are forced to travel hundreds of miles for a clinic abortion. The Valley is one of the poorest regions in the United States and extended journeys to abortion clinics are beyond the reach of many poor valley women who have to budget not only for the procedure itself but for transportation, lodging, lost work hours, and often, the cost of childcare. 

One Valley abortion provider reinvented himself as a miscarriage management consultant after the new law prohibited him from performing abortions this fall. He examines his patients and subtly steers them towards self-abortion with misoprostol if he thinks it’s safe for them to do so. He can’t tell them to go out and get the drugs, but he doesn’t have to, misoprostol miscarriages are already part of the culture. If the drugs don’t work all the way, he tells them they can always come back for surgery to finish the process. 

Miscarriage management is a flashback to the pre-Roe days when sympathetic doctors would tell women to hurt themselves or visit back alley abortion providers in order to get a miscarriage started. Once a woman began bleeding, the doctor could legally perform surgery to resolve the miscarriage and end the pregnancy. 

The Texas law hasn’t stopped abortions in the Valley, it has just made them more difficult and dangerous. 

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