Like many big companies, Ford Motor Company is full of green talk.This quote is from Ford's website, brimming with greenwash:
"Human rights refers to basic standards of treatment to which all p
eople are entitled. It is a broad concept, with economic, social, cultural, political and civil dimensions. For Ford, this means ensuring that our products, no matter where they are made, are manufactured under conditions that demonstrate respect for the people who make them. "It also means respecting the rights of people living in the communities around our facilities, and those of our suppliers, who may be affected by these operations."Hmm, I'm pretty sure 15,000 people in Ayer and Littleton will be affected by the construction of a 12-acre parking lot over our aquifer, to unload Ford vehicles. The site is built and operated by a known, repeated and convicted polluter.
Pan Am Railways (partnering with Norfolk Southern) has polluted often enough in Massachusetts and Maine to have been prosecuted by Martha Coakley's Environmental Crimes Strike Force. (See full text at bottom of blog.)
That bit of news doesn't seem to perturb Ford. Nor does the objections of the community that depends on the Spectacle Pond Aquifer. Big business marches to the tune of the almighty green dollar.
Ford goes on to describe their commitment to the UN's Global Compact Human Rights
"Principle 1: Businesses should support and respect the protection of internationally proclaimed human rights."
Principle 7: Businesses should support a precautionary approach to environmental challenges; Principle 8: undertake initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility; and
"Principle 9: encourage the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies." Source.
Ford-- we want more than greenwash. We want to wash the next seven generations of Littleton and Ayer babies in water from the aquifer you're threatening.
Our three federal legislators have washed their hands of this problem.
We have not given up on Ford -- there is still time to follow your corporate policies.
Here's my quote from Martha Coakley's Environmental Strike Force Memorandum on Sentencing when Pan Am was fined $500,000 for spilling 800+ gallons of oil in Ayer in 2006, not reporting it, covering it up and objecting to paying the fine.
"In Dec. 2007, the Mass. DEP issued a Notice of Noncompliance to the Defendant Boston & Maine Corporation (Pan Am subsidiary) for failing to timely perform an Immediate Response Action for a spill of oil that had been discovered at the defendant's East Deerfield Rail Yard. The spill, from abandoned tanks and drums, had been reported to the DEP by a passer-by (not the defendant) in Aug. 2007.
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