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CREATED:20190119T212900Z
DESCRIPTION:On MLK Day In SF Rally/Press Conference To Demand that Gov Newsom Fire 
 Criminally Corrupt Clean-up Company Tetra Tech\n\nMEDIA 
 ADVISORY\n\nOUTRAGED HUNTERS POINT RESIDENTS DEMAND\nGAVIN NEWSOM FIRE 
 TETRA TECH\n\nEnvironmentalists Join Hunters Point Residents’ Demand That 
 Newsom Rescind State Contract with Tetra Tech to Clean Up Butte County Camp 
 Fire Debris\n\n   WHEN:	Monday, January 21, 2019, MLK Day, 3:00 pm.\n\n     
 WHERE:	California State Building, 350 McAllister Street, San Francisco, 
 CA\n\n\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:  January 19, 2019	Contact: Charles Bonner, 
 Esq.\n415-331-3070; 415-601-0268 
 (cell)\nCharles@bonnerlaw.com\n\nWHAT:	Press Conference. Hunters Point 
 residents demand Governor Gavin Newsom rescind recent contract made with 
 the scandalized company TETRA TECH by the State Environmental Protection 
 Agency’s (Cal-EPA’s) Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery 
 (CalRecycle), the largest such contract in California’s history.  \n\n    
  WHEN:	Monday, January 21, 2019, MLK Day, 3:00 pm.\n\n     
 WHERE:	California State Building, 350 McAllister Street, San Francisco, 
 CA\n\nWHO:	Residents will be joined at the press conference by community 
 leader Christopher Muhammad of the Nation of Islam, former Black Panther 
 leader Elaine Brown and Attorney Charles Bonner, who represents over 3,000 
 Hunters Point Plaintiffs in their $27 Billion lawsuit filed against Tetra 
 Tech last year for its fraudulent reports that it had cleaned up a portion 
 of the Shipyard. The residents’ demand is supported by renowned 
 environmental and medical leaders, including Dr. Ahimsa Sumchai, 
 Environmental Scientist Wilma Subra, Dr. Rupa Marya, Epidemiologist Mark 
 Alexander, Green Action leaders Bradley Angel and Marie Harrison, Dr. Ray 
 Tompkins.\n\nNewsom, who had barely been sworn in as Governor when he 
 appointed Jared Blumenfeld to head the Cal-EPA Agency, was a pivotal player 
 in the deal the City of San Francisco made when he was Mayor with 
 mega-housing developer Lennar to construct more than 10,000 housing units 
 on the Shipyard. The Navy then engaged Tetra Tech to clean up the Superfund 
 site for the Lennar development.  Late last year, the Shipyard’s first 
 homeowners sued Lennar, and now the Navy itself and the Department of 
 Justice have sued Tetra Tech for its dangerously fraudulent practices.  
 More, Congressional House Speaker Nancy Pelosi recently echoed residents’ 
 outrage, stating, “We are concerned that Tetra Tech continues to receive 
 contracts amidst ongoing Department of Justice whistleblower lawsuits into 
 their fraudulent work at Hunters Point Naval Shipyard.”  The 
 Cal-EPA/CalRecycle contract with Tetra Tech was flagrantly entered into 
 even as the U.S. Department of Justice filed its lawsuit against Tetra 
 Tech. To add insult to injury, CalRecycle, headed by Scott Smithline, 
 recently issued a statement arrogantly defending its choice of Tetra Tech. 
 This contract is an insult to residents who remain fearful for their very 
 lives over the radiated Shipyard given the unusually high incidences of 
 cancer, cancer deaths, respiratory diseases, and other medical conditions 
 among Hunters Point residents that scientists and doctors have indicated 
 are caused by the Shipyard’s radiation and other toxic releases.  Hunters 
 Point residents send out a warning to Butte County fire victims to beware 
 of Tetra Tech’s practices.		\n\nCorrupt CA Gov Newsom Who Covered Up $1 
 Billion Eco Fraud Scandal At Hunters Point Shipyard Gives Criminal Tetra 
 Tech Another Huge State Contract To Clean-up Camp Fire After Committing 
 Fraud At Hunters Point Naval Shipyard Clean-up\n\nSuspect shipyard 
 contractor gets huge state deal for Camp Fire 
 cleanup\n\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/green/article/Suspect-shipyard-contractor-gets-huge-state-13521866.php\nJason 
 Fagone ,  Cynthia Dizikes and Kurtis Alexander Jan. 9, 2019 Updated: Jan. 
 9, 2019 7:36 p.m.\n\nhannon Flanagan checks the ruins of the restaurant she 
 and her husband owned that burned in the Camp Fire.Photo: Gabrielle Lurie / 
 The Chronicle 2018\n\nThe flattened homes at Mountain Meadow Court at 
 Country Oak Drive, Thursday, Nov. 15, 2018, in Paradise, Calif. As of this 
 morning, the Camp Fire has burned 140,000 acres. The wildfire is 40% 
 contained. 56 people have died.Photo: Santiago Mejia / The Chronicle\n\nThe 
 state agency in charge of wildfire cleanup has awarded a contract worth as 
 much as $250 million to the company at the center of San Francisco’s 
 Superfund scandal — an environmental engineering firm that was caught 
 falsifying soil tests and is being sued by the U.S. Justice Department, 
 whistle-blowers and homeowners.\n\nPasadena-based Tetra Tech Inc. will lead 
 the “debris management” process after Butte County’s devastating Camp 
 Fire, sparking concerns from environmental groups and the office of House 
 Speaker Nancy Pelosi that a company accused of widespread misconduct in San 
 Francisco will have such a large role in the state’s wildfire 
 recovery.\n\nTwo former Tetra Tech cleanup supervisors were sentenced to 
 prison last year after admitting they faked soil tests at the former 
 Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, a 500-acre site tainted with radioactivity. 
 After checking the company’s data, the Navy and the U.S. Environmental 
 Protection Agency have said they can’t trust most of it. Now many areas 
 need to be retested and residents living on a purportedly clean part of the 
 shipyard doubt their safety. The Navy has said the fraud and the retesting 
 may cost taxpayers more than $500 million.\nTrump: I’ll cut off fire 
 relief to California unless ‘they...\n“We are concerned that Tetra Tech 
 continues to receive contracts amidst ongoing Department of Justice 
 whistle-blower lawsuits into their fraudulent work at Hunters Point Naval 
 Shipyard,” said Taylor Griffin, a spokeswoman for Pelosi, who said last 
 year that Tetra Tech should not receive any new federal contracts. 
 “Wildfire victims of California must have confidence that recovery 
 efforts are accurate, trustworthy and safe.”\n\nThe contract, valued at 
 $250 million, represents the biggest-ever single award for wildfire cleanup 
 by CalRecycle, and an amount larger than any of Tetra Tech’s current 
 federal contracts. The Camp Fire, which began Nov. 8, destroyed nearly 
 14,000 homes, essentially wiping out the foothill town of Paradise on its 
 way to becoming the most destructive wildfire in California history.\n\nThe 
 huge award is just one of several recently handed to the company by 
 CalRecycle, which has been tasked by the governor’s office to deal with 
 the removal of debris and hazardous waste left in the wreckage of last 
 year’s deadly wildfires. In addition to working on the Camp Fire cleanup, 
 Tetra Tech has deployed crews to the regions scarred by the Carr Fire in 
 Shasta County (a $14.4 million contract) and the Mendocino Complex Fire 
 ($1.5 million). Tetra Tech also consults for the U.S. Army Corps of 
 Engineers, which has handled other wildfire cleanup duties in 
 California.\n\nBradley Angel, the executive director of Greenaction for 
 Health and Environmental Justice, a local environmental watchdog group that 
 has asked the federal government and the state to revoke Tetra Tech’s 
 nuclear materials license, called the continued flow of public money to the 
 company “mind-boggling.”\n\n“Tetra Tech should not be getting a penny 
 of government funds, or taxpayer dollars, to work on issues that they have 
 shown they cannot be trusted on,” Angel said. “It is improper and 
 raises serious questions about who our government is protecting.”\n\nSam 
 Singer, a Tetra Tech spokesman, said that the company “does not discuss 
 details about its contracts and awards for which it competes.” Tetra Tech 
 has previously said it did nothing wrong at the shipyard and has blamed 
 problems on a few “rogue” employees.\n\nCalRecycle said in a statement: 
 “In previous wildfire debris removal operations, Tetra Tech has proven to 
 be a reliable debris management contractor, meeting CalRecycle’s high 
 standards for health and safety, performance, and operational 
 accountability.”\n\nGovernments regularly hire private companies to help 
 clean up after natural disasters. Responding to last year’s wildfires, 
 the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services gave CalRecycle the 
 responsibility to deal with debris and hazardous waste. CalRecycle selected 
 Tetra Tech to handle one phase of the Camp Fire job after a public bidding 
 process. Tetra Tech employees mobilized in the field and began work on 
 Monday; the job is expected to last one year.\n\nThe Governor’s Office of 
 Emergency Services did not immediately respond to requests for 
 comment.\n\nCleaning up the Camp Fire, which burned 240 square miles of 
 Butte County, will entail clearing out an estimated 8 million tons of 
 debris — about four times what was removed from the 2017 Northern 
 California fires — and a witches’ brew of potentially hazardous 
 household materials, from pesticides to plastics to paint.\n\n“The fear 
 is that these chemicals turn into something when they burn that is as toxic 
 or more toxic than their parent materials,” said Tom Young, a professor 
 of civil and environmental engineering at UC Davis, who is studying the 
 health problems that may be posed by the remnants of the 2017 Wine Country 
 fires. “People are worried about growing a garden after a fire, and 
 they’re worried because their kids are exposed.”\n\nAs wildfires become 
 more frequent and more destructive, as is expected with a warming climate, 
 disaster cleanup has become a bigger business. The cost of clearing Camp 
 Fire debris alone is expected to top $3 billion.\n\nThe recent state 
 contracts obtained by Tetra Tech give the company broad powers and 
 responsibilities that will affect communities for years to come.\n\nThe 
 company’s role is essentially to quarterback the cleanup process in each 
 wildfire location. The first phase is handled by the U.S. Environmental 
 Protection Agency and the state Department of Toxic Substances Control 
 (DTSC), which go in after the fires and remove the most obvious hazards. 
 Tetra Tech picks up from there. The company collects soil samples, manages 
 the data, monitors the air for toxic chemicals and searches for any 
 remaining hazardous substances, including radioactive materials and 
 asbestos.\n\nTetra Tech also sets the ground rules for how contamination 
 should be removed and when the site can be declared clean; the actual waste 
 disposal is handled later by other companies.\n\nTetra Tech long served in 
 a similar position at San Francisco’s former shipyard, gathering data 
 about the site that was used to make disposal decisions and leaving the 
 disposal to others.\n\nNationwide, Tetra Tech has been involved in a wide 
 variety of post-disaster projects, contracting with governments to clean up 
 after ice storms, hurricanes, tornadoes and floods. According to a 2017 
 company document, Tetra Tech has helped 300 state and local government 
 clients deal with “over 50 declared presidential disasters, representing 
 the recovery of more than $4 billion in disaster grant funds.”\n\nIn 
 California, working for CalRecycle, Tetra Tech deployed in the aftermath of 
 2017’s Thomas Fire in Ventura County, and before that performed cleanup 
 tasks on the Erskine, Clayton, Detwiler and Helena fires.\n\nIrwin 
 Redlener, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at 
 Columbia University, said the role of the private sector in 
 disaster-recovery work will only grow. And so will the possibility for 
 problems.\n\n“What I’m worried about is: Is there enough oversight?” 
 Redlener said. “My sense is that bad work and overcharging is very 
 frequently a problem and the government does not know how or doesn’t have 
 the wherewithal to do the oversight. In almost every large disaster where 
 things have to be rebuilt, there’s always stories of people getting 
 horrible work. Everyone’s in a rush. There’s so much to be done. People 
 want their houses back. They want their lives in order.”\n\nJason Fagone, 
 Cynthia Dizikes and Kurtis Alexander are San Francisco Chronicle staff 
 writers. Email: jason.fagone@sfchronicle.com, cdizikes@sfchronicle.com, 
 kalexander@sfchronicle.com Twitter:@jfagone, \n\n\n\nUS sues Tetra Tech 
 over SF Hunters Point shipyard work, claiming widespread fraud And 
 Retaliation Against OSHA Whistleblowers\nThe new legal complaints are part 
 of three federal suits originally filed in 2013 and 2016 by whistle-blowers 
 who worked on the cleanup of the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. 
 Military radiation experiments during the Cold War left the shipyard’s 
 soil and buildings tainted with large quantities of radioactive substances. 
 Some of these materials remain dangerous for tens of thousands of years and 
 can cause cancer if inhaled or ingested in extraordinarily small 
 amounts.\n\n\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/U-S-sues-Tetra-Tech-over-Hunters-Point-shipyard-13536013.php\n\nJason 
 Fagone and Cynthia Dizikes Jan. 15, 2019 Updated: Jan. 15, 2019 5:09 
 p.m.\nJan. 15, 2019 Updated: Jan. 15, 2019 5:09 p.m.\n\n\nTop managers of 
 the environmental engineering firm Tetra Tech directed their employees to 
 commit widespread fraud in the cleanup of America’s largest Superfund 
 waste site, according to new legal complaints by the U.S. Department of 
 Justice.\n\nThe allegations were filed Monday against Tetra Tech EC, a 
 wholly owned subsidiary of parent company Tetra Tech Inc., the $3 billion 
 government contracting giant. The complaints contradict Tetra Tech’s 
 repeated claims that the company has done nothing wrong and that all 
 problems with its cleanup work at San Francisco’s mothballed naval 
 shipyard were caused by a few rogue employees.\n\n“Tetra Tech’s fraud 
 was initiated and directed by Tetra Tech’s corporate managers,” the 
 government maintains in federal court documents.\n\nIn response, company 
 spokesman Sam Singer again said that any misconduct was isolated and that 
 the company stands by its work.\n\n“Tetra Tech EC will vigorously defend 
 its record and is confident it will prevail following an impartial and 
 transparent legal and scientific review of the facts,” Singer said in a 
 statement.\n\nThe government is asking for almost $800 million in damages 
 — an amount equal to about one-fourth of Tetra Tech’s revenue last 
 year.\n\nTo date, questions about the integrity of its work at Hunters 
 Point have apparently not affected Tetra Tech’s ability to win 
 substantial state and federal contracts. The Chronicle revealed last week 
 that the state of California just awarded Tetra Tech Inc. a record-breaking 
 contract worth $250 million, for managing debris and hazardous waste left 
 in the wreckage of the devastating Camp Fire, which burned 240 square miles 
 of Butte County.\n\nThe new legal complaints are part of three federal 
 suits originally filed in 2013 and 2016 by whistle-blowers who worked on 
 the cleanup of the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard. Military radiation 
 experiments during the Cold War left the shipyard’s soil and buildings 
 tainted with large quantities of radioactive substances. Some of these 
 materials remain dangerous for tens of thousands of years and can cause 
 cancer if inhaled or ingested in extraordinarily small amounts.\n\nThe 
 Department of Justice announced its intention to join the whistle-blower 
 lawsuits in October, a rare move signifying how seriously the government 
 views the cases. Less than 25 percent of such claims result in such an 
 “intervention,” according to one report.\n\nSince at least 2003, the 
 Navy has paid Tetra Tech more than $250 million to find and remove these 
 radioactive materials. But the government now alleges that much of that 
 work, from lab tests of soil samples to radiation scans of buildings, was 
 fraudulently performed.\n\nAccording to the Department of Justice, Tetra 
 Tech fabricated radiation data and submitted more than 200 false reports 
 that painted a bogus picture of the safety of much of the shipyard — 
 including parcels of land directly adjacent to the developed hilltop area 
 where 450 homes have been built and hundreds of people now live.\n\nThe 
 company’s motive, according to the filings, was to decrease its costs and 
 make more money.\n\nUntil now, the Department of Justice had linked just 
 two Tetra Tech employees to the fraud, announcing last year that former 
 Hunters Point supervisors Justin Hubbard and Stephen Rolfe had swapped 
 dirty soil with clean soil and lied about it. The two men pleaded guilty 
 and were sentenced to prison as part of a separate criminal case.\n\nIn his 
 plea agreement, however, Rolfe said that he was pressured by Tetra Tech’s 
 managers to “get clean dirt” because the company wasn’t interested in 
 “remediating the whole goddam site.” The new filings focus attention on 
 higher-level Tetra Tech officials, mentioning four by name.\n\nOne is 
 Andrew Bolt, president of Tetra Tech EC since 2014 and a former senior vice 
 president and company leader since 1994. Another is William Dougherty, the 
 company’s top official in charge of the Hunters Point cleanup. The 
 Chronicle revealed last year that Dougherty was instrumental in placing a 
 large yard full of tainted soil right next door to a busy police office 
 located inside the shipyard, potentially exposing cops and civilians to 
 dangerous amounts of radioactive dust.\n\nThe other two Tetra Tech 
 officials singled out in the complaints are Dennis McWade, construction 
 manager at Hunters Point, and Rick Weingarz, who managed crews that 
 performed radiation surveys.\n\nBolt did not immediately return requests 
 for comment by email and voice mail. An email to Dougherty’s attorney 
 went unanswered. A person who answered a cell phone number connected to 
 McWade said, “I’m sorry, I have no comment, he’s not here,” before 
 hanging up. Weingarz couldn’t immediately be reached.\n\nIn various 
 public forums over the past year, Tetra Tech representatives have argued 
 that the subsidiary handling radiological work at Hunters Point (Tetra Tech 
 EC) and the parent company (Tetra Tech Inc.) are separate, and one is not 
 necessarily responsible for the other.\n\nHowever, in other contexts, 
 company attorneys have said the opposite. In a 2017 filing against the 
 federal government alleging breach of contract on a project to build 
 facilities for the Customs and Border Protection agency in North Dakota, 
 Tetra Tech argued that “routine business practices” of Tetra Tech Inc. 
 and Tetra Tech EC were “taken on behalf and at the direction of the other 
 in their roles as parent and wholly-owned subsidiary, and as business units 
 of the same company.” The judge agreed.\n\nAsked whether the officials 
 identified in the new complaints are still employed by Tetra Tech, Singer 
 declined to comment, citing a company policy against discussing current or 
 former employees.\n\nDavid Anton, the attorney for seven whistle-blower 
 plaintiffs, called the filings “massively significant.”\n\n“It is 
 finally demonstrating that the Department of Justice is doing something to 
 correct the fraud and environmental disaster at Hunters Point,” Anton 
 said. “This fraud was committed from the top down. It is not two renegade 
 low-level supervisors. It was operated by top management.”\n\nSome 
 concerns flagged by the whistle-blowers in their initial lawsuits are not 
 being pursued by the government, including alleged misconduct by other 
 contractors hired to clean up the shipyard as well as the former naval 
 bases on Treasure Island and in Alameda.\n\nAnton said the whistle-blowers 
 still plan on pursuing these allegations and that as the lawsuits progress 
 they “are hoping that the DOJ can realize these points and join with 
 us.”\n\n\nJason Fagone and Cynthia Dizikes are San Francisco Chronicle 
 staff writers. Email: jason.fagone@sfchronicle.com, 
 cdizikes@sfchronicle.comTwitter:@jfagone, @cdizikes\n\n\nWW1-1-19 Fed Gov 
 Shutdown & Hunters Point Treasure Island Whistleblowers Face Cover-up & 
 Corruption\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio/ww1-1-19-federal-gov-shutdown-and-hunters-point-treasure-island-whistleblowers\nWorkWeek 
 looks at the Federal government shutdown and how it is affecting the public 
 including air traffic controllers. Next WorkWeek examines the escalating 
 scandal and financial crisis at Hunters Point Shipyard and Treasure Island 
 which has contaminated the workers and the community.\nWe interview David 
 Anton who is representing 6 radiation health and safety experts who worked 
 for the contractor Tetra Tech at Hunters Point & Treasure Island. We also 
 interview Dr. Larry Rose who is the former medical director of Cal-OSHA and 
 Cheryl Thornton who is an SEIU 1021 steward, delegate to the San Francisco 
 Labor Council and works at the City Potrero Hill Health Center.\nThey 
 discuss who the whistleblowers were, what happened to them and the failure 
 to do a proper clean-up as well as the cover-up by government politicians 
 and officials.\nWe also look at the failure of both the San Francisco 
 Department of Public Health and California Department of Public Health to 
 protect the community, workers and whistleblowers. Additionally the program 
 discusses the failure of Cal-OSHA to protect the community and 
 whistleblowers at both Hunters Point Shipyard and Treasure Island. There 
 have been no investigations by Cal-OSHA over the health and safety and the 
 retaliation against OSHA whistleblowers.\nAlso discussed is the role of 
 former SF City Mayor and now California Governor Gavin Newsom, Senator 
 Dianne Feinstein, Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi and other political officials 
 in this over $1 billion dollar scandal. Newsom was Mayor of San Francisco 
 when these whistleblowers were being bullied, retaliated against and fired 
 by Tetra Tech.\nFor more media:\nWW1-2-19 The Fed Shutdown And Air Traffic 
 Controllers NATCA Speaks 
 Out\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio/ww1-2-19-the-fed-shutdown-and-air-traffic-controllers-natca-speaks-out\n"Cleaning 
 The Swamp" Hunters Point Tetra Tech Workers Blow Whistle On Criminal 
 Cover-up & 
 Corruption\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ky5QFa-q1UU\n\nWorkWeek 
 Radio\nworkweek@kpfa.org\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/01/19/18820470.php
SUMMARY:On MLK Day In SF Press Conference To Demand that Gov Newsom Fire Criminal Tetra Tech
LOCATION:California State Building, 350 McAllister Street, San Francisco, CA
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/01/19/18820470.php
DTSTART:20190121T230000Z
DTEND:20190122T000000Z
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