Monday, May 10, 2010 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com MICHELLE DEWITTI Oil spills aren't debatable Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 tothedaily@umich.edu ANDREW LAPIN EDITOR IN CHIEF RYAN KARTJE MANAGING EDITOR ALEX SCHIFF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Taking notice City officials need a better approach to homelessness J tspeaks volumes of the care homeless citizens receive from the city of Ann Arbor when they are found living in forests rather than the city's available shelters. Two weeks ago, state police officers evicted residents of Camp Take Notice, a community of tents on a wood- ed, unused patch of land near I-94, in an incident that has become a nationally recognized embarrassment. This incident starkly illustrates the city's misguided and shortsighted approach to homelessness. The local government must respond to this problem by improving the acces- sibility and quality of homeless shelters and services, not by evicting I wasn't born yet when the Exxon Val- dez tanker crashed into a reef outside of Alaska and spilled millions of gallons of oil into the Pacific Ocean. But BP has made up for the fact that I missed that catastrophe by creating one of its own. On April 21, the explosion on the oil rig "Deepwater Horizon" killed eleven workers and created an oil spill the size of Rhode Island. The well in the Gulf of Mexico now leaks 5,000 barrels of oil per day and has posed major environ- mental and financial problems. Clean- ing up this spill is going to take time and money, and many scientists fear that cataclysmic environmental damage has already been done. In spite of the irrefutable serious- ness of this situation, politicians and media figures have been discussing the oil spill as though it's a debatable issue. They need to realize that oil spills are bad. They are always bad. There has never been one that has been good. This incident has devastated the habitats of fish and the birds that prey on them. The livelihoods of those in the fishing industry have been threatened by the fishing ban in the affected areas. Not to mention that the explosion was the direct cause of eleven tragic deaths. Let me reiterate: the Deepwater Horizon oil spill isn't a good thing. Well, according to Rush Limbaugh, "hardcore environmentalist wackos" who think that the government's cur- rent cap-and-trade bill is too weak decided that "blowing up the rig" would draw attention to the dangers of off- shore drilling and gain support for their cause. So, if you're a "hardcore environ- mentalist wacko," then destroying the environment was a plot on your part to ... help protect the environment? Some- thing's not adding up here. Sarah Palin has also jumped in on the oil spill action. Her advice, relayed via Twitter, was, "foreign oil co's: don't naively trust." Thanks, Sarah Palin! It would stand to reasonthenthatAmerican oil companies are fully trustworthy. But Exxon is an American company that was also implicated in a disastrous oil spill. Should we not trust anyone anymore? Here's another fun one. Michael Brown, former director of the Fed- eral Emergency Management Agency, is claiming that President Obama's delayed response to this crisis has been for political reasons because "he has never supported big oil ... and now he has an excuse to shut it back down.". Now, maybe it's just me, but if my claim to fame was the fact that I was the director of FEMA during its failed response to Hurricane Katrina, I would never speak publicly again. Ever. I would especially not speak publicly about a government response to an environmental disaster for fear that the hypocrisy would cause the world to implode. But, again, that's just me. Needless to say, not all responses to the Deepwater Horizon disaster have been equally constructive. But consid- ering the fact that the oil well has been spouting millions of gallons of oil into the ocean for weeks, I think it is safe to say that all verbal responses are noth- ing short of pointless. Talking about and debating this problem doesn't stop the leaking oil well. Today's political climate has become so partisan that many public figures have lost sight of the fact that some things are universally bad. Regardless of your political orientation, race, eth- nicity, sexual orientation or what have you, environmental disasters negatively affect everyone. Politicians and media figures alike need to abandon the use- less blame game because it isn't help- ing anything. Once the spill has been cleaned up, go ahead and point fingers because it's a slow news day. But right now, this is a serious problem that no one is benefiting from. Environmental dangers don't lean left or right - they affect everyone equally. As such, politicians and members of the media need to form a united front on this issue. They should dedicate them- selves to efficiently cleaning up the oil spill and supporting the people whose lives have been devastated, not letting politics take over once again. Michelle DeWitt is an LSA junior. *I their harmless resident; Last month, Camp Take Notice was given an ultimatum to either move from its location or face prosecution. The police cited trespassing and problems with domestic violence as jus- tification for their longstanding mission to disband the commu- nity. The group was then forced to move twice in August and September of last year, following the repeated arrest of its leader, Caleb Poirer, according to The Washtenaw Voice. It later set- tled on the wooded state prop- erty from which it was evicted in late April, despite continued protests by lawyers of the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union. What is unclear is why the state and local police have made such a crusade out of forcing homeless Ann Arbor citizens off of unused, wooded state land. While there have been three incidents of reported domes- tic violence since its founding, group representatives say the camp has a strict non-violence policy, and such violators are told to leave. In fact, according to its website, Camp Take Notice actually seeks to "provide a safe, sober and drug-free tent city." The city authorities should not displace a peaceful camp of homeless people that poses vir- tually no harm or inconvenience to the general public. The police fail to recognize that the homeless have few other choices, and, in many cases, a self-governing, peaceful com- munity in the forest is their best option. State police cited health hazards and a lack of facilities as issues with the tent city, but eviction solves neither of these problems - it perpetuates them. With only the Robert J. Delonis Center providing regular shelter for chronically homeless adults in Washtenaw County as of 2008, evictiononly ensures that another tent city will rise some- where else in its place. EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: The larger problem is that the homeless of Ann Arbor don't receive the support they need from the community. A 2008 Daily report estimated that close to 4,000 Washtenaw County residents would experi- ence homelessness that year, a number that has likely grown in recent years and far outstrips the living space available in local homeless shelters (Everywhere to go but home, 01/08/2008). If the city truly wants to get rid of these tent cities, it needs to improve both access to and qual- ity of homeless shelters, as well as fight the root of the problem with job training programs and low-income housing projects. The problem Ann Arbor resi- dents should see in the tent city isn't trespassing - it's poverty. Instead of demolishing the homes of Camp Take Notice res- idents, the government should ensure they have another place to go. We've now developed evidence that shows that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attack." - U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, referring to the botched May 1 Times Square bombing, as reported yesterday by ABC News. Nicholas Clift, Rachel Van Gilder, Emma Jeszke, Harsha Panduranga, Joe Stapleton, Laura Veith