Friday, July 10, 2026

SJC Smirky Turkey Society's "Titanic Trio" -- TRAVIS HUTSON, CHRISTIAN WHITEHURST & BRANDON PATTY --- WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

"The love of money is the root of all evil."  1 Timothy 6:10.

Pray for them.  Pray for the vultures and vipers, who prey on unsuspecting voters.

Who paid for these illegal misleading mailings?

How much did the tortfeaasing fraudfeasors pay?

Cui bono?  (Who benefits?

Could it be clear-cutting, wetland-destroying, democracy-hating "developers?"

 What rough beasts.

What wickedness,

Who knows what evil  lurks in the twisted hearts and sordid souls of money-hungry apparatchiks?

Will there. be civil, criminal and administrative investigations?

Will Congress hold investigative hearings?

I suggest the witnesses include the "Titanic Trio" of the Smirky Turkey Society.

(They try to steal elections, don't they?)

George Washington, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson warned of "factions."  

One "faction,' a small group of willful men, control our government and laws here in St. Johns County.

Once they were  Louche Lords of All They Survey.  

Take developer TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON, our estimable former State Senator (please).

Consider the arrogance and hubris (pride that goeth before a fall).

Consider wicked work of his smiling satellites in 2020.

Now CHRISTIAN GERARD WHITEHURST faces criminal charges for election fraud.  

It's called Karma.

To help WHITEHURST defeat his 2024 Republican Primary opponent Ann-Marie Evans, tens of thousands of phony endorsement cards were sent allegedly sent through the United States Mail.

Call them out, ladies and gentlemen  -- the Titanic Trio, charter members of the Smirking Turkey Society (STS).  

Former State Senator, devious developer TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON (left)(now paid $75,000 annually as a louche "government affairs advisor" to CLERK OF COURTS BRANDON JAMES PATTY (right)(wearing the CHRISTIAN WHITEHURST polo shirt). together on election night 2020 with St. Johns County Commissioner CHRISTIAN GERARD WHITEHURST, the man in the middle, has hired the same criminal defense lawyer (Hank Coxe) as Commissioner SARAH SALLEY ARNOLD and the other alleged conspirators.  Not independent counsel.  

Prediction: the defendants will have a "joint defense agreement." 

We, the People need to know. 

Good people of St. Johns County: 

Vote on or before August 18, 2026 in the St. Johons County Universal Primary. Everyone can vote (even Democrats and people with No Party Affiliation).  First time in ten (10) years

Vote like our lives and futures expend on it, because they do.

Help wipe the smiles off their faces, my friends.old

As my Mother told me, "Time wounds all heels."

Celebrate Democracy.

Be Patriotic.

Help extirpate corruption.

Report corruption to FDLE and FBI.

Do your patriotic duty,

Be not afraid.  It's in the Bible some 106 times,

It's our time, our town and our future, 

Meanwhile, FDLE's investigation continues.

What's next?

You tell me

Here they are -- the Titanic Trio.  former State Senator, devious developer TRAVIS JAMES HUTSON (left)(now paid $75,000 annually as a louche government affairs advisor to CLERK OF COURTS BRANDON JAMES PATTY (right)(wearing the CHRISTIAN WHITEHURST polo shirt),  Look at the smirk on their faces,  Note the rictus on WHITEHURST's face,  

Slavin famiy values -- putting people first

Clean Up City of St. Augustine, Florida: Ed Slavin for Mosquito Control ...

On June 6, 1944, my late paratrooper Father parachuted into France and helped liberate the first French town from the Nazis, before the sun even rose that day.  

My Dad taught me, as JFK's dad taught me him, that "you have to stand up to people with power, or else they walk all over you."

In his spirit, my Mother helped organize the employees of Camden County College in Blackwood, N.J. into what became International Union of Electrical Workers Local 440.  Mom got some 40 union cards signed in an hour in 1970.  The clerical and custodial employees prevailed.  

One of my law professors in Memphis told a mutual friend that I was a "natural born attorney."  My Mother said, "I always knew you were an S.O.B."

My late mentor, the Honorable Nahum Litt, was the Chief Administrative Law Judge of the United Staes Department of Labor, 1979-1995.  

Chief Judge Litt stood like Horatio at the bridge, protecting the independence of hearings in whistleblower and workers compensation cases for Black Lung disease sufferers from the coalfields.

Judge Litt helped me to understand We worked to understand administrative law's perversion of justice by rich and powerful corporations.  

I later wrote about ACUS for Common Cause Magazine.  In response, Congress defunded a federal agency from 1995-2010: the prestigious Administrative Conference of the United States lost funding because it wasted federal tax dollars on worthless studies by pro-agency law professors.  ACUS sought to inflict Alternative Dispute Resolution on workers and corporations. ACUS sought to defang and declaw the Freedom of Information Act.  ACUS sought to stifle lawyer representation of workers in cases against powerful employers, while encouraging non-lawyer representatives. 

My Mother, my Father, and Chief Judge Litt taught me valuable lessons. 

Here in St. Johns County, we're learning what happens when soulless corporations control and contaminate our governments.  

Deforestation. 

Flooding.  

Unplanned overdevelopment. 

Overcrowded schools with hundreds of unsafe portable classrooms. 

Since 1981, I've investigated and helped expose corruption in our country.

 I've lived in St. Augustine since November 5, 1999. 

We've seen the murder of a Sheriff deputy's girlfriend reported in The New York Times and PBS Frontline, 

My Mother had decades of experience in purchasing for Camden County College and corporations like F.W. Woolworth.
 
When I learned that our Mosquito Control Commission bought a $1.8 million no-bid helicopter, I asked my Mother if she would buy a helicopter withoutn competitive bidding: "absolutely not."  
Working with the late Robin Nadeau, John Sundeman,Jeanne Moeller, Don Girvan,  and other community leaders, 

We, the People helped persuade our Mosquito Control District to cancel the no-bid contract.  Taxpayers won a full refund of our MCD's 10% deposit. 

Chief Judge Litt was tight as a tick with government money. Judge Litt taught me that any government budget can be cut by 10%. Here in St. Johns County, we have a $4.5 million mosquito museum, with 41% cost overruns. There's too much waste in government. 

Mosquito-borne diseases kill one million people annually.  My Father was bitten by a mosquito in Sicily in 1943 as an 82nd Airborne Division paratrooper.  

I believe in miracles. They called me a "miracle baby."

Likely due to my Father's suffering from malaria, it took my patents a dozen years, praying to Saint Jude, (patron Saint of hopeless causes), before they were able to have their only child (me).   Mom said the chances of my being born were less than one in 100,000.

We've achieved dozens of public interest victories. 

We can control pestiferous mosquitoes.

We can control corruption. 

Help me help you save money and save lives. 

I would be honored to have your vote to serve on the board of the Anastasia Mosquito Control Commission. Vote on or before November 3, 2026.


Thank you.

Mosquito Control and Overdevelopment



I am running for Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County in the November 3, 2026 election.  May I please have your vote?

Flooding is increasing.  Increased flooding flows from every single proposed "development" here. Mosquitoes flourish amid flooding. 

The frequency and severity of storms and flooding is increasing.  We must use good science to prepare for the storms and remediate the flooding.  

We must protect people from persistent flooding, evidenced by testimony at government meetings.  

Whenever a development (sic) proposal is discussed, residents testify about flooding.  Too often, our governments are flummoxed, failing to present scientific evidence in response. 

Our Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County does its best to apply good science to mosquito control.  It has five Ph.D. scientists.

But our St. Johns County Commission has no Chief Scientist, no Chief Economist, and makes decisions substantially unencumbered by good data and good science.  

Poorly-staffed County Commissioners rather remind me of what Sir Winston Spencer Churchill said in 1937, "The Government simply cannot make up their mind, or they cannot get the Prime Minister to make up his mind. So they go on in strange paradox, decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all powerful to be impotent. So we go on preparing more months and years – precious, perhaps vital to the greatness of Britain – for the locusts to eat."

Mosquitoes are eating us alive.  Building "developments" in mosquito swamps is unwise and unscientific.  It needs to stop. 

Our St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners and our Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County are two separate local government agencies, with their own boards.  

SJC abolished its Intergovernmental Relations Committee under  controversial former County Administrator MICHAEL DAVID WANCHICK (2007-2019), who sought a County takeover of mosquito control.  We, the People stopped him. 

Our County must better regulate "development" by greedy "developers," who build homes in swamps, exposing residents to hordes of mosquitoes. 

Worldwide, some 1,000,000 people die every year after mosquito bites. My Father was bitten by a mosquito in Sicily in 1943, contracting malaria.  We saw his suffering.  Due to the effects of malaria, I was born fourteen (14) years later, after my parents prayed to Saint Jude (patron Saint of hopeless causes).. 

Our County's "Growth Management (sic)" staff must consult with experts with our Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County and AMCD's scientists and professionals.  

Every single "development (sic) order" must include a mosquito control plan. Every single one. No excuses. Protection against mosquito-borne diseases must not be a "hopeless cause."

I am running for Anastasia Mosquito Control District of St. Johns County (Seat 2) in the November 3, 2026 election.  

May I please have the honor of your vote?


Thank you.
With kindest regards, I am,
Sincerely yours,
Ed Slavin
Box 3084
St. Augustine, Florida 32085-3084
www.edslavin.com
(904) 377-4998

July 11, 1983: Al Gore's Mercury Pollution Hearing in Oak Ridge, Tennessee -- Largest Mercury Pollution Event in World History (4.2 Million Pounds)

43 years ago.






Members of Congress wanted answers, or at least then-Rep. Al Gore and some others acted like they did, Newspapers around the nation reported the then newly "declassified" Oak Ridge Y-12 Nuclear Weapon Plant pollution, including the largest mercury pollution event in world history.  For background read Elliott Marshall's July 8, 1983 article from SCIENCE Magazine, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).  Anderson County District Attorney General James Nelson Ramsey recommended me for a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting over the mercury declassification,

42 years ago on July 11, 1983, shortly after lunch, I was testifying under oath about Y-12 nuclear weapons plant mercury pollution before an historic Congressional hearing, co-chaired by two (2) Tennessee members of the U.s. Congress, in the packed Oak Ridge Museum of Atomic Energy auditorium, on stage, before Tennessee Democratic Congress members Albert Gore, Jr., and Marilyn Lloyd, who were co-chairing meetings of their two House of Representatives Science and Technology subcommittees, one on Oversight and Investigations, chaired by Gore and the one on Energy Research and Development, chaired by, Marilyn Lloyd (D-Chattanooga).   

Oak Ridge nuclear weapons plant workers were forbidden to talk about health problems, poisons including mercury were promiscuously consumed and recklessly emitted, a scientist was fired for taking "unauthorized soil samples" and asking questions about mercury.  The 1977 Elwood mercury inventory report was stamped "Business Confidential" by Union Carbide.  

That's the way it was, until our tiny tabloid Appalachian Observer weekly newspaper's November 1982 FOIA and declassification request was granted by DOE on May 17, 1983, some 182 days after we asked for it.  (After its massive illegal pollution was exposed by DoE document releases to us, Union Carbide did not rebid for the Oak Ridge contracts and was later perpetrator of tens of thousands of poisoning deaths and injuries in Bhopal, India).

Chairman Gore, later Vice President, honored our request to his superlative staffer, Steve Owens: then-Rep. Gore swore in all the witnesses, conducting an investigative hearing -- first time ever in the entire history of U.S. nuclear weapons complex.Before then, there were secret meetings -- held on a small secure room in the apex fourth floor of the Capitol high above Congress -- before the secretive Joint Commission on Atomic Energy, which protected the Atomic Energy Commission, ERDA and DOE from public scrutiny.

During a recess in the Gore hearing, I stood on the steps of the Museum of Science Atomic Energy, conferring with the two standup, courageous local DAs and two local County Attorneys whose territory embraced Oak Ridge.  

They jokingly called themselves "the Gang of Four" and contemplated filing a sworn, certified public nuisance lawsuit in a Tennessee state court.  But the State Attorney General's office assured them that the State AG would filing be a federal pollution lawsuit.  Thus, the State AG thereby discouraged and halted filing of powerful state court nuisance litigation by our four local elected government lawyers in Anderson and Roane Counties.  

The July 11, 1983 hearing began federal investigations of the foul, fetid feculent federal nuclear weapons complex, source or great misery here in America.  

Years of investigative reporting and activism. nationwide, ultimately resulted in adoption of federal workers compensation legislation in 2000 (the defective Energy Employees Occupational Injuries Compensation Act or EEOICA, which I opposed in detailed written testimony as consisting the toxic, hostile working environment, as lacking in Due Process, with no hearings, no appeals, no discovery or depositions).  

Some $12 billion has been disbursed in EEOICA payments to the workers that Gore's hearing ignored.  (During my testimony, I drew eye-rolling, raised eyebrows and arch questions from Rep., Marilyn Lloyd, asking me about my "scientific background."   Rep. Lloyd asked me to "name" anyone "hurt in any way" by the mercury.  I replied, "J.C. Wilson Jr.," who suffered from mercury pollution, including constant vomiting and Technicolor hallucinations, as the Knoxville newspapers and Appalachian Observer documented.  Rep. Lloyd's offensive reply was that Mr. Wilson was "inside the area," as if that were irrelevant or exculpatory! 

After lousy louche lying DOE lapdog Marilyn Lloyd, a Tennessee Democrat, left Congress:
ORNL said in a press release, :"Lloyd served 20 years as U.S. Congress representative of people in Tennessee's Third Congressional District. She was chairman of the Energy Subcommittee of the House Science and Technology Committee and moved many landmark bills that helped shape the U.S. energy policy. Lloyd, a Democrat, retired in January 1995."

(Lockheed was later cancelled as Oak Ridge Operations contractor due to its environmental ineptude, as demonstrated to its harsh response to workers concerned about the poisoned workplace.  Was Lockheed's noncompliance largely due to DOE's forcing its predecessor, Martin Marietta, to retain all but twelve of 4000 maladroit Union Carbide managers at five plants in three states employing 20,000 people?) 

No one ever went to prison or jail for even a day for putting 4.2 million pounds of mercury into local creeks and groundwater, and into workers’ lungs and brains, without signs, fences, respirators, warnings or basic protections. Half the free world’s mercury was in Oak Ridge: Union Carbide and the Atomic Energy Commission and successor agencies “LOST” 10% OF IT.   

Years after the hearings and billions were spent on cleanup, mercury levels are rising.

Thanks to activists and former U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), DOE is currently spending another sone $125 million to keep mercury from entering East Fork Poplar Creek, which is still being contaminated daily by mercury that is still leaching out from the Y-12 Nuclear Weapons Plant.

"It is the function of the citizen to keep the government from falling into error." Those are the words of United States Supreme Court Justice Robert Houghwot Jackson, America's prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials. 

As I wrote in the St. Augustine Record on November 8, 2014:

On Nov. 21, 1974, our United States Senate enacted the Freedom of Information Act, joining the House in voting to override a veto by President Gerald Ford (whose veto was pushed on him by then-DOJ lawyer, Antonin Scalia, and White House aides Richard Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, who wanted government to remain secretive).

I was 17, a “hick from the sticks” — first-semester Georgetown University freshman, an intern known for my walking/working speed in Senator Ted Kennedy’s office as “Fast Eddie.” I carried three stacks of Senator Kennedy’s legal-sized, stapled, freshly-mimeographed press release to three Senate press galleries, cheering the veto override and enactment of the Freedom of Information Act.

I read it on the Senate/Capitol subway, promising transparency. I walked up a marble staircase, past a gigantic painting of Lincoln with his cabinet, signing the Emancipation Proclamation. My heart leaped with joy.

Eight years later, as the fledgling Appalachian Observer tabloid's first editor, I used FOIA to ask for government data on mercury pollution; a long kept secret by Union Carbide’s Y-12 nuclear bomb builders in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. We won, and on May 17, 1983, the largest mercury pollution event in world history was declassified — 4.2 million pounds of mercury emitted into the environment and workers’ lungs and brains, which continues leaking into creeks and groundwater today (subject of a new $125 million mercury cleanup plant advocated by Senator Lamar Alexander).

Nuclear weapons plants cleanup may be achieved by circa 2057, by my 100th birthday, at a cost that may top $300 billion.

Forty years after FOIA, Americans work to hold our governments accountable, seeking to breathe life into open records laws.

As Ben Franklin said in Philadelphia after our Constitutional Convention in 1787, we have “a republic, if [we] can keep it.” Will we?

We Americans ended slavery, but can we ever stop being slaves to secrecy?

We Americans eradicated smallpox and polio, but can we ever eradicate political corruption?

Enough flummery.

We must make our governments more transparent.

… Let us have a government truly “of the people, by the people, and for the people,” as Lincoln promised at Gettysburg.

Let us have what [Mayor] Nancy Shaver calls a “no surprises” government. Now.

In 1977, I was a 20 year old staffer for Senator Jim Sasser, assigned to cover as a legislative research assistant the creation of the Department of Energy under President Carter, among other issues. We had no idea at that time what DOE had done to Tennesseans and other Americans. No one but DOE knew that.

Six years after that, and less than nine years after carrying Ted Kennedy's FOIA press release to the Senate press galleries, the mercury losses in Oak Ridge were declassified on May 17, 1983, at request of Appalachian Observer Publisher Ernest F. Phillips and me, the editor, a beardless youth of 26. 

The Al Gore hearing followed, like a bird on a wagon. 

People were outraged.  

Yet, at the hearing, I was the only witness to call for criminal prosecution.  
No one was ever prosecuted. 

42 years later, we can now conclude that Oak Ridge would never be the same again. 

The DOE complex began a "culture change," and was forced to focus on whistleblower protection, environment, safety and health. The multi-billion dollar cleanup of DOE sites continues, nationwide. Read all about it. 

All witnesses were sworn in at the request of our elected Anderson County Attorney David Alexander Stuart and me (Mr. Stuart, then 26, was later my co-counsel in several landmark whistleblower cases.  With DA Jim Ramsey, Mr,. Stuart was a member of the group who humorously referred to themselves as "the Gang of Four" -- two District Attorneys General and two County Attorneys acting as government watchdogs, contemplating jointly filing a sworn public nuisance complaint against DOE and Union Carbide under Tennessee nuisance law. Alas, the State Attorney General and the Legal Environmental Assistance Counsel filed first, and the "Gang of Four" did not go ahead with their inchoate plans).

Other disclosures around the country, sought by activists from all walks of life, have shown the Nation a picture of sublime ugliness: the Cold War took tens of thousands of Americans as unwilling victims, without informed consent. Now we know all too well that our Nation faces a moral crisis involving DOE, truly the “moral equivalent of war,” one that will test who we are as a people. 

As Dr. Susan Arnold Kaplan, Ph.D. wrote in 2005:

The public first learned of DOE environmental releases in 1983 when the agency announced the release of mercury from the Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The announcement, which was prompted by a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request by Ed Slavin,1 marked the beginning of DOE’s Environmental, Safety, and Health (ES&H) projects nationwide.2 

Former Department of Energy Oak Ridge Operations Manager Joe Ben LaGrone told me in a 2012 telephone conversation after I read his oral history interview that I was indeed "the crowbar" who got the mercury pollution declassified and forced action. Mr. LaGrone stated that Department of Energy officials sent him to Oak Ridge the new Manager without telling them of the expected declassification.  

Not only that, but the Presidential libraries of President Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan show that two Presidents were never briefed on the scandal.

In 2014, former Department of Energy Deputy Assistant Secretary Robert Alvarez wrote of Y-12:

The mercury threat. Activities at Y-12 have produced multiple environmental challenges; perhaps the largest is mercury pollution.

During the crash program to build thermonuclear weapons in the 1950’s and early 1960’s, Y-12 purchased about 24 million pounds of mercury to purify lithium. Of that amount, about 10 percent (2.4 million pounds) was released into the environment or could not be accounted for inside buildings. To put the problem in perspective, Y-12 mercury losses are about eight times the annual mercury emissions estimated by the Environmental Protection Agency for the entire United States during the years 1994 and 1995. 

Despite the well-recognized hazards of mercury, a neurological poison, workers were not provided with adequate protection from it. People living nearby, including hundreds of school children, were exposed for years to an estimated 73,000 pounds of mercury released to the air. In 2012, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry concluded that “elemental mercury carried from the Y-12 plant by workers into their homes could potentially have harmed their families (especially young children).” A rough measure of harm to workers can be found in compensation statistics maintained by the Department of Labor. Nearly 9,000 Y-12 workers have received some $417 million for exposure to non-radioactive substances. 

The Upper East Fork Poplar Creek and Bear Creek continuously transport about 500 pounds of mercury from heavily contaminated soil on the site to downstream areas. The contaminated creeks then feed into the lower Watts Bar reservoir of the Tennessee River and the Clinch River, where tens of tons of mercury have accumulated in sediments. In 2002, nearly 40 percent of the anglers using the Watts Bar Reservoir continued to eat mercury-contaminated fish, despite a public ban on consumption. African-Americans were the least aware of the ban and were the most vulnerable to potential harm. 

After recognizing the magnitude of the mercury problem at least 35 years ago, the Energy Department is just beginning to construct a water treatment plant to remove mercury from the contaminated creeks and to reduce offsite mercury run-off. The total cost of mercury cleanup at Y-12 has not been determined. However, it may rival the cleanup costs of profoundly contaminated areas such as the Hanford Site in southeastern Washington state. 

The DOE Nuclear Weapons complex, to paraphrase Lincoln, is guilty of “idolatry that practices human sacrifices.” 

DOE’s American victims must be compensated fully, fairly and swiftly. It may be cleaned up by the year 2047, at which time I will be 90 years young. 

Cleanup of the entire nuclear weapons complex may eventually be achieved for as little as $400 billion. In the immortal words of the late Senator Everett McKinley Dirksen (R-Ill.), "A billion dollars here, a billion dollars there, and pretty soon you're talking about real money."

I was honored to testify before then-Rep. Al Gore at his July 11, 1983 hearing on the Oak Ridge mercury pollution crisis, which was said to have been a classified secret (kept even from President Jimmy Carter and President Reagan according to their Presidential libraries).  In reality, the only "classification" was Union Carbide's "business confidential" stamp, but so cowed and cowardly was our nuclear weapons industrial technostructure that Union Carbide was giving our government orders.

Secretary of Energy Donald Paul Hodel hornswoggled Joe Ben LaGrone into leaving DoE San Francisco Operations and moving his family to Oak Ridge by stating there were mere "management problems," never disclosing my pending mercury FOIA declassification request.  Mr. La Grone personally walked East Fork Poplar Creek and personally counted some 100 pollution discharge pipes, none with federal permits.  

Born in 1899, scion of an old Tennessee political family, appointed to the U.S. District Court by President Harry Truman, Eastern District Chief Judge Robert Love Taylor ruled against DOE in the case of Legal Environentsl Associations Foundation v. Hodel, holding that there was no "national security" exemption from anti-pollution laws. DOE was gobsmacked.  Nuclear weapons contractors seethed.

Gore's hearing helped give the government a spinal implant.  

The hearing and Judge Taylor's ruling were victories, thanks to fine work by Gary Davis and Natural Resources Defense Council lawyers on, the landmark case applying environmental laws applying to lawbreaking feculent federal bomb factories in Oak Ridge. 

But to this day, 42 years later, I wish that Al Gore had done his job better.  

Al Gore needed to do more than hold one (1) hearing -- no further hearings ever investigated the Environmental Justice issues that I raised (e.g., moving an entire segregated African-American community next to the creek).  

Wonder why?

Al Gore lost interest in Oak Ridge mercury and environmental health issues after he was elected to the U.S. Senate.  When he was Vice President, we tried to urge Gore to meet with some of the workers sickened by Oak Ridge nuclear weapons plant poisons, to no avail.  Meanwhile, Gore's 2000 presidential campaign was run by Lockheed Martin Washington lobbyist PETER KNIGHT.

Al Gore was seemingly raised to be President, the son of courageous Democratic. populist U.S. Senator Albert Gore, Sr. (He and then-Senator Kefauver joined with Kentucky Senator Alben Barkley and Texas Senator Lyndon Johnson).  

Al Gore, Jr., held some 1200 town hall meetings in Tennessee as Congressman (1977-1985) and Senator (1985-1992).  Sadly Gore seemed distant to Tennesseans as Vice President (1993-2001).   

I reckon that Al Gore lost Tennessee in 2000 largely because he lost interest in Tennessee issues like the Oak Ridge worker illnesses exhaustively covered by the Nashville Tennessean.  It did not help Gore's Presidential candidacy that his long Secrect Service caravan was obstructing I-40 traffic every Friday afternoon, as Air Force Two landed and he and his entourage drove some 42 miles from the Nashville airport to Carthage, his ancestral home, a joke for Nashville DJs that hurt his support in Democratic Middle Tennessee).  (The Gore-Lieberman presidential campaign failed to carry either Tennessee or Arkansas in 2000, and was found to have lost to Texas Governor George W. Bush by 537 votes in Florida.)

The month after Gore's July 11, 1983 mercury hearing, I went on to start Memphis State University Law School, went on to clerk for Memphis labor and civil rights attorney Dan M. Norwood, and then went ib to clerkships with Judges Charles P. Rippey and Chief Judge Nahum Litt at the U.S. Department of Labor Office of Administrative Law Judges, work at the AFL-CIO Occupational Health Legal Rights Foundation and Government Accountability Project and private practice, including Oak Ridge matters. 

So I'm contemplating Al Gore's desuetude of Congressional oversight, with little or no followup after initial headlines, and his also doing a wonderful job for a proud shining momentous open public hearing 42 years ago, touching on what Pope Francis later wrote in his encyclical, Laudato Si, about humankind turning this frail planet into "a pile of filth."

On balance, Gore's hearing on July 11, 1983 was a great day in American history. If Hollywood made a film and asked about music, I would suggest, "The times they are a-changin," or else "the world stood upside down" (played at Yorktown by our fledgling U.S. Army when Lord Cornwallis surrendered to President George Washington).  Or in the words of the ad jingle, "Oh, thank Heaven for 7/11.









 

May 17, 1983: World's Largest Mercury Pollution Event Declassified by U.S. Department of Energy in Oak Ridge, Tennessee

Oak Ridge mercury declassification 43rd anniversary (4100+ words). 

(Copyright  (c) 1983-2026 Ed Slavin All Rights Reserved)