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Showing posts with label Yale University. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yale University. Show all posts

Sunday, January 5, 2014

Yale Urged to Revoke Honorary Degree to Convicted Asbestos Magnate

Today's post is shared from  Barry Castleman author of Asbestos: Medical and Legal Aspects, Fifth Edition.

WNPR radio in New Haven CT has just run a second piece on this theme, longer than the one on Dec. 23.  Yale declined to send anyone to be interviewed about its refusal to reconsider awarding the honorary degree to the asbestos billionaire.  The story runs for the first 16 minutes of the program and ends with me being asked if the asbestos magnate's philanthropy erased or greenwashed his asbestos past.  I had testified on the public health and corporate history of asbestos in the criminal trial in Italy.
http://wnpr.org/post/asbestos-scandal-reaches-yale-mind-psychopath

Those who want to write to the President of Yale can contact Peter Salovey:  peter.salovey@yale.edu

ASBESTOS VICTIMS ASK YALE TO REVOKE AN HONORARY DEGREE   (National Public Radio,  Dec.  23, 2013)

http://wnpr.org/post/asbestos-victims-ask-yale-revoke-honorary-degree

An Italian organization representing victims of asbestos exposure has asked Yale University to rescind an honorary degree awarded to the owner of the company they once worked for.
In the mid-1970s, Swiss billionaire Stefan Schmidheiny took over his family's business.  The Eternit company had plants around the world that produced asbestos-cement products.  The largest was in Casale Monferrato, Italy.
Connecticut lawyer Christopher Meisenkothen represents shipyard workers and boiler makers who worked with asbestos here in the US and later developed diseases like asbestosis, lung cancer, and mesothelioma.  He is handling the Italian request to Yale, pro bono.
Meisenkothen described notes from an Eternit company meeting in the 1970s.  "Clearly", he said, "they were acknowledging in 1976 that the workers were at risk.  The plant continued to use asbestos for many years after that.  They could have given the workers respiratory protection [or] installed exhaust fans.  And the worker testimony from workers at the time consistently indicates that there were no serious precautions taken at the plant."

Two years later, Schmidheiny began to dismantle the company's asbestos-processing concern.  He went on to use his wealth to support eco-friendly sustainable development in other parts of the world.
In 2012, Schmidheiny was tried in absentia in Italy.  He was found guilty of causing the deaths of thousands of people in Casale Monferrato, and has been sentenced to 18 yeaars in prison.   Victims and their families said Yale should reconsider whether he still deserves an honorary degree.

Thomas Pogge, a professor in the philosophy department at Yale University, said the accusations deserve careful inquiry.   "This is very important new information," he said, "that I think , at the very least, should be looked at very carefully by the authorities  at Yale.   Yale has a very distinguished record, actually, in asbestos research.   And we have the requisite expertise to convene an excellent faculty committee that could look into this case in more depth."

Yale authorities declined WNPR's request for comment, but in a statement, said the 1996 honorary degree  was based on Schmidheiny's advocacy for sustainable economic  development.  Yale has never revoked an honorary degree.
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Added Note (BC):   In letters exchanged with attorney Christopher Meisenkothen in the past few months, Yale first denied and was later obliged to admit receiving money from Schmidheiny's Avina Foundation before and after the award of the degree in the mid-1990s.  Yale alumni and others who wish to see these letters and/or express their views are welcome to contact me or Chris (cc'd here).  You may also want to write to the President of Yale, Peter Salovey:  peter.salovey@yale.edu


Friday, January 3, 2014

Justice for asbestos victims

Today's post was shared by Linda Reinstein and comes from you.38degrees.org.uk

Dear Lord Freud The 2013 Mesothelioma Bill in its current form is unfair and punitive. It imposes arbitrary deadlines on already-vulnerable people, depriving them of vital compensation.We call on you to amend the bill to ensure that everyone who is affected by asbestos exposure get 100% of the compensation owed to them.
Anyone who is exposed to asbestos at work, and subsequently develops mesothelioma cancer, is entitled to compensation from their employer. However, many people can’t be paid compensation because they can’t track down the company who insured their employer at the time of exposure, which could have been many decades ago.The government is currently legislating to set up a scheme where they will compensate those affected if they can’t find the relevant insurer. However, they’ve imposed a cut-off date of 25th July 2012 so anyone diagnosed before that date can’t claim from the new scheme. This arbitrarily punishes people struggling with life-threatening illnesses.And they’ve capped the compensation someone can claim to 70% of the average compensation paid through the civil court system. This robs people of vital funds they need at a difficult time of their lives. This government is crippling individuals, to save themselves pennies.Sign this petition and demand fair, compassionate treatment for all asbestos-affected people.

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Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Asbestos Victims Ask Yale to Revoke an Honorary Degree


An Italian organization representing victims of asbestos exposure has asked Yale University to rescind an honorary degree awarded to the owner of the company they once worked for.

In the mid-1970s, Swiss billionaire Stefan Schmidheiny took over his family’s business. The Eternit company had plants around the world that produced asbestos cement products. The largest was in Casale Monferrato, Italy.

Connecticut lawyer Christopher Meisenkothen represents shipyard workers and boiler makers who worked with asbestos here in the U.S., and later developed diseases like asbestosis, lung cancer, and mesothelioma. He is handling the Italian request to Yale, pro bono.

Meisenkothen described notes from an Eternit company meeting in the 1970s. "Clearly," he said, "they were acknowledging in 1976 that the workers were at risk. The plant continued to use asbestos for many years after that. They could have given the workers respiratory protection, [or] installed exhaust fans. And the worker testimony from workers at the time consistently indicates that there were no serious precautions taken in the plant."

Two years later, Schmidheiny began to dismantle the company's asbestos processing concern. He went on to use his wealth to support eco-friendly sustainable development in other parts of the world.

In 2012, Schmidheiny was tried in absentia in Italy. He was found guilty of causing the deaths of thousands of people in Casale Monferrato, and has been sentenced to 18 years...


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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

A Twist of Fate: Italian Asbestos Victims’ Investigator Finds Evidence Stephan Schmidheiny’s Avina Foundation Donated to Yale University by Linda Reinstein

Today's post was shared by Ban Asbestos Network and comes from www.gban.net

Revoke Convicted Asbestos Criminal Stephan Schmidheiny honorary Yale doctorate_edited-2
Revoke Convicted Asbestos Criminal Stephan Schmidheiny honorary Yale doctorate_edited-2
Posted on December 9, 2013
Corporate Crime Reporter: Italian Asbestos Victims Call on Yale To Revoke Honorary Degree to Schmidheiny @CorpCrimeReport
The Courant: Asbestos Victims Ask Yale To Revoke Honorary Degree Of Former Factory Owner @hartfordcourant
Yale Daily News: A Toxic Legacy @yaledailynews
ADAO BLOG: ADAO Supports AFEVA’s Plea to Yale University to Revoke Schmidheiny’s Honorary Doctorate
On October 30, 2013, an Italian asbestos victims’ group, Associazione Famigliari Vittime Amianto (AFeVA) has sent a letter and petition to Dr. Salovery asking Yale to revoke asbestos criminal, Stephan Schmidheiny’s, honorary doctorate.
Yale University awarded billionaire Schmidheiny an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters in 1996, ten years after the Eternit plant in Casale was closed, leaving behind an environment disaster.  The Italian court noted that Schmidheiny’s actual knowledge of the deadly hazards of asbestos dated back at least as far as 1976 when he attended an Eternit managers conference and was involved in key decision-making about the company’s asbestos business.
Yale University asserted in the October 30, 2013 letter that neither Schmidheiny, Eternit nor Schmidheiny’s Avina Foundation ever contributed gifts or grants to Yale.  Wrong!  In an interesting twist, however,...
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

A Global Asbestos Battle Touches Yale

Today's post was shared by Linda Reinstein and comes from www.courant.com

That Stephan Schmidheiny has played a huge role in environmental matters around the world over the last 37 years is not up for debate.

What is hotly contested about the Swiss industrialist-turned-philanthropist and author is whether he's rightly portrayed as a hero or a villain. And Yale University, which gave Schmidheiny an honorary doctorate in 1996, is caught in the middle — with that degree as a global political football.

In 1976, when he was 29 years old, Schmidheiny took over the Swiss Eternit Group, a business founded by his grandfather. The company had become one of Europe's largest asbestos firms, making cement products girded with the deadly mineral throughout the continent and in Brazil. Schmidheiny was 29 and a newly minted lawyer.

Within 10 years, the Italian arm of the business, with five factories, closed in bankruptcy.

After Eternit, Schmidheiny, born rich and growing richer through ties to Switzerland's best known companies, turned his attention to ecologically sustainable development. He created a charity and endowed it with more than $1 billion, launched a nonprofit foundation that operates in 17 Latin American countries and founded a global business group dedicated to private-sector environmentalism.
That was the Stephan Schmidheiny that Yale feted, and not just with an honorary degree. In 2000, Schmidheiny was a keynote speaker at the centennial of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, which...
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