I couple of months ago I wrote a diary about Sierra Blanca. The entire diary can be found below for perspective. I suggest you read it and then watch Paul Wellstone in action on the Senate floor.

The Sanders’ have partially released their 2014 tax return and on the return, Jane Sanders is still drawing a salary as an alternate commissioner for the Texas Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Compact Commission. (TLLRWD Commissioner)

This is the commission that oversaw the Sierra Blanca dump site, that Sanders voted for and also voted to strip out the Wellstone amendment in conference.

The Wellstone amendment would have given legal recourse to this mostly poor Latino community to fight the placement of this waste dump, if they could prove environmental racism. The compact was passed, with vigorous help from Sanders. Later and fortunately the dump was scuttled by the state of Texas.

This is just for 2014. Mrs. Sanders could have been drawing a salary for years and unless they release more tax returns we'll never know for sure.

go.berniesanders.com/...

TLLRWD Commissioner income

If you follow this link, you’ll see Mrs. Sanders is still associated with the TLLRWD.

www.tllrwdcc.org/...

TLLRWD Alternate Commissioner

I know some folks will blow this off. They will say this isn't a big deal, but turning your back on a poor minority community that did not have political clout is a BFD. It was inexcusable and especially coming from a candidate who claims he wants to give power back to the people.

Sanders campaign strategist Tad Devine and his then 2004 presidential candidate, Senator John Kerry, thought this was a big deal in 2003 and they attacked Howard Dean’s Sierra Blanca connection then. Sound familiar?

lubbockonline.com/...

Democratic presidential hopeful Sen. John Kerry on Wednesday criticized the environmental records of fellow Democrat Howard Dean and President Bush, accusing the former governors of striking a deal in the 1990s to ship nuclear waste to a poor Hispanic town near El Paso. Kerry said Dean, when he was Vermont governor, signed a compact in 1993 with Maine and Texas to send nu clear waste to Sierra Blanca, a plan opposed by civil rights groups. "He clearly reflected an insensitivity to that community," Kerry said during a campaign stop at a housing project.

Kerry, of Massachusetts, criticized the decision to "dump nuclear waste into a poor community far away from where you live because you can do it. I think George Bush was wrong and I think Howard Dean was wrong."

The late Senator Paul Wellstone, John Kerry and Sanders campaign strategist Tad Devine all believed that Sierra Blanca was wrong, then why are the Sanders’ still involved and profiting from nuclear waste dump sites that are more likely to be located in or around poor communities like Sierra Blanca?

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Original diary below, for perspective.

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In 1998, then Representative Bernie Sanders cosponsored and actively ushered a bill through Congress that would allow Vermont and Maine to dump their nuclear waste in the poor disadvantaged Hispanic community of Sierra Blanca, Texas.

Three West Texan protestors went to Vermont to plead with then Representative Sanders that the dump site shouldn't be located in this poor minority community, Mr. Sanders told the three activists, "My position is unchanged and you’re not going to like it.” When asked if he would at least visit the proposed site in Sierra Blanca, he said: “Absolutely not. I'm gonna to be running for re-election in the state of Vermont."

“He didn't listen,” Curry said. “He had his mind made up."

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Reading this article, I had a real sense that Mr. Sanders just didn't care about their concerns or the plight of this poor Hispanic community. It wasn't his community to care about. If history tells us anything about minority communities they seemingly always get the short end of the stick. Flint, MI is one such community that comes to mind. In this case, the community of Sierra Blanca didn't have any real political clout and they were reaching out to Mr. Sanders for help.

Mr. Sanders could have stood behind this very poor Hispanic community, but as his response to the protestors revealed, he chose the political expedient route. In this case, he didn't stand up for the less fortunate in Sierra Blanca.

Paul Wellstone would later call this injustice against the people of Sierra Blanca a case of "environmental racism”.

"My position is unchanged, and you’re not going to like it.”

www.nytimes.com/...

I think maybe they choose us because we are a small town, because we are so distant from everyone and because we have no political power,'' Ms. Bustamante said. ''I think maybe they are taking advantage of us. I believe that most of the people are opposed to it.''

Now compare this with the late, great Paul Wellstone, who fought with passion on the Senate floor for this poor disadvantaged community. His impassioned speech for the people of Sierra Blanca was a shining moment on the Senate floor.

For Mr. Wellstone, reaching out, helping and fighting for minorities came naturally. He immediately recognized the injustice and fought for this community, like it was his very own.

www.austinchronicle.com/...

In Washington, Wellstone called the dump part of a "national pattern of discrimination in the location of waste and pollution" that preyed on those lacking political clout and financial resources.

archive.bangordailynews.com/...

Wellstone has promised to force a fearsome debate on the issue and the overarching issue of what he calls “environmental racism.”

Mr. Wellstone fought on the floor to add amendments that would give this poor Hispanic community the legal right to stop this dump site if it could prove racial discrimination factored into placing the site, which Mr. Wellstone proved was in fact the case during his speech. Link to video of his entire speech below.

Transcript of floor speech: www.gpo.gov/…

www.shakesville.com/...

When it came up for a vote in May 1998, Sanders listened to 12 anti-dump delegates as they outlined their concerns. The next day, he spoke in favor of the bill because of its "strong support" in all three states.

Mr. Sanders was against the Wellstone amendments. Those amendments would have given this poor Hispanic community a “fighting chance”.

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Mr. Sanders eventually voted to have the Wellstone amendments stripped out of the Texas-Maine-Vermont Compact bill in conference.

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Mr. Sanders campaign for President is built around this grand premise of giving power back to the people. A political revolution by the people. When he had the opportunity to give power back to the poor Latino community of Sierra Blanca, he voted against the Wellstone amendments that would have given this community the real power they needed to fight back against environmental racism.

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Paul Wellstone’s Senate floor speech can be seen here: www.c-span.org/...

The speech starts at the 5 hour 35 minute mark. I would highly recommend you watch Paul Wellstone’s entire speech. It’s incredibly moving. I included a partial transcript of the speech below, but the video is much longer and more detailed.

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www.politifact.com/...

Voted to dump Vermont’s nuclear waste in a majority Latino community in Sierra Blanca, Texas In 1998, the House of Representatives approved a compact struck between Texas, Vermont and Maine that would allow Vermont and Maine to dump low-level nuclear waste at a designated site in Sierra Blanca, Texas. Sanders, at the time representing Vermont in the House, cosponsored the bill and actively ushered it through Congress. Located about 16 miles from the Mexican border, Sierra Blanca’s population is predominantly of Mexican ancestry. At the time, the community was about two-thirds Latino, and its residents had an average income of $8,000, according to the an article in the Bangor Daily News. The low-level nuclear waste would include "items such as scrap metal and worker’s gloves… as well as medical gloves used in radiation treatments at hospitals," according to the Bangor Daily News.

archive.bangordailynews.com/...

The House approved Wednesday a deal that would allow Maine and Vermont to dump their low-level nuclear waste from places like the now-closed Maine Yankee in a poor Hispanic town in west Texas. By a 305-117 vote, the House approved the compact without any of the troublesome amendments that had been previously attached to the tri-state deal, setting up a final showdown in the Senate that will determine its fate.

Opponents of the Maine-Vermont-Texas compact contend that Sierra Blanca was chosen as the site because it lacks political clout, considering it is 67 percent Mexican-American and its residents have an average income of $8,000.

When the House and Senate hammered out a single bill, supporters of the compact won out, and the amendments were simply tossed aside. Because of that, Wellstone has promised to force a fearsome debate on the issue and the overarching issue of what he calls “environmental racism.” “I will use every parliamentary tool available to try and block this shameful bill,” Wellstone said.

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Partial transcript of Paul Wellstone's Senate floor speech.

Entire transcript: www.gpo.gov/...