and then some
April 23rd, 2010

iceland in control

Sigur Ros from Iceland have had as much influence on me as looking at a Gursky or a Bresson photograph. I have long said if you took away all my music and left me with one album i wouldn’t hesitate in my choice. Their first album Agaetis Byrjun had an affect on me that was unparalleled by anything I had heard before. With Sigur Ros’s music and the falsetto voice of lead singer Jon Por Birgisson I can be transported somewhere else. Usually to the top of a mountain or some space in my head where I think this must be what heaven sounds like.

I caught wind of the fact that Birgission known as Jonsi was on a solo tour with his new album ‘Go’ and a show that promised spectacular projections and design. So I thought I’d rekindle the old days of when I was a young whipper snapper rock band photographer and get down there and make some pictures of an artist that has brightened my life for a long time. The Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco was the venue. About 1000 people capacity. The musicians played in what seems like a style only Icelandic or those who submerge themselves in the place can play. Animals and nature moved around the stage chasing each other in vibrant colourful projections. Everything was perfect. The roof was raised, the audience was enraptured.  It was April 16th and about 4000 miles away in Jonsi’s homeland all eyes were skyward and the volcano reminded the world who was in control.

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Here’s a slideshow of a selection of photos from the night. You can select a full screen option in the bottom right corner to view.

They’re also available for sale from my Photoshelter site.


Jonsi, Palace of Fine Arts, San Francisco. 4/16/10 – Images by Michelle McCarron

March 30th, 2010

Richmond, a community and an oil refinery.

Currently I’m working on a new project that sprung from a desire to highlight one of the Bay Area and California’s dirtiest secrets. A secret which is being largely ignored by the area’s mainstream media. Chevron is California’s biggest polluter and it’s Richmond facility occupying 3,000 acres is at the center of a controversy surrounding the company’s environmental impact here in the United States. It has been polluting the Bay Area and the community for decades with toxic waste, flares, explosions and fires releasing chemicals into the atmosphere and ground water. Now Chevron is looking to expand their refining in order to process dirtier crude.  The local community is against this saying that the potential impact this would have on the community has not been properly assessed. Earlier this year I began work with Dr Henry Clark executive director of the West Counties Toxic Coalition(WCTC) and other community leaders in North Richmond to help them highlight their struggle.
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Chevron oil refinery holding tanks and a Richmond residence

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General Chemical processing plant from which there have been several leaks over the years.

While Chevron recorded record profits in 2008 of $24 billion , the community of North Richmond currently suffers from an unemployment rate of approx 16%. Chevron does not employ local labor and refuses to release details of employee backgrounds. It is plainly obvious that the community sees nothing of the ground breaking profits being garnered just across the train tracks in the place they call home. The state of the community is akin to standards of living that  I have witnessed  in developing countries. Not the typical picture that America or California likes to paint of itself. Another non profit organization involved in the campaign in Richmond, Communities for a Better Environment,(CBE) conducted a survey of Richmond residents and found 46% of  adults and 17% of kids suffering from asthma, twice the rate in the rest of the county.

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Dr Henry Clark at work at the office of the West Counties Toxics Coalition, North Richmond.

In September 2008, WCTC, CBE, and Asian Pacific Environmental Network(APEN) brought a lawsuit against Chevron to stop the expansion project. In July 2009 Judge Zuniga of the county superior court found Chevron in violation of the California Environmental Quality Act in failing to provide an adequate Environmental Impact Report(EIR). On Feb 23rd this year I joined many community residents and the above groups for a hearing in San Francisco Superior Court on the issue. A ruling is expected in the coming months.

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For a community that is constantly vilified in the media and the problems they face living under the shadow of Chevron, being largely ignored ,  I want to show a little of the other side of the story. A side that shows a community standing against injustice, discrimination and neglect. A community that is taking it’s welfare into it’s own hands and standing up to the large corporation because their own government and media has failed them.  A community that is saying enough is enough,  demanding their rights to a cleaner, healthier environment, greener energy and a share in the wealth in continuing along an alternative energy path.

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Gwendolyn Powell, North Richmond resident and community organizer in her home office.

On March 20th I joined the community for Little League Day the first one in many years according to long time resident and community activist Leonard Webster who has been an enormous help to me as I move forward in the story.  The last time I was with Leonard was the week before at his mother Dorothy’s funeral. Dorothy, 79 and a longtime Richmond resident and member of West Counties Toxics suffered from onset asthma and spent her later days on respirators. She experienced many chemical spills and Leonard was eager to have me interview her. She died before I got a chance.

Little league day began with a blessing of what will be a future community garden built on the strength and generosity of volunteers.

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The site for the new community garden

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Residents join hands to bless the beginning of their new garden.

Parents and children celebrated with each other all day long  and I witnessed truly formidable young adult men and women volunteers leading kids in a parade through the community that culminated in a day of baseball.

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Since beginning my project amongst the people of North Richmond and with all involved in the struggle with Chevron’s Richmond refinery, I have had the pleasure of making some new friends who humble me in their commitment to each other and community. There is so much positive energy and solidarity amongst the people there to make their lives better that to call it inspirational is an understatement. It is story of ordinary people fighting for truth and justice in the face of ever increasing corporate power. Just like the struggles of the indigenous communities in Equador, the Niger Delta and Rossport, Ireland. It is a human story all too commonplace in our modern world.

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December 28th, 2009

the rising tide (part 2)

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Concerned citizens of the San Francisco Bay area gather at City Hall on Dec 11th 2009

With the collapse of Copenhagen and the failure on the part of the heaviest polluters to bring anything to the table that showed their commitment to a cleaner planet we have been given a clear message. When it comes to the planet and the welfare of the majority, big business and corporate profits will continue to be the priority. Obama’s pre election promises of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 have now fallen by the wayside. The deal that was hoped to be brokered in Copenhagen is now widely believed to have been derailed by the two biggest emitters China and the US. The non-binding accord contains NO targets or date to end global emissions growth. This together with the ramping up of a war in the middle east and the environmental costs of that taken into consideration, I’m beginning to see where Obama’s real sense of urgency lies. I voted for him. It’s now my responsibility to keep my eye on him, to ensure he’s keeping his promises on the platform that meant that he got the X beside his name on MY ballot paper. He managed to seriously disappoint me in Copenhagen with his rhetoric and the echo of empty promises. What I’ve realized is that when it comes to the change we wish to see in the world, that change will not be affected by politicians. It will be affected by ordinary people in the street paying attention, learning how to live more sustainably, demanding justice and system change.

The following video is from a series of actions in the Bay Area recently that sought to draw attention to some of the biggest corporations that are actively participating in a blockade to environmental policy change. Bank of America is the third largest financier of oil, gas, and coal in the world, and is heavily involved in financing mountaintop removal coal mining. On Nov 30th Rainforest Action Network, West Counties Toxics Coalition, Greenpeace, Urban Habitat, Center for Biological Diversity and the Mobilization for Climate Justice West to name a few voiced their discontent at a rally held outside B of A headquarters in San Francisco. On Dec 7th many of these same groups made their way to Chevron headquarters in San Ramon California to voice their opposition to Chevron’s continued expansion of crude oil refinement and pollution causing severe health problems for the communities nearby. Incidentally the Chevron Richmond refinery is also California’s leading greenhouse gas polluter. Photos from these events can be found here at my Photoshelter page http://www.photoshelter.com/c/michellemccarron

The Rising Tide from Michelle McCarron on Vimeo.

The mainstream media would like us all to believe that the movement for climate justice and responsibility is a fractured one made up of few people. 100,000 people in Copenhagen demanding clean energy policy and environmental protection for the earth, it’s people and it’s animals is hardly a few. The individuals who managed to make it there for the Conference were the representatives for the fastest growing grass roots movement alive today. When you actively participate with them this becomes much more evident.

Perhaps for 2010 we could all pledge to support an organization in our localities that is fighting to protect the planet, ourselves and the animals we share it with. Participation in the process of the government of our country and it’s policies doesn’t end when the polling booths close. For a better, fairer, safer world we vote everyday in the actions and decisions we make when we shop, when we eat and when we pay attention.

If you make any news years resolutions this year make it one that means a real investment in the future of our children and the earth. There are hundreds of groups out there that are active in the fight, highlighting local issues that have global significance. Pick one in your community and pledge to participate in continuing to make your voice heard. Also remember that in how you choose to live and consume everyday is the strongest vote that you can make for a greener future and a more balanced world.

Some organisations that need your support and involvement here in the Bay Area and internationally :

Rainforest Action Network,

Center for Biological Diversity

Mobilization for Climate Justice West

The Sierra Club

The Wilderness Society

Greenpeace

Good Planet

Circle of Blue

The Story of Stuff

West Counties Toxics Coaltion

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