Vivian

May 142013
 
Albright

Kerry Albright on Buffalo Creek, Logan County, WV. Photo by Kerry Albright.

On March 23, 2013, OVEC brought Kerry Albright, the Miracle Baby of Buffalo Creek, to the WV Culture Center to tell his story. Here’s Kerry’s story, in his own words.

First I’d like to thank Maria Gunnoe and the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition for asking me to come down from New York Ctiy to speak. Maria thought this would be a great idea because she, as well as 5.5 million other readers saw an article in the January edition of Readers’ Digest. The article was of course called “The Miracle Baby of Buffalo Creek.” Now Maria of course knew this story before the article, but millions of others had simply not heard it, or even of The Buffalo Creek Disaster. It happened in a time when we didn’t have the internet or mass media news.

As I got older and started to read all the books, documentaries and reports on the disaster I started to notice that my story was never there. I always found it odd because I was always being reminded about being The Miracle Baby a lot from the community. This disaster is in the minds of everyone on Buffalo Creek to this day. I recently got to speak to some of the women of Buffalo Creek who told me they still have night mares  and very vivid memories of that day.

But because of this recent notoriety in Readers Digest. It made me dwell on my story. Sometimes I feel like I’d told it so many times that I wasn’t for sure if even I was telling it correctly. So I had to go thru articles and ask family members to remind me of the specific details or if i was missing something. I was nine months old after all. I have no actual memories of that day. Thank God.

 All of my life I thought this story was about me. How they found me. How old I was, how I made it thru this. But the more and more I thought about it, the more I realized that this is a story not about me but a story about my father. Robert Albright.

Robert grew up with the definition of humble beginnings. My dad grew up as the son of Coal Miner and he had 11 brothers and sisters. He use to tell me stories about how he and his brother would be so hot in the summer that they would sleep under the house on the dirt simply because it was cooler. He never really seemed to complain about his childhood to me. He just kinda told me that’s the way it was. He was really proud of one moment though. That was the day that he and his brothers saved up all of their money from doing odd jobs around the camp and actually saved up to buy their Mom a refrigerator. Not a new refrigerator but a frig. I was young when he told me that story; I wish I would have asked what they were doing without one. I also had one rule growing up and that was to turn the overhead light off in the living room. This was because they didn’t have any light covers in their home and it was just one bright bulb hanging from the ceiling that hurt his eyes. So only lamps were allowed in the living room.

He went to school and was happy until he reached 6th grade. He told me that it was too embarrassing to go each day because he only had one outfit. He said “I didn’t have no clothes decent to wear anyway.”  After school he’d race home with his brothers because who ever got home first got to wear the one pair of jeans they had for the entire family, of ELEVEN. So for school….he simply quit. Now, I always found this story to be odd because my father always wore the same exact outfit everyday anyway. Seriously, at the end of each day he would take his outfit off and neatly place or hang it up. Then wake up and put it right back on. I guess it’s different when you have that choice.

My dad knew poverty and swore that he would do better for his family when he had one. So he became a coal miner and started off not really knowing anything in 1942 making very little but he worked very hard and became one of their best electricians. By 1972 he was making $42.80 a day and he could work as much overtime as he wanted.

He married a beautiful woman named Sylvia Bailey and they had two sons named Steve and Terry. Steve was a very talented saxophone player who had received a scholarship at a University.  Terry… well, let’s say he was the rebel in the family. To give an example of his rebelliousness I was told by a very special girl in his life that for today I will call Peggy Sparks Browning. Well, Peggy told me that he had an old truck and on the side of it he had put…. “Don’t laugh! Your daughters in here!” So…That was Terry.

Terry was later drafted into The Vietnam War. He did NOT want to go. This rebel was not happy about it. At one point he even wanted to run away to Canada. But a lot of people thought the army was going to be a good thing for this rebel. Because he needed some discipline and The United States army was good for that. Terry kept fighting it though, and threatening CANADA. My dad finally sat him down one day and told him he was going to the army because it was the right thing to do. So finally this rebel bowed down and listened to the words of his father. Even though terry knew in his heart that he wouldn’t return. When I say he knew, several people have told me that he seriously knew this. It wasn’t the fear of going. It was the fear of not coming back.

Terry was murdered in Vietnam by a fellow soldier and rather than recall what I was told I would like to read to you a letter that was sent to me a few years ago by Terry’s best friend in the Army. The man who stood beside him as he was murdered. This is Rudy’s letter to me.

That isn’t quite right, here is what happened.

The platoon was stopped to do some maintenance on our vehicles. Terry and I were working on our tank and decided to go to the road where some Vietnamese girls were selling beer and soda pop and get us something to drink. Terry was in country before I was so I kind of picked him as my teacher to show me the ropes. I was in country for only four months at the time. Anyway we walked to the road and left our rifles at the tank because it was supposed to be fairly secure where we were. We were talking to one of the girls when she gave Terry a bright yellow towel, which we thought was pretty cool being we live in a world of OD GREEN. Shortly after a GI came up to me and Terry and told Terry he wanted the towel. Terry told him no and we went back to talking. The  GI cussed at Terry and Terry told in no again with a few cuss words of his own. The GI then told Terry to give him the towel or he would blow him away. Being that term was used every day we didn’t pay it any mind and told him to get screwed and went back talking to the girl. The GI then selected auto and his M 16 and fired several rounds into Terry. I watched Terry fall and the GI then turned the rifle on me and said “you are his friend you’re next”. I don’t know what I said to the guy but he didn’t shoot me. I don’t know what happened after that, I can’t remember how or who stopped him no matter how much I try. I feel I should have done something to stop it. I am sorry. Terry was a good man and didn’t deserve to die like that.

Rudy G. Morris

The army actually did inform my family of this story. There was no cover up or conspiracy and Terry’s death was listed as a homicide.

Needless to say this devastated my father and he never really got over the fact that it was his demands, as his father, that he went. I remember every year on Terry’s birthday I could see my dad staring blankly at the floor. I could see he was concerned but as a child I didn’t quite understand those emotions just yet. But he’s always pause from his stare and look at me and say…ya know…He wanted to go to Canada.

After Terry’s death it was brought to my Mom and Dad’s attention that a cousin was pregnant and had decided that she was not going to be able to care for the child. Robert and Sylvia had always wanted and third child and this might be a good time for the addition. So I was adopted and Named Kerry, after my brother Terry. My dad told me that they had signed the adoption papers before I was born. He said. So no matter what you came out looking like, I was going to have to take you. Thanks Dad.

As a baby, from what I have heard, I was really cute. I was just this perfect little blonde angel that was sent from the heavens. They were obsessed over me. Even Steve, The 17 year old son would carry me around and take me everywhere and show me off as his baby brother.

Everything was getting better and life was slowly coming back from the shock of Terry’s death. Steve had received a scholarship for his ability to play tenor sax. He was very excited to be attending a concert at the college but unfortunately it had rained so hard the past few days that they decided that it wasn’t safe to go. So, no big deal, they decided to just stay home and have a family night.

Then they heard car horns blowing and people screaming. Steve ran outside to investigate only to find a 20 foot wall of black water coming directly at him. Now, I’d like to stop for a moment and just point something out. Just 5 seconds ago I was talking to you about how my brother was on a scholarship for college, My Mom and Dad were slowly recovering from Terry’s death and they had this wonderful new bundle of joy in their lives, me. Then in the blinking of an eye life changed. It changed because this is what happens when a dam breaks. When a dam breaks and you basically live in its path you don’t get to make a quick call or grab a bag. You do the ONLY thing you can do and that’s RUN.

This is exactly what my mom and brother did. They were running with me to get to higher ground on the mountain side. Some people had already made it and they were screaming for my family to make it too. The beginning of the wave of water had risen above their ankles and they could no longer pick their feet up.  The force of the water itself and the fact that the water was a black sludge created suction and made it difficult to lift their feet. They knew they were not going to make it. There was no time left. So without hesitation in a last moment effort they counted to three and threw me at nine months old as far as they could to the mountainside. Even with every ounce of life they had left it still was not enough to get me to safety and the water took all three us with it. This is how I lost my mother and brother.

After I was separated from them, it was just me, the millions of gallons of black muddy water that carried me and God. I’m nine months old and being drug away by a tsunami of chemicals, debris and negligence. The raging water was so powerful that it would pick up houses and crush them. Some people could be seen literally riding on the tops of their homes as the water took them away.

After the wall of water had passed and the ground could be seen again the people of Buffalo Creek immediately started to look for survivors. But they didn’t expect to find anyone because who could survive a disaster that crushed your home, carried your car away and left an entire community covered in a black chemical based sludge.

But they looked anyway. It was the preacher and his son, the Vanovers. As they were wading thru the filth. The son told his father that he thought he heard a baby cry. They thought that there’s no way a baby could have survived this. It must have been the cry of an animal. But they looked anyway. Then they saw what appeared to be the leg of a baby doll sticking out of the mud. They grabbed the dolls leg and pull it out from underneath thick mud. They didn’t pull out a doll. They pulled out a nine month old baby and they found that baby because they looked anyway.

If there is anyone that has set an example in my life on how to walk in blind faith it was the Vanovers. They walked blindly and yet they were guided. But I’m by no means safe yet. They saw that my mouth was packed with mud so I had no way to breathe. They immediately carried me to Catherine Gent who just happen to be there and just happen to be a nurse. So she immediately took me from their arms and started forcefully clearing my throat. I had the privilege of speaking to Catherine a few months ago at her home and I got hear her tell me the story directly. She was so sweet and so kind at 92 years old but when she got to the part of the story where she took me from their arms a new person emerged. Her voice deepened.

She said, I took you and started getting everything out of your mouth. I had to force my two fingers down your throat and i just kept pulling out what looked like oily seaweed. It was just strings and string of junk. I have no clue what that actually was. After that she had to make a bandage from bed sheets to hold my right leg on. She said the debris had cut it down to the bone and it looked like a piece of butchered meat. Plus she was very worried because thru all of this I never made one sound. I never even cried. I just quietly laid there as she worked on me. She never even knew who I was because I was covered in that black oil and unrecognizable. Even though I was her 1st cousin’s child.

Now my Dad just happened to be working the Hoot Owl shift when all of this took place. he told me he was about a mile down in that hole and was riding a belt out when all of the sudden the power went out. He was confused because he didn’t hear anything that suggested that there was a problem. But he felt he needed to go ahead and crawl the rest of the way out the hole himself.

When he reached the top he saw the confusion and panic from people. He knew what had happened and he knew the rest of his life that he had worked so hard for was most likely gone as well. He had just lost Terry in Vietnam and now he’s lost his entire family. He feels like he’s lost it all but still, he climbed over a mountain to get where his home and family once stood.”

When he finally got there what he saw was nothing. There was nothing there.  But in that nothingness he still asked…Has anyone seen my family? No one had an answer but a neighbor finally said, I think your baby may be alive. But since I was still covered in that thick sludge, no one could identify me. He finally made it over to the small room I was in and saw me in the arms of my Aunt Patty. She said “Robert, I can’t get him to cry and I’m still trying to get this black stuff out of his mouth.” That’s when my dad, without saying a word , leaned over and gently picked me up and softly kissed my cheek. That’s when I started wailing because I knew I was safe in the arms of my Father.

So we got into my Uncle Larry’s truck and he had went ahead and created a road for us to travel on. He got us as far down the holler as he could till I was put into an emergency vehicle that got me to the hospital where they finally could perform surgery to fix my partially severed leg and to clean my body so the sludge chemicals that were already going thru my bloodstream wouldn’t make it worse. I looked like I was in an oil spill. It took them three days to complete the work on me and my father never left my side. Not even for a moment. Not even to change out of his filthy work clothes. He simply chose to wait.

A few days later my dad went to the make-shift morgue at South Man Grade School to identify the bodies of my mother and brother. They were found 800 yards from our home. We moved into a FEMA trailer and lived in Accoville Hollow till I was almost 5. That’s when he decided to take that trailer and place it exactly where our house once stood. He said… I was born and raised here and I will die here.

My father never returned to the mines after that day. He decided that he was going to raise me by himself and he was going to be just fine doing it. He later told me. I had to learn to cook, how to clean, how to sew….I even had to learn how to rock you to sleep at night. So in 1972 my father became a single parent stay at home Dad and he was proud of his new found domestic skills. Later on people started to ask him why he hadn’t re married and he always had a kind answer. Then one day someone asked that question and I guess it rubbed him the wrong way because this new breath had gone into his body that I had not previously seen. He looked her dead in the eye and said, Because I don’t want someone coming into my home that I’ve built and trying to tell me how I should live my life and I definitely don’t want someone coming in here telling Kerry how he should live his. That person never asked that question again. Later on he told me in his soft spoken voice. You can be whoever you want to be and you can do whatever you want to do.

 

 

Feb 142013
 
OVEC’s Maria Gunnoe with Daryl Hannah at the F13 rally. Photo by the Sierra Club’s Mary Anne Hitt

OVEC’s Maria Gunnoe
with Daryl Hannah at the F13 rally.
Photo by the Sierra Club’s Mary Anne Hitt

OVEC's Maria Gunnoe and 350.org's Bill McKibben at the F13 rally. Photo by the Sierra Club's Mary Anne Hitt.

OVEC’s Maria Gunnoe
and 350.org’s Bill McKibben at the F13 rally.
Photo by the Sierra Club’s Mary Anne Hitt

Several OVEC members and staff are heading to Washington D.C. for the largest climate rally in history, happening this Sunday, February 17. If you can’t join us in person, please join the rally online. Hashtags in use for the rally include #forwardonclimate, #f17. With your tweets please include #(your zip code), so we get a view of the support from our area. OVEC will be trying to tweet from the event. Follow OVEC here and me here.

In a lead-in event to the rally, OVEC organizer Maria Gunnoe was among 48 people arrested outside the White House yesterday. Their focus was on the Keystone tar sands pipeline and what approval of the pipeline will mean for the climate. As a follow up to that action, please call President Obama to tell him to reject Keystone XL.

Like tar sands extraction, mountaintop removal is climate ground zero. Here’s Maria’s statement from yesterday:

President Obama must end mountaintop removal coal mining. Coal kills from the cradle to the grave. It’s a climate catastrophe and a personal one. We in Appalachia know firsthand what it means when the coal industry moves in and takes over your community. Energy companies and government agencies uproot and pollute the land, air and water that sustains all our lives, with energy as their excuse. This simply is not an acceptable plan for our children’s future. We deserve a healthy energy plan. One that ends mountaintop removal coal mining and its deadly impacts on Appalachian people. No one should have to die for electricity in America.

We’ve collected links to many of the news stories generated from yesterday’s action here (look for the tornado and fist icons).

It’s interesting that these arrests were happening the very day that, 100 years ago, Mother Jones was arrested in Charleston, W.Va. Her arrest helped bring national attention to the plight of coal miners’ working conditions.

Meanwhile, on this St. Valentine’s Day, if you aren’t already in Kentucky for I Love Mountains Day, show your love by joining the event online.

Also, show Maria a little love by helping to garner as many signatures as you can ASAP on her petition here. The deadline for the petition is tomorrow.

Dec 212012
 
I often sought advice from Joan. She opened doors on Capitol Hill for groups like OVEC.  She helped us get our stories to legislators, helped them introduce legislation that would protect our health, our water, our mountains. She helped us get our stories to regulators and she spearheaded efforts at Earthjustice aimed at making regulators enforce laws already written, laws that were supposed to be protecting our health, our water and out mountains.Joan wasn’t just a central figure in the movement to protect Appalachian’s health and future by ending mountaintop removal. She was a clean water advocate for communities nationwide.  Air breathers and water drinkers everywhere are better off because of her intelligence, the network of connections she built, her tenacity and her fearlessness.Joan Mulhern died December 19, 2012 after a long illness.

Joan, thank you for your work. Thank you for you friendship. Thank you for your heart.  Why do you have to go so soon?

On March 30, 2004, in front of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Joan Mulhern of Earthjustice (at the podium) opens a press conference she arranged. Among the speakers where OVEC organizer Maria Gunnoe, Coal River Mountain Watch’s Mary Miller, West Virginia Highland Conservancy’s Cindy Rank and Robert Kennedy, Jr.

On March 30, 2004, in front of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Joan Mulhern of Earthjustice (at the podium) opens a press conference she arranged. Among the speakers where OVEC organizer Maria Gunnoe, Coal River Mountain Watch’s Mary Miller, West Virginia Highland Conservancy’s Cindy Rank and Robert Kennedy, Jr.

Dec 182012
 
If you follow coal-related news in West Virginia, then you know about the tragic November 30 coal sludge impoundment failure that claimed the life of a bulldozer operator at a Harrison County, W.Va. coal prep plant.You may also know that OVEC and Coal River Mountain Watch have been working together for years on our Sludge Safety Project, working on health and safety issues surrounding coal sludge injection and coal slurry impoundments. Watchdogging government agencies to make certain they are enforcing laws written to protect workers and communities is part of SSP’s mission.

CRMW’s super-watchdog Rob Goodwin contacted me (note that I was Rob’s second choice for photographer, since most-excellent photographer Paul Corbit Brown was unavailable) to see if I could join him on a flyover of the impoundment to take photographs of the impoundment failure site, photos that will be available to anyone trying to answer questions such as what happened and what other dangers may exist for workers and those living nearby.

Weather and schedules conspired to keep us out of the sky until the afternoon of Friday, December 14 when we were able to board a SouthWings plane in Charleston to head north.

It was a sad, somber flight. The bulldozer operator’s body was still trapped in the impoundment. It was terrifying to imagine what he went through, what his family is still going through. We later learned that just hours after our flight, the body of Markel J. Koon was finally brought to the surface of the impoundment.

Something else we saw from the air added to our somber feelings. For all of us on board, it was our first time seeing some of the impacts of Marcellus Shale gas extraction and processing from the air. We flew over just a couple of the sites that WV Host Farms, the Doddridge County Watershed Association and others had suggested we photograph. (Photos from that part of the flyover will appear in another blog posting.)

Once we were back in the airport, TVs were flashing news of what had happened at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT.

It was too much to take in one day.

Below are some photos from the first part of the flyover. Please sign this petition asking President Obama for a moratorium on faulty coal waste dam construction. And here’s a petition to President Obama about the need to talk about gun control.

CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va. Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SoouthWings.org.

CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va. Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SoouthWings.org.

Dwellings near the coal sludge impoundment at CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va. Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SouthWings.org.

Dwellings near the coal sludge impoundment at CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va.
Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SouthWings.org.

Note the failed area on the coal sludge impoundment at CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va. Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SouthWings.org.

Note the failed area on the coal sludge impoundment at CONSOL Energy’s Robinson Run complex in Harrison County, W.Va.
Photo by Vivian Stockman, www.ohvec.org. Flyover courtesy SouthWings.org.

 Posted by at 2:19 pm
Sep 092012
 

September 19 Update: Oct. 14 event celebrating Larry Gibson

Public memorial scheduled for activist Larry Gibson

From September 9:  We are in shock, mourning the passing today of Keeper of the Mountains Larry Gibson. We are holding his wife, daughter and sons close to our hearts. Update: Read some of his daughter’s thoughts here: Prominent W.Va. environmental activist Gibson dead at 66.  Also see: Anti-mountaintop-removal activist Larry Gibson dies.

Larry Gibson was an OVEC board member for more than a decade. We have so many memories.  The Walk for  the Mountains… the tens of thousands of students he inspired… the first introduction to mountaintop removal for so many of us… the first national news story where Larry took Penny Loeb of  U.S. News and World Report up to Kayford… so much more…

Here’s a notice from Keeper of the Mountains:

Larry Gibson, long-time environmental activist, died of a heart attack Sunday, September 10, while working on Kayford Mountain, the family home in Raleigh County which he spent the last decades of his life protecting from the coal mining practice known as mountaintop removal.

Kayford was the site of Larry’s birth, the final resting place of 300 ancestors stretching back to the 18th century, and the site of Larry’s annual 4th of July festival celebrating life in the mountains. As part of his effort to preserve the mountains, Larry traveled across the country, to schools, churches and a wide range of public gatherings where he spread his simple gospel about the mountains:  “Love em or leave em; just don’t destroy em.”

A private funeral is planned, and Larry’s family has requested that persons wishing to express condolences make donations to Keeper of the Mountains Foundation, which Larry founded in 2004 to support mountain communities.  A public memorial service will be announced at a later time.  Larry is survived by his wife, Carol, two sons Cameron and Larry, Jr. and his daughter, Victoria.  He was sixty-six years old.

Photos: Larry  in action on Kayford Mountian, taken by Vivian Stockman.

Aug 312012
 

Pick up the current (Sept. 10) issue of People magazine. “The Naughty Prince” is the cover story, but make your way to page 71 for a four-page story on OVEC’s work in Twilight, W.Va.

“Time is running out to keep Twilight, W.Va., from being lost to an extreme coal-mining process, but Maria Gunnoe is trying,” writes Kurt Pitzer.

 

A final aerial view of Lindytown, now gone. We are fighting to keep Twilight from the same fate. Photo by Vivian Stockman, flyover courtesy SouthWings.

Jul 102012
 

A guest blog by OVEC membership committee member Sylvia Arthur

A good website for finding out about elected representatives is Open Congress. Open Congress is a project of the Participatory Politics Foundation, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization that builds free and open-source software for civic engagement. The Sunlight Foundation, also a non-profit organization, is the founding and primary supporter of Open Congress. Open Congress brings together official government data with news coverage, blog posts, public comments, and more to give you the real story behind what’s happening in Congress.

If you don’t already know who represents you in Congress, you can look them up by your zip code. Note: If you live in a split district you should put in your full address whenever possible. On the pages of your Senators and Representatives, you can look through their full voting history, their recently sponsored bills, and see who made their campaign contributions. By subscribing to their RSS feeds, you can easily keep track of your representative’s latest votes and sponsored legislation.

Open Congress wants to help people to lobby more effectively. On the Issues page, you can look back through the results of major votes on issues you care about. You can identify prominent sponsors of legislation, as well as “swing” votes in Congress — members of Congress who tipped the balance in close votes. This makes it possible to better focus your lobbying efforts, as well as refer to specific bills and votes, when you call or write to your members of Congress. Open Congress has good information. It is easy to find what you are looking for. You can write representatives directly from the site

GovTrack.us is a tool created by Civic Impulse, LLC to help the public research and follow legislation in the United States Congress and the state legislatures. Launched in 2004, initially as a hobby, its goal is to promote and innovate government transparency, civic engagement and civic education. It has since gone on to win multiple awards for online education. You can use their congressional directory to research and track your current congress persons. They carry similar information like vote history, sponsored bills and a money trail. Information also includes how far to the left or right they are, relative to everyone else in Congress and the committees they sit on. They will have redistricting maps available in January of 2013.

Some related websites to research the issues

If you are inspired to write to your representative you might suddenly realize, (as you finally sit down to do it) that you have an opinion, but not many facts. The OVEC website is full of helpful articles and information that can help “back you up” as you attempt to contribute and educate your legislators. They are very busy and you would be surprised at what they don’t know. Your letter can make a lot of difference to how they might vote on an issue. Here are two sites that can also help you get your facts straight and build your case.

ProCon.org is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit public charity that has no government affiliations of any kind. ProCon.org promotes critical thinking, education, and informed citizenship by presenting controversial issues in a straightforward, nonpartisan, primarily pro-con format. It’s great to see issues broken down into a few brief statements. One problem however, is that all pros and cons are not equal. ProCon.org does have a system for rating the quality of each side. But, for instance, we are well aware of the recent million dollar efforts to deny or rebut climate change. The actual debate about climate change happened over the past 40 years or so and consensus has been reached. As a matter of fact the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences released reports concluding that the build-up of carbon dioxide and other “greenhouse gases” in the Earth’s atmosphere will likely lead to global warming in 1983. So, the danger is that one can manufacture controversy where there is none and receive equal standing in a pro-con presentation.

A second good spot I found is actually a homework help site. This web page was created to meet the needs of Multnomah County Oregon middle and high school students researching current social issues from multiple perspectives. Works for me!  Click here. If this link does not work you can click here, then click on the Research tab on the menu on the top of home page, then click “Homework web sites” on the research page. From there choose “social issues”.

Have you ever wondered where our legislators get their information from? I mean besides the high powered lobbyists? Go to: Open CRS Congressional Research Service Reports for the People. Congressional Research Service (CRS) reports are provided to members of Congress for background information on a number of issues. Open CRS is a project of the Center for Democracy & Technology. Their mission is to provide citizens access to CRS Reports that are already in the public domain and they encourage Congress to provide public access to all CRS Reports. You can search by subject. This site is very useful because you can see what information is actually being provided to congresspersons. Some states also have public access to the information provided to legislators.