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The Moviegoer

Charles Lambert was on a trip to Hollywood in 1956 when he charted one of his life’s many courses.

The 13-year-old kid got the notion to see every movie that had earned an Oscar in six major categories: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Actress, and Best Supporting Actor and Actress. The next year, he contacted the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which sent him a comprehensive list of all winners in those categories. Lambert was on his way.

“I just started crossing off films. It’s taken over 50 years,” said Lambert, who has seen over 1,300 films and wrote a book about his adventures as a moviegoer, Capturing the Reel World. He will discuss and sign copies of his book at the Woman’s Exchange on August 9th.

Lambert, who worked for 20 years as an attorney for the U.S. Treasury, has seen some changes in the movie experience.

“When I was a kid in the Highland Heights area of Memphis, all the kids walked through a creek to get to the Bristol Theater on Summer. It’s a motorcycle shop now, but you can tell it was a theater. We paid a dime. A first run movie downtown might cost 40 cents. Now, you just shut your eyes and hand over your money.”

Lambert was committed the project, no matter the circumstances. “I saw films projected onto bed sheets in battlfields,” Lambert says of his days in Vietnam.

He benefited from the archival movement and befriended several institutes, including the British Film Institute, Eastman House, and the Library of Congress.

Another parallel feat was his ability to obsess on this and remain married. “She’s put up with it for 44 years,” Lambert said.

Charles Lambert signs Capturing the Reel World at the Woman’s Exchange (88 Racine), Thursday, August 9th, 11 A.M.-1 P.M.

Capturing the Reel World is available at the Booksellers at Laurelwood.

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Food & Wine Food & Drink

Grills! Grills! Grills!

Please stop talking about your obnoxiously trendy barbecue grill. How many parties must you ruin prattling endlessly about cooking steaks at the surface temperature of the sun on a thousand-dollar grill?

A) Nobody cares.

B) We are here to help.

This is Memphis. We were famous for smoking and grilling way before you bought that thing and set upon your campaign of party-conversation destruction. Get a grill that you can be proud of, something everyone will want to hear about because it’s like Memphis: funky and fascinating.

The source of this tirade is an old legend: a Sasquatch-like myth of a grill that is periodically seen around eastern Arkansas. Some say it washed out of the river — part river buoy, part kid-drawn military ordnance. They say it was cut up in a farm shop and set onto wheels. It became the grill/smoker of legend before it wandered west into the Delta never to be seen again.

This mythic river-buoy grill will set your mind free from the limitations of propane tanks, stainless steel, payment plans, and all of the other things that can make your barbecue taste like Nashville sounds: all wrong.

The first thing you should do is look into the grills sold at Kingsbury Career Technology Center on North Graham. James Everett has taught metal shop at Kingsbury for 15 years. He has two classes of 18 kids every day.

“We’ll make them for anyone who would like them,” Everett says. “We use the funds for materials and going to field trips and welding competitions.

“I’ll have about five kids on a grill, depending on the size. We sell between five and eight per semester through word of mouth from students’ parents and teachers.

“This one we also made,” Everett says with a spark of pride. “The plumbers were taking two sinks out of that bathroom and they gave me these.”

Then it dawns on me what I’m looking at: two school-size stainless-steel sinks (each a bulbous half-circle) stacked and hinged along the flat (wall) side and set on a stand with wheels. The grill has a striking symmetry and clean, utilitarian lines. You could see it being Steve Jobs’ grill.

“They are stainless steel and hold the heat for a long time. We use it all the time on campus,” Everett says.

“A lot of the kids leave here and go to Tennessee Tech for higher education and some of them just get jobs,” Everett says before pausing to sort of heckle the premise of this article: “But I don’t know that any of them go on to work making grills.”

For information on Kingsbury grills, call 416-6000.

One exception to this no-jobs-in-grills travesty can be found at DJ’s Welding. If you have not seen the sign where Tillman dead-ends into Summer, you are a defective Memphian. DJ’s Welding brims with custom-made grills and the enthusiasm of owner Dwayne Johnson. They also sell tamales.

“I’m from this neighborhood,” DJ says. He hopes to buy the corner building soon and to give something back to the kids he sees every day.

He is a second-generation metal worker and went to Tennessee Tech.

“My uncle Ezell Matthews was an artist. He worked at Pickle Ornamental Iron.”

Johnson’s enthusiasm for his work and his neighborhood runs over as we look at photos of a grill that he set into the body of a race car for a Memphis in May contestant. He points to a recent hire from Tennessee Tech.

“I’m focused on this neighborhood; on how to build it up and make it better. It’s my way of giving back. So students will have something else to do and somewhere to go.”

DJ’s grills start at $60 for a personal size and run up to the 55-gallon model at $99.99. They also do custom work.

“Whatever you can come up with,” Johnson says.

DJ’s Welding, 2992 Summer (314-6029)

This leaves option three. You must be this cool to ride: Make your own grill.

Drumco, an “Earth minded company” on Tulane Road, will sell you a locally reconditioned barrel for under $25 and a brand-spanking new food-grade model for under $70.

Southern Steel Supply on North Dunlap has just about every part you would need. You can get a plasma cutter and welding kit at Northern Tool on Summer.

Soon, you will be the proud owner of a locally sourced artifact of your new, improved, hog-smoking, life-winning self. Of course, that means taking it out for a strut with some wheels and a trailer hitch. Go to www.tn.gov and search for “homemade trailer.” Our state government is all over this idea and has posted the requirements to hook up what you got and keep it off the impound lot.

Drumco, 3299 Tulane (396-6484)

Then there is the Olympiad of custom grillery. And where in the world might that take place? The National Ornamental Metal Museum. The museum’s bi-annual Art Cooker event is where the masters of the art meet to show cookers/works of art and then hold a barbecue. Last year’s Art Cooker show included the infamous We’re Having a Tea Parody, J. Taylor Wallace’s cooker shaped like an enormous Sarah Palin head. This and other designs boggle the mind and seal in the juices.

Noah Kirby, who teaches sculpture at Washington University in St. Louis, participated in the second Art Cooker and thinks custom cookers are an extension of the cooking and of the culture of food.

“This takes the grill away from pure function,” Kirby says. “It makes a totem of it: a sacred site, a communal site. It’s something interesting to stand around. Even if it’s just sitting in the yard, it’s a memory of that gathering.”

Kirby smoked a turkey in a cannon and shot it out “like a pop gun” onto a platter at the second Art Cooker contest.

The next Art Cooker is set for May 2013.

Just roll that store-bought grill to the street and be done with it. Welcome to Memphis.

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Music Music Features

Double Decker Fest

The Beale Street Music Fest is still a week away, but if you need to work your way up to the big one, you can’t do better for a more leisurely, outdoor music festival than Oxford’s annual Double Decker Festival this weekend.

The 17th annual festival starts with a ticketed concert Friday night and unfolds Saturday with a free all-day blend of art, food, family activities, and music on two stages.

A strong musical lineup pairs Floridian indie-folk band Iron & Wine with Rhode Island’s Deer Tick on Friday. With grunge-Dylan singer-songwriter John McCauley leading a particularly adept roots-rock band, Deer Tick are one of the best entities on the indie scene’s bar-band circuit over the past few years, and their last album, Divine Providence, found the sweet spot amid fake country, garage-y post-punk, and Stones strut for an album that landed on my own 2011 Top Ten.

The Saturday lineup boasts some early Memphis action with Star & Micey and Grace Askew and concludes with an ace Southern music trifecta: Drive-By Truckers’ Patterson Hood in solo form, New Orleans legends the Meters, and Stax great Mavis Staples.

Full main stage lineups:

Friday, April 27th

7 p.m. – Charlie Mars

8:30 p.m. – Deer Tick

10 p.m. – Iron & Wine

Saturday, April 28th

10 a.m. – Rooster Blues

11:30 a.m. – Star & Micey

1 p.m. – Grace Askew

2:30 p.m. – Ponderosa

4 p.m. – George McConnell & the Nonchalants

5:30 p.m. – Patterson Hood

7 p.m. – Funky Meters

9 p.m. – Mavis Staples

For more info, see doubledeckerfestival.com.

Model Citizen at the Hi-Toné

Matt Patton can’t do everything at once.

“I like to keep busy,” Patton says from his home in Water Valley, Mississippi. Patton’s Model Citizen opens for Memphis’ Japanese cousins Guitar Wolf at the Hi-Tone Café this week.

Patton formed Model Citizen in Jasper, Alabama, in 1995 after high school. The punkish power trio is rhythmically charged and compressed like the Stooges. But Patton brings a wide range of musical experience that distinguishes Model Citizen: The guitars have more to say than most proto-punkers due to Patton’s country soulfulness. Nothing is over-distorted and papery, a common deal-breaker for this genre. Since 2000, drummer Mike Gaut has shaped the band by turning the kit into athletic performance art. Gaut alone is worth the cover charge.

Patton has a way of staying in the middle of things. A Birmingham analog to Memphis’ Scott Bomar, he’s worked up sets with two classic-era Birmingham soul artists, Ralph “Soul” Jackson and Roscoe Robinson. He’s also done side work for Eddie Bo, Alex Chilton, and Fat Possum blues find Paul “Wine” Jones.

Patton’s other gig, the Dexateens, is a lively mix of Southern vernaculars and was signed to Estrus Records in 2004.

“That was an absolute dream come true,” Patton says. “So, Dexateens became my main focus for a while. Model Citizen travels at my pace, unfortunately.”

Model Citizen’s recordings reflect this benign neglect. In 2006, Model Citizen released Save It for the Camp Fire on Italian indie Nicotine Records. That record failed to capture the magic fury of their live shows and felt like a forced studio record. All of this was improved on 2007’s The Inner Fool, which felt more organic and captured the energy generated in their performances. They are currently working on a new 7″ EP at Water Valley’s Dial Back Sound.

Model Citizen plays the Hi-Tone Café on Thursday, April 26th, with Guitar Wolf and Transistors. Doors open at 9 p.m. Admission is $13.

Categories
Food & Drink Hungry Memphis

Malia’s

malia_s.jpg

For the past few months, my commute has taken me by Malia’s, a food-truck operation on Lamar between Cleveland and Bellevue. It was hit or miss as far as them being there. But I had time to stop today and am glad I did.

Owner Gregory Graham is a barbecue scion. His grandfather owned Uncle Joe’s, a barbecue place at Third and Vance.

“He had a dynasty back in the day. Way back before my time and yours too,” said Graham, who is also an affiliate broker with Crye-Leike. (This begs the question about house hunting in a truck full of smoked meat. Where else but Memphis is this even a remote possibility?)

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Opinion Viewpoint

Dear Governor Haslam…

Recently, you blamed the media for the unfavorable attention being paid to the social agenda of your party. I have held my opinion of your administration mainly to myself. But you have crossed the line with this latest “move.” As a moderate conservative, I supported you during your campaign. There was a time when I thought you might stand up for the best interests of the state. That time has passed.

First of all, the legislature is objectively embarrassing. There is no positive way to spin hate. The party mantra of “job creation” not only rings hollow but plainly stinks when compared to the slate of social laws that are pitched every session. What sort of jobs are you people after? Inquisitors?

A man of your privilege should know that educated people who can be depended upon to solve critical problems in medical research, logistics, and higher management don’t respond well to xenophobia and witch-hunt politics. If you want the media to stop reporting this tomfoolery, then stand up for educated, well-mannered people who live here and who are horrified and ashamed by the backward and hateful agenda that apparently equates to success in our General Assembly.

You came into power touting your business background. But you seem unclear on the concept of “executive.” By promising to veto embarrassing, generally unconstitutional legislation, you could have sent a message to educated people who might invest here or move to Tennessee to do research at Vanderbilt or at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. These reckless, self-serving bills play well in the backwoods hollers of Tennessee. (The Daily Show likes them too.) But how many jobs do those people create? More than FedEx’s Fred Smith?

In fact, the recent snubbing of FedEx over the issue of guns in employers’ parking lots is a perfect example. A major employer in this state was effectively told to shut it by state senator Mae Beavers of Mt. Juliet. This makes a mockery of your jobs rhetoric.

Beavers is hardly alone in her humiliating dance in the court of the gun lobby. Educated people are quick to see the irony behind your party’s invocation of Christian morality in service to the false god of profit and the outright scourge of gun violence that destroys lives and families among our state’s poorest citizens. This makes a mockery of any claims to Christian values.

Anyone who has worked in management in white-collar industry knows that women and gay people are indispensable. This was once made very real to me when I was starting a business here. The potential partner in the concern was an older man, Southern and brusque. He asked me one day in talks, “What do you think of the gays?” As an open-minded child of the New South, I stalled and stuttered wondering what on earth was coming next, when he added, “If I could hire only gays, that’s what I would do. They are the best people I can find.” He employed many Tennesseans.

You have been made a fool of by Lieutenant Governor Ron Ramsey. Your nomination was a Pyrrhic victory. (Look it up.) The cost of your failure may very well be the ability to recruit people like Fred Smith (Yale ’66) to Tennessee. But speculation aside, you have definitely lost my support — just like John McCain did when he chose Sarah Palin as his running mate.

Until you stand up to it or openly acknowledge that your party’s agenda has become that of seeking lobbying money and riling up hatred, I will fail to take you or your party seriously. I sure as hell won’t become a Democrat, but I will hound superstition and political avarice at every turn, because educated people read this paper and others. Their voice deserves a place in our state. Tennessee is becoming a place where educated entrepreneurs and doctors of international renown would feel unwelcome.

Blame the media, do you? The media will have to speak to and for people like me until you decide to stand up for Tennessee — and for yourself.

Joe Boone, a Memphian and self-described “swing voter,” works as a Flyer copy editor.

Categories
Cover Feature News

An Unnatural State

Heber Springs, Arkansas, has been a recreation and retirement destination for Memphians since the 1960s. Located just 134 miles from the Bluff City, the mountains, the waters of Greer’s Ferry Lake, and the abundant trout on Little Red River are the basis not only of a tourism industry but the retirement plans of many Memphians.

“We call this Little Shelby County. Memphis is our main draw,” Heber Springs mayor Jackie McPherson says.

But now McPherson’s city sits at ground zero in a battle between two economic forces: On one side is a community built on natural beauty. On the other is the natural gas industry, an economic juggernaut that employs thousands and is a source of income to a historically poor region.

Maurice Lipsey, whose name will ring a dinner bell to Memphians who remember his family’s fish markets, owns Fat Possum Hollow, a 250-acre resort on the Little Red. His website touts its natural amenities (the river, trails, horses, hunting) and the luxury accommodations. It’s his home and his vocation.

“Most of my customers are from Memphis — I’d say 90 percent,” Lipsey says. “Most of the people who own property around here on the river are from Memphis. Myself included.”

Lipsey is among many here who see an industry of outsiders running rampant and jeopardizing the natural beauty and economic engine of the area.

“On my property, right across the street, they have fracked, drilled six wells,” Lipsey says. “They have started back up again for the last week, and 24 hours a day, seven days a week, they are bringing trucks in and out of there — at all hours of the night. You can’t sleep.”

The community

It can be said that the town of Heber Springs owes its existence to large-scale environmental exploitation. The dam impounds the Little Red River and creates Greer’s Ferry Lake, which provides hydroelectricity and drinking water for the region. The dam’s dedication ceremony was President John F. Kennedy’s last public appearance before his fatal appearance in Dallas in November 1963.

The power station was commissioned in 1964. The lake itself is an energy-production by-product. But since its creation, it has supported a local economy with incomparably clear water and a bounty of bass, walleye, and striped bass.

The Little Red River is managed for the 79 miles from the dam output to its confluence with the White River. Its cold, clear waters are a legendary draw for trout fishermen

Heber Springs lies on the eastern edge of the Fayetteville Shale, a “play” as the natural gas industry calls it. Heber Springs is merely a drop in a giant bucket into which the industry has poured more than $2 billion of investment since 2009. Despite a nosedive in natural gas prices, developments in extraction technologies have opened up reserves once thought unprofitable at much higher prices.

“We are very proud that they are here. Those are good-paying jobs,” McPherson says about the drilling companies.

The city of Heber Springs leased about 450 acres to Chesapeake Energy for an initial payment of just under $2 million and a 20 percent royalty on the gross income. The city used the funds to develop its most congested intersection.

“Now we have national chains looking at that intersection. Those are new retail businesses that pay taxes, increase employment, and it helps our traffic flow,” McPherson says. “The royalties should help us grow and invest without raising taxes.”

Similar benefits come to thousands of property owners who lease their mineral rights to drilling companies. The income was essential for some in this hardscrabble country. For others it was gravy on luxury property. Either way, few complained, initially.

“Originally it was manna from heaven. Those folks in those old rocky farms — they were happy,” Greg Seaton says. Seaton is a retired Little Rock native. He works as a fishing guide on the Little Red River.

The Commodity

Rising energy prices drove new techniques for natural gas extraction, particularly horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing. These opened up new plays, most importantly the Barnett Shale of Texas in 1999 and the Marcellus Shale in the northeast around 2005.

The Fayetteville Shale runs across Arkansas at depths from 1,500 to 6,500 feet and ranges in thickness from 50 to 325 feet. In the early 2000s, Southwestern Energy found similarities between the Barnett Shale and the Fayetteville Shale. This set off an oil rush throughout Arkansas. In 2004, there were 13 wells worth $640,000. By 2007, 603 wells produced gas valued at $651 million, according to a study done by the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Arkansas.

The economic benefits in that study were based on price estimates of around $6 per MMBtu (one million British Thermal Units). Prices peaked at more than $8 in 2008. The warm winter of 2011-2012 led to a glut in gas, with inventories 41 percent higher than last year. The average price for 2012 is estimated to be $3.17 per MMBtu by the Department of Energy.

“They continue to turn a profit even with low prices,” study author Kathy Deck says. “It still costs more money to invest, but the industry has gotten really good at identifying where to drill to get bang for the buck.”

But even at the low prices, the scale of activity is overwhelming. Chesapeake Energy sold its Fayetteville Shale holdings to BHP Billiton Petroleum in February 2011 for $4.75 billion.

The other major player in the area is Southwestern Energy, a conglomerate with subsidiary interests in exploration, extraction, and transportation. Southwestern spends $2.8 million per well and invested more than $2 billion in 2011 and 2012.

Both companies were asked to provide local sources that had found work with the industry. Calls and emails to Southwestern were not returned. BHP supplied a link to the 2008 study.

Natural gas drilling is a complex and expensive job involving several processes, including: exploration, obtaining mineral rights, installation of drilling equipment, drilling operations, extraction, field processing, gathering, and transportation.

“Fracking,” or hydraulic fracturing, involves millions of gallons of highly compressed fluids blasted into rock formations, creating fractures that allow natural gas to escape. The entire process can require three to five million gallons of fresh water.

The fluids are saline mixes and other chemicals, many of which are considered proprietary trade secrets. The fluids and the by-products of the gas extraction are collected in a pool and disposed of by four common methods: treating the water and returning it to surface water, injection into deep water formations, recycling, and even spreading onto roads for dust suppression.

The Problem

“The reason I enjoy owning property here is to enjoy fishing on the Little Red River,” says Jim Julian, a Little Rock native and former president of the Arkansas Bar Association.

“We are close enough to a rig that we can hear construction and the sound of the drilling at times. Those things are somewhat noisy. It depends on the time of day,” Julian says. “My concern is that the science of how this effects the habitat of the trout has not been done. They are taking water out, and it’s probably getting back in.”

The Arkansas Natural Resources Commission grants the permits required to get water from state waters for operations. In 2007, the commission received three requests to move water from rivers for use at other locations. The next year there were 121 requests, and the number has remained above 400 every year since 2009.

“You’ve got the road kicking up dust. In fact, when I drove over here, it looked like there was a fire burning. But it’s not a fire. It’s the dust from what they are doing over there right now,” Lipsey says.

This dust presents a second risk: sediment.

Clinton, Arkansas, in the more heavily exploited, adjacent Van Buren County, recently had its water supply tainted due flooding and sediment. While normal development creates sediment that impedes watersheds and changes the chemical make-up of aquatic habitats, the problem has dramatically increased as gas companies have cleared roads and “pads” covering several acres for operations.

“They started drilling about eight months ago, and that’s when I started discovering the methane in my water,” Lipsey says. He’s had to abandon his own well and have his property placed on the municipal water system.

Shale gas is typically comprised of over 90 percent methane.

Two studies have confirmed the role of drilling activities in the contamination of water wells. One by Duke University on drilling in the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that “methane concentrations in drinking-water wells increased with proximity to the nearest gas well” and were 17 times higher in extraction areas than in those without drilling activities.

An EPA study of water supplies in Pavillion, Wyoming, found methane, petroleum hydrocarbons, and other chemical compounds “consistent with migration from areas of gas production.” Although the levels were “below established health and safety standards,” the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services later reviewed the EPA’s data and advised the well owners to use alternate sources of water for “drinking and cooking, and ventilation when showering.”

“There may have been methane in the well, but it’s nothing like it is now,” Lipsey says. He worries that it will decrease the value of his property. “You’re going to have to disclose that you’ve got methane in your water well.”

Regulation

“We want local judges and politicians to think about the retirement and recreation,” Seaton says. “[The gas companies] had their guns drawn and their ducks in a row when they hit the state. They wanted to try to get as much done as possible before the agencies could act.”

The federal government granted the industry exemptions from the major regulatory acts including the Safe Drinking Water Act. That leaves the monitoring and rulemaking up to the state. The Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission and the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality regulate natural gas wells.

Shane E. Khoury is the deputy director and general counsel for the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission (AOGC). He thinks there is sufficient regulation.

“The Oil and Gas Commission is serious about doing all we can to ensure that drilling and fracking is done in a safe way in Arkansas. Although accidents may occur, we have passed many regulations to ensure that the practice in Arkansas is highly regulated in an effective manner,” Khoury wrote in an email.

AOCG has nine members and, by law, a majority of members must have experience in the development, production, or transportation of oil or gas.

“Drilling and/or ‘fracking’ does have a potential to cause contamination. I am not saying that issues didn’t arise or that they weren’t serious events. I am just saying that they are often taken out of context and reported as global problems for fracking everywhere,” Khoury wrote.

He points to shallow production wells in Wyoming and a blow-out on a Chesapeake site in Pennsylvania where fluids spilled or discharged onto the surface due to poor regulatory oversight.

“The state allowed frack flowback to be treated and released into streams and other surface waters. This same fresh water flowed downstream and was eventually used for drinking water. This issue was caused by surface discharge, not the fracking process.”

Khoury points to Arkansas regulations such as a moratorium on disposal wells following increased seismic activity, requiring additional seismic data for disposal wells. Arkansas is the only state to impose a statewide noise regulation and amended casing and construction requirements to protect water supplies.

Khoury notes that Arkansas is the second state to require the disclosure of chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing: “The reported fluids, additives, and/or chemical constituents are submitted to the AOGC under penalties of perjury.” However, the state regulation on fluids exempts any fluid declared a trade secret.

When Teresa Marks, director of the Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ), came into office in 2007, the department was overburdened. Seventeen regular water inspectors responded to complaints, in addition to regular duties including wastewater treatment and oversight of industry.

“They had a full plate without the burden of the Fayetteville Shale,” Marks says. ADEQ was overwhelmed by the number of complaints as the companies were laying the groundwork: making roads and constructing pads.

Help came, ironically enough, when the Arkansas Game and Wildlife Commission leased some its land for drilling and used a portion of the funds to underwrite four additional ADEQ inspectors and another supervisor dedicated to permitting and inspection duties.

Marks says industry has made efforts to clean and recycle water, something that was not done before. Sand mining (for use in the fluid mix), sediment, and air pollution are also concerns.

“It’s in the industry’s best interest not to have those fugitive emissions. They are very difficult to see. It would be nice to do more testing, especially with the compressor stations,” Marks says. She would like to do more data gathering and additional testing of ground water and adjacent waterways. While drilling has dropped off since Marks arrived, there is still concern about the disposal.

Treatment centers, where fluids are treated and released to local surface water, are regulated by ADEQ. Injection wells, which pump fluids deep into geological layers, are regulated by AOGC and ADEQ. Recycled fluids can be re-injected into wells as fracturing fluid. Recycling is not regulated by permit but is subject to AOGC rules. Spreading water on local roads for dust mitigation is unregulated unless it otherwise presents a threat to state waters.

Even the industry’s harshest critics concede that some dialogue has taken place.

“We are not at all in disagreement with ADEQ or ANR [Arkansas Natural Resources Commission]. They were overrun. But we need better regulations, and it has to come from the legislature,” Greg Seaton says. He has met with Southwestern, Chesapeake, and others. “They are taking notice. Some have been helpful. They have worked with us on best management practices. I don’t want to muddy that up.”

In 2011, Chesapeake Energy conducted tests on Greer’s Ferry Lake and set off a groundswell of community concern. The issue surrounded the Army Corps of Engineers Little Rock District’s release of the permit. The Corps has responsibility for Greer’s Ferry Lake.

“We appreciate people’s concerns, and we share those concerns. It is a possibility that a gas company could drill under the lake. The Corps of Engineers did not always buy the mineral rights,” says Laurie Driver of the Army Corps of Engineers.

Local attorney Richard H. Mays sued the Bureau of Land Management — which administers the mineral rights — along with the Forestry Service and the Corps of Engineers to place a moratorium on drilling under the lake and in the national forest until an environmental impact statement can be completed in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act.

“We are in the process of trying to settle. But I don’t think they have the leases issued. And I have a close relation with them, because I have sued them a lot,” Mays says.

Mays downplays the threat of drilling under the lake and sees drilling in the forest, threats to the Little Red River, and wastewater containment as more important threats.

“I don’t think there is immediate cause for concern,” he says of drilling under the lake. “There would be a public uproar.”

Mays’ concerns are for the river and the forest.

“It takes 2 to 3 million gallons of water per well. That’s taken out of the water cycle,” Mays says — adding that there is probably improper disposal going on and that some companies are probably getting away with it.

“I don’t have much confidence in the regulators, because they don’t have enough people to do it.”

Most here will have to live with the bargain that the industry will get its way until something catastrophic happens. If nothing catastrophic happens, the industry will call their operations a success. Whatever the final outcome, the anxiety of the risk and the day-to-day burden of trucks, dust, and noise all take their toll on the notion of a placid, secure retirement or a livelihood based on natural settings.

“This property is in jeopardy because of what they are doing,” Lipsey says. “This is a resort property, where people come to get away from the rigors of, say, Memphis, Tennessee.”

Additional Reading:

Links

Maps of drilling sites from the Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission (Requires Google Earth): http://www.aogc.state.ar.us/Maps.htm

Photos of drilling near Greer’s Ferry Lake: http://gotowebbuilder.com/savegreersferrylake/photo-gallery.html

The Economic Impact of the Oil and Gas Industry in Arkansas: http://cber.uark.edu/369.asp

U.S. Energy Information Agency’s natural gas page: http://205.254.135.7/naturalgas/

Arkansas Department of Environmental Quality: http://www.adeq.state.ar.us/

EPA study on hydraulic fracturing and drinking water: http://www.epa.gov/hfstudy/

Duke University study on methane: http://www.biology.duke.edu/jackson/pnas2011.pdf http://www.nicholas.duke.edu/cgc/

EPA study on Pavillion, Wyoming:
http://www.epa.gov/region8/superfund/wy/pavillion/index.html

Army Corps of Engineers Press Release:
http://www.swl.usace.army.mil/news&info/news/2011/008-11.html

BHP Billiton:

http://www.bhpbilliton.com/home/Pages/default.aspx

Southwestern Energy:

http://www.swn.com/Pages/default.aspx

Categories
News

The Commercial App

The Commercial App?

Oedipus, the Theban king, who believed in himself with such vigor only to fall so far, is an apt metaphor for large media companies that have chased digital dreams in the face of economic ruin. The Commercial Appeal announced layoffs last week, just months after launching its mobile app. The big daily seems to be executing the role of Sophocles’ monarch.

There is no way around the competitive challenges facing the newspaper industry. Information, once at a premium, is now a commodity and smart consumers get it for free. Once, valuable journalism created two revenue sources for publishers: subscriptions and advertising. The availability of free information via the Internet has caused a destructive feedback loop in that revenue model: a fall in the number of subscribers, which then eroded revenues from the advertising side. Online advertising has always been more hat than cattle and never has come close to covering the spread from the losses in the two vital revenue streams. Big problem.

But what does a ruler, or publisher, do? It helps to think like an investor.

Every investor constantly faces two options: invest or don’t invest. The publisher’s choice is to invest in new media or not invest. The latter has an obvious risk: The returns on the print publishing activities are going to continue to erode. Papers with fixed costs (such as giant headquarters and printing facilities) are put in a vise between falling revenues and costs that don’t fall (like leases and loans). Investment capital does not like this scenario. In fact, The New York Times is paying insane rates of interest to Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim, just to say afloat.

As for the former option: the investment in new media is expensive, and the revenues are not materializing to sufficiently cover those costs. But here’s the kicker: The expensive new investments are chimerical. The horde of free-information-seeking media consumers is fickle. People who think they can keep up have a bridge (or an app) to sell you. When did you last check your Myspace page?

Which brings me back to the CA and what is happening to Memphis’ largest pool of reporters: that is, the people who gather information that helps us participate in democracy.

The CA doubled down on the app. They put up a pay wall, requiring payment for their digital content. Scripps and CA management appear to be trying to solve the problem with an app. This is a poor city. I-whatevers are expensive. How can this be wise?

Full disclosure, I subscribe to the CA, wrote one story for them, and (ironically) applied for a job in the online division: There was a better candidate. No hard feelings. I prefer working at the Flyer for a million reasons.

But reading Mike Royko and “Bloom County” over breakfast every morning as a kid led to my career in journalism, as well as my passion for this city. Other kids liked football, I liked Lewis Grizzard and Perre Magness. Weird, I know. After moving back home to Memphis two years ago, I subscribed. Soon the papers started piling up. I convinced myself I was reading enough online, so I let the subscription go. Recently, I bowed to reality, got the Sunday-only subscription and opened my mind and wallet to the app. So I’ve earned the right to have my say in how the thing is run. I give a major damn about The Commercial Appeal and about the people who work there. That said, I am tremendously disappointed by the technology and appalled at its consequences.

The fundamental exercises of reporting and reader experience are placed in submission to gadgetry. It’s like GM stopped making cars and dedicated itself to Hello Kitty. Except way sadder and more detrimental to informed democracy in Memphis. In this app, we have a toy that society will soon abandon. Investors will eventually call this a sunk cost.

Those costs hurt Memphis. We need more Calkins and Beifuss, not digital bells and whistles. If the absentee parent company could give us more content from people with genuine insight into our local situation, people would respond. Maybe that’s not enough to save a big newspaper. But that choice beats a self-destructive campaign against your own essence.

This latest round of job cuts at the CA probably won’t be the last, but printing and real estate costs are not as easy to cut as people. The number of journalists keeping an eye on our government, looking out for local threats to our health and economic well-being will continue to decline. You can complain all you want about the media; but do you trust your elected representatives to self-report their behavior? Me neither.

There’s no app for that.

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Journey to India

“Passage Through India” is the theme for this year’s cultural heritage festival hosted by the India Association of Memphis. And it involves journeys guaranteed to blow your mind.

There is a merchants’ bazaar with local and traveling vendors offering traditional Indian jewelry and apparel. (Did somebody just say “Christmas-shopping slam dunk”? Because I thought I heard a voice say that.)

The festival’s Experience Zone is based on the Amazing Race, in which you earn passports to challenges involving the different linguistic traditions and cultural diversity of India. Kids can learn to write their names in different languages, tie a turban, drape a sari, paint a mask, and henna. 

The foodie-geared Spice Journey has three components: heritage, fusion, and interpretation. Heritage involves learning about the traditional ingredients and methods of Indian cooking. The fusion portion includes how to prepare Indian food with what’s available from local grocers. The final stop is interpretation. “We look at how you would take an American recipe and jazz it up with Indian spices,” festival director Sharan Salian said.

There is an open talent competition with dancing and singing that will feature 15 performers. The bands from White Station Middle School and Germantown Middle School will also play short concerts of Indian-themed material from 10:30 to noon.

Don’t miss the regional talent competition involving entrants from six Indian states. The five-minute presentations involve a combination of elements from Indian classical music and dance, Indian folk music, and Bollywood. 

“They use elements of all three to present the theme of ‘Passage Through India.’ But each has its own tradition. There is absolutely so much creativity. Anybody who has never seen India Fest will be blown away,” Salian said.

India Fest, Saturday, November 5th, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Agricenter International, $3. For more information, go to

indiafestmemphis.org.

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Ab-BRA-cada-Bra!

Sheryl Hibbs has 43 bras hanging up in her Artreach Gallery in Germantown. She hasn’t gone crazy, nor is she catching up on her wash. She’s helping to fight breast cancer. 

“Bralapalooza,” an exhibit featuring decorated brassieres and sponsored by the women’s organization Hadassah, concludes Saturday, October 29th, at Artreach with two judgings for awards: People’s Choice and Best in Show. Forty-three artists submitted brajets d’art for a great cause. 

“Instead of burning their bras like people did in the 1960s, we encouraged the artists to glitz them and glam them and make them as crazy imaginative as possible,” says Marion Bessoff, the project coordinator for “Bralapalooza.”

With entrants bearing titles such as Old Jugs, Busted, Hang Em High, Steel Magnolias, Merci BeauCUP, and Ab-BRA-cada-Bra, the artists — or “bratistas” — are taking Bessof at her word. But the event has a serious purpose.

Hadassah funds breast cancer research in Israel. Locally, they administer the CHECK IT OUT program to raise awareness of breast cancer among women of all ages.

“We train women to go into the schools and youth groups to educate young girls about how to do the exams. We have a plasticized card that they can take into the shower. But the hope is that they are taking it home to their moms and grandmothers. We’re hoping to hit multiple generations. The truth is that breast cancer can strike at any age,” Bessoff says.

“People can take them home for whatever decorative reason,” she says of the bras featured in “Bralapalooza.” “They really are incredible works of art,” she adds.

Bralapalooza, Artreach Gallery (2075 exeter, germantown), Saturday, October 29th (759-9119). bralapaloozamemphis.org

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Stars and Bars

Ever wanted to ask Jerry Lawler to make you a Gin Rickey? Or maybe you’ve been waiting to ask the mayor to make you a Mai Tai at the Mercedes-Benz dealership on Poplar while models walk around in the latest fashions from Laurelwood. It’s go time.

“STRUT! Memphis,” a benefit for the Community Legal Center, is a fashion show with celebrity bartenders such as Lawler, Mayor A C Wharton, newscaster Mearl Purvis, mega-lawyer Leslie Ballin, mega-doctor Susan Murmann, and some dude named VanWyngarden.

There are over 30,000 families in Shelby County whose income is between 125 and 175 percent of the poverty line. That means they can pay their rent, but they struggle beyond that. When they buy a used car, get a divorce, or run into landlord problems, the legal help they need is often out of reach.

Community Legal Center serves this niche by providing pro bono advice to people who do not qualify for Memphis Area Legal Services, which helps those below the poverty line.

“We have too many reports of seniors who have lost their homes or cars to scams. Very often the only thing that can reunite senior citizens with their property is free legal help,” Purvis says. 

In 2009 alone, the CLC fielded more than 5,000 calls, met with 143 clients at bimonthly clinics, and formally represented 400 Memphians with legal problems.

But remember: Not all celebrity bartenders are created equal. Ballin warns, “Attendees should order from the other bartenders. I practice abstinence. Since 2003, I have not woken up with a hangover or pregnant.”

“Strut! Memphis” Fashion Show, Mercedes-Benz of Memphis, 5389 Poplar.

Thursday, October 27th, 6 p.m.