Author Archives: CharlieClaywell

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About CharlieClaywell

I have been a writer for years, mainly as a reporter, but I have always enjoyed history, especially non-mainstream stories buried inside old documents. My blog mostly centers around those stories. On occasion, though, I deviate and talk about my dog, vintage toys and what it's like to be middle-aged.

‘Trespassing Across America’ Details Hiker’s Quest For Answers

51BKbdirvkL__SX329_BO1,204,203,200_The Keystone Pipeline introduced me to American politics. It came along at a time when I was becoming more aware of the disconnect between the GOP pro-business stance and what it was doing to small towns in America like mine. It was when I first began seriously researching what Ohio’s 8th Congressional District possessed — with regards to affluence and jobs — compared to what was promised by the ‘if we support business all will be well’ maxim.

My former Congressman John Boehner was an ardent supporter of the Keystone XL Pipeline project, which truly and honestly baffled me. The project offered nothing for his constituents, and overall offered very little for the state and country as far as long-term jobs. It felt as if he was doing a favor for a sponsor instead of looking out for the interests of the people who voted him into office.

So my interest was piqued when I came across the story of a man who hike the pipeline for environmental reasons. I knew the oil was ‘dirty’ and consumed a lot of energy to process, but what I did not know was which regions of the country were impacted by the project.

Author Ken Ilgunas sheds considerable light on the people and areas impacted by the proposed project — which was vetoed by President Barack Obama in 2015. But with a new president heading into office next year, that is no guarantee that the deal is done.

Hiking The Pipeline

Trespassing Across America: One Man’s Epic Never-Done-Before (And Sort Of) Illegal Hike Across The Heartland by Ken Ilgunas is a travel-based memoir and an engaging look at America’s heartland. The book opens with Ilgunas. a North Carolina native, hatching a plan with a co-worker in Deadhorse, Alaska to hike the Keystone XL pipeline. The opening provides aglimpse of what life is like in an oil-rigging town where all the ‘good jobs’ exists. He expands on it by looking reporting on one of Canada’s largest oil towns, Fort McMurray, Alberta — a town located near the Keystone Pipeline’s starting point.

Drawbacks on the Highway to Hell

The road to Fort McMurray is called the Highway to Hell by locals, he reports. The 150-mile stretch of road, officially known as Highway 63, is also one of the deadliest roads in Canada.

In 2004, the Royal Mounted police gave out 18,000 tickets on juts one stretch of highway, the average ticketed speed being 100 miles per hour. Between 2002 and 2010, there were 66 deaths, and between 2001 and 2005, there were more than 1000 collisisons and 250 injuries.

Much of this is attributed to oil-town workers who — off only a couple days per month — speed home to reconnect with family before returning to their 12-hour shifts and 12-day stretches of work. According to one worker, who gave the author a ride to Fort McMurray, alcoholism, drug addiction, gambling and prostitutions wiles away much of the workers’ time and money during the off hours — giving the town an 1800s coal mine town feel.

Heading South

The author’s goal is to follow the pipeline form Canada to Texas by hiking directly above it. This means he will be trespassing. However, as the story unfolds, he does not trespass the entire 1900-mile trek. The fear of being shot prompts him to stay on public grounds for significant portions of the journey.

But the real story is not so much about the pipeline and the hike — it is about the people he meets along the way. Many are die-hard, anti-environmentalists, who view him with open suspicion. This becomes especially true when he enters Kansas and Oklahoma, where he is repeatedly stopped and questioned by police officers. In one small town he is even investigated for two home break-ins.

Rigid Thinking

As Ilgunas describes ghost town after ghost town, it also becomes apparent that America the Great has fallen into disrepair — whether through neglect or exploitation — and people along the path of the pipeline often allow the pipeline on their land due to economic need. But in many cases, too, he is running into people opposed to government intervention and people who dislike everything — especially Obama and the EPA. What is often lacking in the individuals he describes, though, is a willingness to discuss an issue. When he asks one man why policy of Obama he disagrees with — the man replies ” all of them.” Ilgunas, discussing this mindset, writes,

They weren’t free-thinking men, but stone tablets onto which dogma had etched its wicked creed.

In another part of the book, he reintegrates this reoccurring theme. For the most part, Ilgunas admits he was treated kindly, but his walk revealed an unstable and uneasy undercurrent in America — a segment of our population driven, not by pride or patriotism, but by fear.

I’d been ID’d nearly every day of my walk through Kansas. I was approached by paranoid Montana men and kicked out of Boone County, Nebraska. If it’s this hard for me  — a Caucasian walking thorough homogenous Caucasian country — what would it be like if I were black, or gay, or Korean, or Muslim, or woman, or all of the above?

In the end, the book is about more than the pipeline. It is about who we have become.

Rated: 4 out of 5 stars. As with most memoir-styled books, the title only hints at what the book addresses. Even a 1900-mile trek can become uneventful on the printed page. So Ilgunas intersperses his travels with stats, ancedotes and personal musings that move the story forward. It’s only weakness, is a couple of passages where the story lags a little. Overall, though, the book is an easy read and it offers a nice slice of American life while highlighting what our dependency on oil has done to our society. This is Ilgunas’ second book. He also wrote Walden on Wheels.

Categories: Books I have read

What’s The Deal With All These Surcharges?

28344076923_6e62aa1798_zLately I sense a persistent level of anger and irritation in my country. It bleeds through the TV screen, my computer monitor and, is especially alive and well, in the political arena.

Why are Americans so angry?

We snipe online, listen to angry TV commentators yelling about something trivial, and even things as simple as paying a bill can trigger irritation when customer service employees become combative over the phone.

Since I can only control my response, why am I so irritated? Specifically, what is feeding the anger. To find out I made a list. And, not surprisingly, it’s long — filled with big and small annoyances that steal my joy and happiness.

Right to Be Mad

I’ll start with my utility bill. Not an earth-shattering subject, but, like taxes, it is something we all pay. In the month of June, I used 10 CCFs of natural gas. Apparently that’s how much it takes to keep my water hot. At a price of .399 per CCF, my bill for the natural gas was $3.99.

Not bad.

Except, that is not what I paid. Included in my bill were surcharges and taxes because, not only do I pay for the natural gas, I also get the privilege of paying to have it delivered. It feels a little bit like the story my father told on himself. After buying a set of encyclopedias for the family (way back in the 1960s), he also paid the door-to-door salesman a delivery fee. After handing the man the check, Dad and the salesman walked outside and unloaded the books from the trunk of the man’s car.

Utility companies charge me to maintain their privately-owned gas lines. The surcharge was $24.70 and, for good measure I suppose, a 29-cent tax was tacked on.

So, the true cost — out-of-pocket cost — per CCF was $2.91 ($29.07).

Try Travelling

It’s not just utilities it’s a whole slew of products and services we use. In a couple articles USA Today tackles hidden fees unsuspecting customers pay to the airline, hotel and car rental industries. They report,

‘The airlines have become very good at extracting every dollar from consumers by keeping travelers in the dark with hundreds of optimizations and fare rules that maximize the carriers’ revenue.’ In other words, airlines create these nonsense rules because they help them make money.

New Orleans International Airports in 1960s.

New Orleans International Airports in 1960s.

The ‘infectious logic’ is mining cash from our pockets as companies engage in ridiculous behavior — like charging customers extra fees for returning a rental car early — without any fear of reprisal. Have you ever wondered, like a former co-worker did, why auto insurance premium prices don’t fall year-over-year since the cost is based on the value of the vehicle.

Is it because consumers have few legitimate options for the services they buy and no easy way to file a complaint. When my teenage daughter was stiffed on a concert ticket, I had to file complaints with four organizations (and in our buyer-beware society, she lost).

High-Priced Slow Internet

In southwest Ohio, I have two equally poor choices for my packaged deal of phone, cable and Internet: Time Warner Cable or Dish TV.

Although it is tempting right now to go on the standard rant about having 1000 channels and nothing to watch, I’ll restrict myself to surcharges. I pay for two promotion packages. Apparently the word promotion is important to Time Warner Cable because they offer 5 packages and they all include the word promotion. My two promotions include starter TV, standard TV, a variety pass (again 1000 channels — nothing to watch) and other added values like, drum roll please, UNLIMITED (yes, they cap it) local and long distance phone calls in the United States and Canada. Surprisingly, I do not make a lot of long distance calls to Canada (or in the U.S. for that matter).

Then comes the fees and surcharges. The most intriguing ones are:

  • $5 extra for ‘extreme Internet upgrade.’
  • $8.75 surcharge for ‘Broadcast TV and Sports Programming’
  • $4.84 for state and local taxes
  • $4.03 franchise fee
  • $.08 FCC regulatory fee – cable.

The God of Profit

Even though I live in Ohio Vectren, an Indiana company, supplies my natural gas. Indiana is one of only three states where industry regulators are appointed by the governor with no oversight from the public or the legislative branch.

It’s a great deal for business, but it’s really hard on the environment. I live in the Tri-State area — and all three states: Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana landed on the 10 most polluted states list. Ohio was first.

It’s also hard on the pocket book.

According to Citizens Action Coalition, a watch group launched in 1974, this lack of public oversight has led to unchallenged rate increases. If utilities were a ‘normal’ company that might be acceptable, but they are not. They were created by the government as monopolies guaranteed a ‘reasonable profit’ (what a nice, slippery term) in exchange for providing the commodity — like natural gas or electricity — to the public.

So, utilities are guaranteed profit and customers, but that’s not enough.

As CAC notes on their site, the utilities have created a way to automatically increase rates (but never decrease them) through the use of trackers — which are essentially a ‘we need an increase because costs are up,’ measure. If utilities’ books were transparent, again, this would not be a problem. The public could examine the books and expose any indiscretions.

This lack of transparency has the Coalition seeking passage of a Consumer Bill of Rights because,

Legislators are ignoring policies that benefit and protect ratepayers. Instead, they work to protect the monopoly utilities at taxpayer and ratepayer expense.

But, At Least They Keep Salary Costs Down

Okay, not so much.

In 2015, the CEO of Vectren received nearly $4 million in compensation. A really good wage in a country where more than 50 percent of the jobs pay less than $30,000 annually — and 71 percent of all American workers earned less than $50,000 in 2014.

Time Warner Cable

This company ranks near the top in companies I love to hate (Express Scripts is No. 1) — which is kind of sad because the service workers who have been inside my home have always been extremely professional, likable and highly skilled. It’s not the front line workers at fault, it’s a company philosophy of providing a substandard product and engaging in, what feels a lot like, price gouging.

Is ‘Extreme’ Code For Slow?

ruralAmericans, especially those in rural areas like me, have been shafted on Internet service. Despite an outcry more than a decade ago by politicians to ‘outlaw’ French fries (rename them Freedom Fries) the French have something even better than those thinly sliced and heavily salted deep-fat fried potatoes. They have real high-speed Internet — eight times faster connection speeds, and unlike me, they don’t have to pay a $5 ‘extreme Internet upgrade’ surcharge. Even Belgium, the place French fries were actually invented, has faster connection speeds than the United States.

According to a 2015 report from NPR, citizens in the United States pay higher prices, yet get slower speeds. Why? They report,

…half of American homes have only two options for Internet service providers for basic broadband, according to the Federal Communications Commission. And for faster speeds, a majority of households have only one choice.

Sold To The Highest Bidder

When I went online to examine the surcharges on my Time Warner bill, a banner on the page advised me that the Time Warner Cable and Charter Communications merger was complete. The small press release announcing the change said,

Exciting changes are in the works, but for now, Time Warner Cable, Bright House Networks and Charter Spectrum will continue offering their current suite of services to customers in their markets.

I could barely contain my excitement, after all 1000 channels…. But, what the press release failed to mention was Time Warner’s chief executive Robert D. Marcus is projected to receive a $100 million+ golden parachute in the deal. Not bad for less than two years on the job.

Now, I know why I’m angry.

So I click the Time Warner’s online customer service form URL so I can voice my complaint and give them a piece of my mind.

But the page won’t load.


thefineprint

Highway Robbery

An excellent book that goes into detail about the surcharges that nickel and dime the average person to death is The Fine Print.

Categories: Things I'm Tired Of | Tags: , , , , , , ,

‘Muscle Shoals’ Looks At Man Behind Musical Sound, Hits

 

Documentary Muscle Shoals is an enjoyable walk down memory lane — showcasing some of the greatest music ever produced in the United States.

But, it is also a story of survival — of persevering through a life of setbacks and emotional pain.

The movie details the life of Rick Hall, founder of the Fame music studio located in Muscle Shoals, an Alabama town (population 13,600) near the Tennessee River. Although, the studio is far removed from the typical hustle and bustle of the large city studios in New York City and Los Angeles, it still produced hit after hit beginning in the 1960s.

Despite its ‘off the beaten path’ location, in time big-name bands and artists flocked in to record their music.

Rolling Stones & Company

Footage of the Stones’ recording sessions, including the production of hits like Wild Horses, is more than nostalgic meandering, it moves the story forward. But the movie is not just old clips, current interviews with Mick Jagger and Keith Richards offer reflection as they, and other artists, try to explain the appeal and magic of the region.

But, while these interviews and clips round out the story, make no mistake, Hall is the star of the film.

Hall’s story is a tale of triumph and loss. I won’t retell his story here because it would ruin an initial viewing of the film, but his life is proof that hard times make some people stronger — and, for people like Hall, something good can be created out of the aftermath of hard times.

Down A Long Hard Road

Hall, and the studio musicians featured in the film were, in many ways, just ‘good ole boys’ from down the road. However, that certainly did not equate to untalented. They were all extremely skilled. The studio musicians, The Swampers, even toured with The Who before returning to their Alabama roots, where they eventually split from Hall opening their own music studio. This only seemed to up the magic as the hits kept coming — ranging from Bob Seger’s Old Time Rock and Roll to Percy Faith’s When a Man Loves a Woman.

Missed Opportunities

Two musical incidents I found interesting, though, demonstrate the hit, miss and competitive nature of the business. Duane Allman — who would eventually helped form the Allman Brothers Band — camped out near Hall’s Fame studio trying to land a job as a session musician. In time, Hall hires him. Allman, being the creative guitarist he was, attempts to convince Hall to record, what is now known as southern rock. Hall, not interested in that style of music, nonchalantly admits on screen, ‘yeah I missed the boat on that one.’

The other story involves the best rock song ever recorded — Free Bird by Lynyrd Skynyrd (I know some will argue that distinction goes to Welcome to The Jungle by Guns N Roses, but they’re wrong). When the studio version of Free Bird was recorded in Muscle Shoals, it was over nine minutes long (the live version is about 15 minutes — as it should be). The record company wanted the studio version shortened to less than four minutes. The recording studio refused saying it would destroy the integrity of the song.

The decision eventually cost them the contract.

Rated 5 out of 5

If you enjoy music, and the stories behind some of the biggest names in music, the documentary is a perfect blend of music, interviews and story. Be forewarned though, it may inspire you to dust off some old albums or to download some classic songs from iTunes.


My Interest In The Movie

Bob_Dylan_-_Slow_Train_ComingBefore watching the film, I knew nothing about Rick Hall, but I did know that Bob Dylan recorded Slow Train Coming in Muscle Shoals — his best work in my opinion. The 1979 Christian Rock album features bluesy cuts like Gotta Serve Somebody and Precious Angel as well as a somewhat humorous take on the Garden of Eden — Man Gave Names To All the Animals. Dylan also recorded the follow-up album Saved in Muscle Shoals.

 

 

Categories: American History, Americans Who Got It Right, movies | Tags: , , , , , ,