Dr. Riki Ott, author of Not One Drop will speak at Sleeping Lady chapel at 7:30 PM May 29, 2009.
It's time to make human rights and community values COUNT more than corporate profits. Join Dr. Riki Ott and ABFAS at the Sleeping Lady and learn why you should care -- and how you can help make a difference.
The Exxon Valdez was more than just an oil spill... it was a democracy crisis. What happened in Alaska matters to every community in America.
Thirty-five years ago, former Senator Ted Stevens promised, "Not one drop of oil" would touch Prince William Sound... but corporate influence has taken over our government and sabotaged our democratic process.
It's time to change the rules. It's time to make human rights and community values count more than corporate profits. It's time to hold corporations accountable for risky behavior that harms people, communities, and the environment.
Author and story-teller Dr. Riki Ott, PhD, documents her evolution from scientist to citizen-activist with the nation's largest oil spill--the 1989 Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska. In her new book, Not One Drop she offers thought-provoking remedies for the climate crisis, the economic crisis, and the democracy crisis by building sustainable communities and separating corporation and state.
General Admission $15, Students and Seniors $10. Subject to service charge and tax. For tickets and information, please call (509) 548-6344. If calling from out of the area, (800) 574-2123.
 Not One Drop
In the early 1970s, Alaska Senator Ted Stevens promised Cordova fishermen "not one drop" of oil would be spilled in Prince William Sound from proposed tanker traffic and the trans-Alaska pipeline project. Fishermen knew better. Spanning nearly 40 years, Not One Drop is an extraordinary tale of ordinary people who take on the world's richest oil companies and most powerful politicians to protect Prince William Sound from oil accidents.
In Not One Drop, author Riki Ott, a rare combination of commercial salmon "fisherma'am" and PhD marine biologist, describes the firsthand impact of this broken promise when the Exxon Valdez oil spill decimated Cordova, Alaska, a small commercial fishing community set in 38,000 square miles of rugged Alaska wilderness.
Ott illustrates in stirring fashion the oil industry's 20-year trail of pollution and deception that led to the tragic 1989 spill and delves deep into the disruption to the fishing community for the next 10 years. In vivid detail, she describes the human trauma coupled inextricably with that of the Sound's wildlife and its struggle to recover.
Contrasting hard-won spill prevention and response measures in the Sound to dangerous conditions on the trans-Alaska pipeline, Ott critically examines shifts in scientific understanding of oil spill effects on communities and ecosystems, exposing fundamental flaws in governance and the legal system. Her varied background, professional training, and activist heart lead readers confidently and clearly through the maze of laws, back-story, and government red tape as large as that of the five billion dollar lawsuit itself, instilling a new-found sense of understanding of this environmental tragedy.
Buy a SIGNED Copy of Not One Drop - $21.95
 Praise for Sound Truth and Corporate Myth$
"Important! Chilling! Courageous! Like David confronting Goliath, Riki Ott challenges the giant Exxon to account for its lies and evasions. If you care about life on earth you must read this book. And, as Ott begs, do your bit to force Exxon to compensate its victims and revise its safety measures. We must join forces to safeguard our planet from the effects of chemical poisons and global climate change." — Jane Goodall
"This book doesn't just change our views of the Exxon Valdez spill; it forces us to dramatically reassess the risks from petroleum and the enormous costs that industry is imposing on our health and planet." — Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Join Riki on the ABFAS forum, or learn more about her on Riki's ABFAS page.
Buy a SIGNED Copy of Sound Truth and Corporate Myth$ - $24.95
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