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Correa
31st December 2005, 07:34
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/images/2005/09/citgo_station2b_p.jpg

Chicago Turns Down Discounted Venezuelan Oil
by Jessica Pupovac

Chicago, Dec 28 - The Chicago Transit Authority is refusing an opportunity to alleviate commuting costs for hundreds of thousands in the Windy City's low-income neighborhoods. Instead of accepting deeply discounted fuel from the Venezuela-owned Citgo Petroleum Corporation, the city is instead raising fares to solve budget shortfalls.

In an October meeting with representatives from the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), the city's Department of Energy and other city officials, Citgo unveiled a plan to provide the Chicago with low-cost diesel fuel. The company's stipulation, at the bidding of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, was that the CTA, in turn, pass those savings on to poor residents in the form free or discounted fare cards.

But two months later, despite claims of a looming budget crisis, the CTA president "has no intent or plan to accept the offer," according to CTA spokesperson Ibis Antongiorgi. She gave no explanation.

According to Venezuela’s consul general in Chicago, Martin Sanchez, the CTA has yet to inform his office of its decision to decline the discount offer.

In place of the proposed discount, which the CTA apparently does not want Chicagoans to even know about, budget shortfalls will be addressed by fair hikes. Chicagoans who are unaware of the Venezuela offer will be hit with an increase of 25 cents per ride next month, and discounted route-to-route transfers will be eliminated for passengers paying cash.

"This is going to hurt the poor and the minority people, like me," said Dorothy Chew, resident of Humboldt Park, where one-third of residents live below the federally recognized poverty level – currently just $16,000 for a family of three. Chew relies on the CTA to get to work and to Chicago Commons, where she attends classes daily in preparation for taking her GED. Since she rarely has money to invest in a fare card, she will be forced to pay for transfers the majority of the time.

Chew's classmate, Linda Cox, works a minimum-wage job and has been a Public Aid recipient for 15 years. She also relies heavily on public transportation.

"I only earn $560 a month and of that, over $200 a month goes to my bus fare," Cox told The NewStandard. "I have a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old who also need to get to school. If they change the prices and take away transfers, there are going to be a lot of days missed. I already see no money at the end of the month."

The offer of discount fuel is not just confined to Chicago. Over the Thanksgiving holiday, the first of Venezuela's "oil-for-the-poor" programs in the US was launched. Citgo struck a deal with three nonprofit organizations in the Bronx to deliver 5 million gallons of heating oil at 45 percent below the market price. The deal will amount to a savings of $4 million for the 8,000 low-income households slated to benefit from the plan.

"This is going to hurt the poor and the minority people, like me." -- Dorothy Chew

Citgo has made a similar arrangement with Citizens Energy Corp. in Boston for the sale and distribution of 12 million gallons, saving low-income and elderly residents there a total of $10 million. The company's website says that it expects to expand the program to other boroughs in New York City and that it is exploring the possibility of offering discounted fuel to residents in Maine, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.

However, in all of Illinois, only about 12,000 households use heating oil.

So instead of fuel for heat, Citgo representatives offered the CTA a 40-50 percent discount on diesel fuel for buses to benefit Chicagoans most in need of relief from soaring oil and gas prices this winter.

"We didn't know how else to reach enough people," said Consul Sanchez.

Another difference between the Chicago offer and the programs enacted in the Northeast is that Citgo proposed to work with a government agency, rather than nonprofit organizations. The CTA relies on the US federal government – which is in a constant war of words with Venezuelan President Chavez – for much of its funding. In fact, just weeks after Citgo made its offer to the CTA, Congress signed the Federal Transportation Appropriations bill, allocating $89 million in infrastructure project funds the CTA had been seeking for years.

Representatives from the US State Department and city officials, including Aldermen involved in the negotiations and the Chicago Mayor's Office, refused to respond to queries about whether international politics played any part in the CTA's rejection of Citgo's offer.

Some critics of President Chavez say his offer of cheap fuel to low-income communities in the US is a political ploy to win the support of the American people. Larry Birns, executive director of the progressive think tank, Council on Hemispheric Affairs, said Chavez is trying to counter Bush administration criticisms with "petro-diplomacy." Birns, who criticizes both US policy toward Venezuela and Chavez’s confrontational style, told TNS, "There is a certain amount of humor involved in needling the Bush administration for neglecting it's own while attempting to stand tall in Latin America."

However, as Mark Weisbrot of the Center for Economic and Policy Research – another progressive think tank – pointed out, the Venezuelan government has been providing cheap fuel to several countries in Latin America. Weisbrot is a staunch supporter of the Chavez administration.

"It is part of [Venezuela's] policy to compensate for the impact of the high oil prices on poor people," he said. "They don't have any grudge against the American people; it's just the Bush administration that they don't like."

Consul Sanchez echoed this sentiment. "Any corporation that makes a big profit in a community owes that community something in return," he said. With one of Citgo's three light-oil refineries located in nearby Lemont, 30 minutes outside the city, Sanchez said, Venezuela has "a special relationship with people and community organizations in Chicago."

There remains no sign, however, that the government of Chicago will take Citgo and Venezuela up on the unilateral offer.

© 2005 The NewStandard (http://newstandardnews.net)

bolshevik butcher
31st December 2005, 13:39
Well this isnt really a surprise, that the imperialists will refuse offers of friendship from the Venezuelan people.

The Venezuelan scheme to give discounts to union members from their petrol stations is still going ahead i think though. So, the oppertunity so show that Latin American socialism is not necesserally bad for the American people still lives on.

ComradeOm
31st December 2005, 13:58
Well let's hope that the people of Chicago discover how much they're being screwed. Has this story gotten much coverage in the States?

And are they really called "Chicagoans"?

Colombia
31st December 2005, 23:08
I've never heard of this until now. Has Citgo offered anything to New Jersey? Northern Jersey has many low-income families similar to Chicago and many Citgos around here.

Yes they are called Chicagoans.

Nothing Human Is Alien
31st December 2005, 23:24
Venezuela assists poor Americans with heating oil
http://freepeoplesmovement.org/fp16o.html

Venezuelan humanitarian aid has arrived in New York and Massachusetts as promised by President Hugo Chavez months earlier (see "Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez Speaks (http://www.freepeoplesmovement.org/fp15a.html)", The Free Press Volume 1, Issue 5).

At a time when U.S. oil companies have refused to lower prices and Congress has failed to deliver aid in response to rising oil prices, thousands of poor residents of Massachusetts and the Bronx are receiving low cost heating oil to help them make it through the winter.

The assistance was welcome in the Mount Hood neighborhood of the Bronx, where "we accept food stamps" signs fill supermarket windows and dreary housing projects fill the skyline.

"It's very hard as a single parent, trying to raise a child, and on welfare. I'm just trying to manage," said Bronx resident Yolanda Ayabarreno at an event to announce the delivery.

Congressman Jose Serrano, who helped the Venezuelan government put the program together, said he was trying the best he could for the Bronx.

"To those folks who say that this is a way for Hugo Chavez to score political points, I invite every American corporation that wants to score points with my community, to start scoring points this afternoon," he said.

Citgo, the U.S. arm of the Venezuelan state oil company, will deliver another 20 million gallons of heating oil this winter to tens of thousands of New York and Massachusetts families at steep discounts.

So, while the U.S. government has done nothing to alleviate the impact record oil prices are having on its own poor, Venezuela is offering them tens of millions of dollars in assistance.

"The federal government of the United States makes billions off the high price of crude oil and yet they haven't increased the amount of fuel assistance one dime despite the fact that the price of oil has nearly doubled in the past two years," said Joe Kennedy, chairman of Citizens Energy, one of the organizations that will distribute the oil.

Venezuela is "the one country that has agreed to provide our poor people with some low-cost oil and it's the country that gets the greatest amount of criticism," he said.

Guerrilla22
1st January 2006, 04:36
Too bad, the high spike in the cost of gas prices will affect many lower income families.

bolshevik butcher
1st January 2006, 10:20
This congressman sounds like quite a good polititian actually, someone willing to go against the status quote to aid his constitutents anyway.

It's good to see that some of the Venezuelan aid is getting through.

Nothing Human Is Alien
1st January 2006, 10:51
Besides meeting with Fidel and Chavez when they came through and this, he's just like any other bourgeois politician. He didn't even support the striking transit workers.

Xvall
1st January 2006, 12:43
Good thing I don't drive.

WUOrevolt
1st January 2006, 21:18
Originally posted by [email protected] 1 2006, 03:17 AM
I've never heard of this until now. Has Citgo offered anything to New Jersey? Northern Jersey has many low-income families similar to Chicago and many Citgos around here.

Yes they are called Chicagoans.
I live in Northern New Jersey too, and I dont believe they have, only to poor communities in places like New Orleans, Chicago, New York and other places like that.

DeathtoPrejudice
1st January 2006, 21:22
This isn't a slap in the face of the poor, it's a slap in the face of anyone who owns a vehicle (that runs on gas)...

ugh, i hate these gas prices (yes, i live in chicago).

Janus
1st January 2006, 22:40
This isn't too surprising. The rich US oil companies don't care about the working class and neither does the CTA, they just want to make a profit. The CTA decision makers are just a bunch of chauvinist capitalists who don't want to accept foreign help. These capitalists focus only on how much of a profit they can make by exploiting the working class. Since the have the support of the Bush regime, they pretty much have a free hand.

Seven Stars
2nd January 2006, 04:29
Bus fair in Chicago is now $2 because of rising gas prices. I now will have to pay $4 a day because of this.

DeathtoPrejudice
2nd January 2006, 04:40
well, four dollars isn't TOO much.

At least not a day, but it can really add up.

Guerrilla22
2nd January 2006, 08:17
Chavez made the same offer to New Orleans after the Hurricane, but Bush turned him down. The uS is uppity, our government never will accept any foreign aid, even while it does nothing to help its own poor.

Correa
2nd January 2006, 21:12
Originally posted by [email protected] 1 2006, 02:31 PM
This isn't a slap in the face of the poor, it's a slap in the face of anyone who owns a vehicle (that runs on gas)...

ugh, i hate these gas prices (yes, i live in chicago).
What about heating oil? Don't people in Chicago use oil to heat their homes? I might be mistaken, but I thought they did.

WUOrevolt
3rd January 2006, 20:11
Originally posted by [email protected] 2 2006, 12:26 PM
Chavez made the same offer to New Orleans after the Hurricane, but Bush turned him down. The uS is uppity, our government never will accept any foreign aid, even while it does nothing to help its own poor.
Cuba offered aid too and of course it was denied.

Johnny Serrure
4th January 2006, 23:59
Dammit Daley.

Johnny Serrure
5th January 2006, 00:01
Interesting since Chicago is one of the most Liberal (In the American Sense not Economically) cities in the U.S. My guess is scoring a deal with a percieved Totalitarian state didn't settle well with Libertarian fused Midwesterners. Not to mention Mayor Daley has way to much pride to accept handouts for fear they could be used as a bargaining chip over the city.

P.S. Not sure about % oil heating, but I know a fair deal run on Natural Gas.

cormacobear
5th January 2006, 00:19
Sounds like a good issue to try and rally a protest around. You could print flyers and leave them at bus stops. Tape signs to light poles, or drop flyers in mailboxes in poor neighborhoods, or even drop them from buildings during peak commuting, times pick a day at least 30 days away and put an e-mail address so other organizations can get involved in helping when they learn of it. I'd suggest, city hall, a friday from 4:00 pm on that way people can come after work, and there is a greater chance of the protests carrying over onto the evening or weekend. Just a thought since a couple of you live there or near there.

BuyOurEverything
5th January 2006, 01:25
My guess is scoring a deal with a percieved Totalitarian state didn't settle well with Libertarian fused Midwesterners.

Nevermind the laughable claim that poor families would turn down cheaper energy costs because of a disagreement with the politics of the country it came from (wanna talk about totalitarian states? Where's the oil coming from now...?), are you actually suggesting that this offer was turned down because of massive public protest against it?

Johnny Serrure
5th January 2006, 01:30
Im saying Daley and Chicago Politicians were too proud and too afraid of the Feds to accept it.

Your right about the Totalitarion thing, though the majority of America's oil is imported from Canada.

Organic Revolution
5th January 2006, 04:48
ahh!!! L prices are rising cause of this shit to i heard.

Correa
5th January 2006, 05:11
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/images/logos/cta-take-it_p.gif

Chicago Jan 4, 2006.- U.S. Congressman Luis Gutierrez, Chicago Aldermen Billy Ocasio, Ed Smith, State Representatives Cynthia Soto, Marlow Colvin and Larry McKeon, along with other 20 organized labor leaders and community activists, joined forces today to urge the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) to reconsider an offer by CITGO Petroleum Corporation to provide the city with discounted diesel fuel for its public buses.

Venezuelan government officials and representatives from CITGO, a subsidiary of Venezuela's state oil company PDVSA, met with Chicago officials last October to offer diesel fuel at a 40% discount for the city public buses, on the condition that the savings are passed on to riders.

Two months after the offer, Chicago's Transit Authority, has not provided CITGO or Venezuelan government officials any feedback on the offer in spite of a transportation budget deficit of 17 million for fiscal year 2006 due to high fuel costs. Instead, as of January 1, 2006, bus fares paid in cash increased by 25 cents to 2 dollars, and transfer tickets now cost 2 dollars more if paid with cash.

It is unknown if the refusal to accept the offer comes from CTA Commissioner Frank Kruesi or from Mayor Richard Daley directly, but almost all of those who participated in the press conference, including State representatives Cynthia Soto, Marlow Colvin and Larry McKeon, blamed Kruesi.

CITGO's proposed a 40 percent discount on 7.2 million gallons of diesel fuel which could save the city approximately $15 million, according to a press release by Congressman Gutierrez.

The proposal to provide discounted oil products to poor communities in the U.S. was initially proposed by Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, during his September visit to New York for a United Nations General Assembly meeting, weeks after hurricane Katrina left thousands of poor U.S. residents without assistance from U.S. federal and local authorities.

New York City and Massachusetts are already taking advantage of discounted CITGO heating oil for low-income families, and Maine, Vermont Rode Island, Delaware, Connecticut and Pennsylvania are currently in talks with CITGO and Venezuelan officials regarding similar offers.

"If other major cities are working with CITGO to reduce the strain of skyrocketing energy prices this winter, why is the CTA leaving Chicago out in the cold," added Gutierrez. "This proposal represents millions of dollars that can be used to help shore up the CTA's finances and to assist low-income riders. It is that simple."

"Instead of starting this New Year off with millions of dollars in savings on fuel expenses that could go toward helping the city's cash-strapped public transportation systems get its finances in order, the CTA has instead asked riders to bear the brunt of its poor fiscal management by raising cash fares and eliminating cash transfers," Gutierrez said.

"When we are repeatedly warned of doomsday scenarios, major service cuts and employee layoffs, how could the CTA outright reject an offer that could infuse millions of badly needed dollars into its operating budget. The public deserves an explanation," he added.

Alderman Billy Ocasio, who asked CITGO to offer diesel fuel to Chicago instead of the heating oil offered to other cities, said the CITGO proposal will ensure that the CTA remains an affordable option for those who need it most. "The CTA Board has repeatedly cried out for help and is in no position to turn down what amounts to $15 million in assistance; it must, therefore, reconsider CITGO's generous offer," Ocasio said.

CTA Commissioner Frank Kruesi later held a press conference arguing that CITGO's fuel would not work in CTA buses, and suggested CITGO could buy 15 million dollars in fare cards and distribute it them to Chicagoans. Kruesi also cited state laws, and CITGO's alleged demand that free fare cards are provided to poor riders, as reasons that would prevent Chicago from accepting the offer.

However, State Representatives at their press conference earlier, had said that state laws such as the Metropolitan Transit Authority Act, could be modified if it indeed prevents Chicago from buying cheaper diesel fuel for its buses. They said that fare card demands from CITGO and city contract issues have never come up in discussions on the offer.

Alderman Billy Ocasio said that the type of diesel is not an issue as CITGO has offered to obtain it from other companies in a procedure know as swap, in case it does not produce it in their Lemont, Illinois refinery.

A CTA spokesperson told the local Chicago WBBM radio station that Kruesi believed dealings with CITGO would be "inappropriate" given the tensions between the U.S. and the Venezuelan governments. Today Krusie said Chicago should not interfere in U.S. foreign policy. "We are not in the business of operating a separate foreign policy from the U.S. government, and I have no intention of beginning such a process," he said.


However, State Department spokesperson Adam Ereli provided no objections to the CITGO's offers at a Dec 8 briefing.

U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman also said that the U.S. government has no problems with Venezuela's offer. "We view it, as corporate philanthropy. We're all for that. Nobody in the Energy Department, or in the government for that matter, is going oppose that. If that's what Mr. Chavez and his colleagues who own CITGO choose to do, I'm certainly not going to criticize," Bodman told CNN last Dec. 9.

BuyOurEverything
5th January 2006, 05:39
Im saying Daley and Chicago Politicians were too proud and too afraid of the Feds to accept it.

Actually that was your secondary claim, but I'll take that to mean that you acknowledge your first claim was baseless and false.


the majority of America's oil is imported from Canada.

I know it would be useless to attempt to actually discuss facts with you but I have to ask. Do you know what 'majority' means?