Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Protest to support family, target DTE's criminal negligence Community members say DTE responsible for the death of four July 16

By Bryan G. Pfeifer
Detroit

The insatiable greed of DTE Energy has led to yet another criminal
atrocity resulting in the deaths of four African Americans in Detroit
July 16.

According to the July 17 Detroit News, the Reed-Owens’ family had
their electricity cut off by DTE for nonpayment July 15. With serious
medical conditions of various family members including asthma,
neurofibromatosis and bronchitis that needed the use of electric
breathing machines, the family was desperate when their power was cut
off. The Reed-Owens’ then went to their church to borrow a gas powered
generator which they placed in their basement; only hours later four
of the five family members died due to suspected carbon monoxide
poisoning. Marquetta Owens told the News that her partner Vaughn Reed,
and their children Mar’Keisha Reed, 17, DeMarco Owens, 12, and DeMonte
Owens, 6, perished in their home. (www.detnews.com).

Like millions of other families in the United States, the Reed-Owen’s,
through no fault of their own, had fallen victim to unemployment when
Mr. Reed was laid off from an auto parts supplier in January thus
creating many financial hardships for the family including their home
being foreclosed on. Michigan has the highest unemployment rate in the
U.S. with the official figure at 15.2 percent but it is much higher
particularly in African American and other communities of color.
Foreclosures and evictions in the state are also at depression-level
proportions.

The Reed-Owens tragedy is particularly heart wrenching and outrageous
as the family had filed for bankruptcy protection thus it was illegal
for DTE to shut off their utilities. The U.S. Bankruptcy Court on June
25 sent DTE an electronic notification of the Reed-Owen’s bankruptcy
filing. But DTE didn’t stay the shutoff; instead the corporation
claims the notice was sent to the wrong address-not the home were the
Reed-Owens were residing. And even after a telephone call from Mr.
Reed to DTE on Wednesday, July 15 where he told the company he had
filed for bankruptcy, power wasn’t restored immediately; DTE says it
was going to turn the power back on by the next day but then it was
too late.

Neighbors and family members of the Reed-Owens are outraged and aghast
over DTE’s criminal actions.

“At these times of crisis, what is the problem?” said Pamela Jackson,
Mrs. Owen's cousin who said DTE never should’ve turned off the power.

DTE’s mission: Profits before People

DTE Energy is a monopoly corporation operating throughout the U.S. Its
2008 operating revenues were $9.3 billion and the corporation claims
over $24 billion in assets and $546 in net income according to its
2008 financial filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC). DTE’s two primary utilities are Detroit Edison Company (Detroit
Edison), an electric utility with 2.2 million customers in Michigan,
and the Michigan Consolidated Gas Company (MichCon), its natural gas
utility with 1.3 million customers. DTE is also making “significant
investments in non-utility asset-intensive businesses.”

DTE’s Board of Directors is crawling with Chrysler, Ford, Comerica
and other corporate thieves including investment “advisors,” and a
former Army General who worked for the Pentagon and the Army’s 1st
Infantry Division. Behind the corporation’s slogans of “making dreams
real,” the reality is that DTE’s top priority is putting profits
before families such as the Reed-Owens.

Granholm: ‘State of Emergency NOW!’

To protest the Owen’s family’s death and other murders and atrocities
committed by DTE and to demand that Michigan governor Jennifer
Granholm declare an immediate State of Emergency in Michigan to
include a moratorium on all foreclosures, evictions, utility shutoffs,
layoffs and plant closings, the Moratorium Now Coalition is having a
press conference and demonstration at DTE headquarters, One Energy
Plaza, in Detroit July 24 beginning at 4:30 p.m. For more
information: www.moratorium-mi.org.

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http://www.dteenergy.com/dteEnergyCompany/investors/corporateGovernance/board/boardDirectors.html

DTE Energy Board of Directors

- Anthony F. Earley, Jr. has been chairman of the board and chief
executive officer since 1998 and was also DTE Energy’s president and
chief operating officer from 1994 – 2004. He joined the company in
1994, and that same year was elected to the board.

- Gerard M. Anderson. has been the president and chief operating
officer of DTE Energy Company since 2005. He also served as the
president from 2004 through 2005 and Executive Vice President from
1997 through 2004. He joined the company in 1993. Anderson was elected
to the board in 2009.

- Lillian Bauder is the retired vice president of Masco Corporation.
She previously served as vice president of corporate affairs and as
the Chairman and President, Masco Corporation Foundation from October
1996 through December 2005. Bauder was elected to the DTE Energy Board
in 1986. (C, N, P)

- W. Frank Fountain is the chairman of the Walter P. Chrysler Museum
Foundation Board of Directors and advisor to Chrysler, LLC. He
previously served as senior vice president of external affairs and
public policy at Chrysler LLC. He joined Chrysler Corp. in 1973 and
held top leadership positions in the company's corporate controller's
office, treasurer's office and government affairs office in
Washington, D.C. He was elected to the DTE Energy Board in 2007. (A,
P)

- Allan D. Gilmour is the retired vice chairman of Ford Motor Company.
He served as vice chairman from 1992 to 1995, and then again from 2002
until his retirement from Ford Motor Company in 2005. He was elected
to the DTE Energy Board in 1995. (C, F, O)

- Frank M. Hennessey has been chairman and chief executive officer of
Hennessey Capital LLC since 2002. He is the former vice chairman and
chief executive officer of MascoTech Inc. He joined the DTE Energy
Board in 2001. (A, O)

- John E. Lobbia is the former chairman and chief executive officer of
DTE Energy. He retired in 1998. He joined the company in 1965 and has
served on the DTE Energy Board since 1988. (F, N)

- Gail J. McGovern is president and chief executive officer of the
American Red Cross. Prior to that, she was a professor at the Harvard
Business School, president of Fidelity Personal Investments and
executive vice president of consumer markets, AT&T. She was elected to
the DTE Energy Board in 2003. (F, P)

- Eugene A. Miller is the retired chairman, president and chief
executive officer, Comerica, Inc. and Comerica Bank. He retired in
2002. Miller has served on the DTE Energy Board since 1989. Mr. Miller
is currently the DTE Energy Board Presiding Director. (C, F, O)

- Mark A. Murray. has been the President, Meijer, Inc. since 2006.
Prior to that he was the President of Grand Valley State University
from 2001 through 2006 and Treasurer for the State of Michigan from
1999 through 2001. He was elected to the board in 2009. (P)

- Charles W. Pryor, Jr. has been Chairman, Urenco Investments, Inc.
since January 2007 and was the president and chief executive officer
of Urenco Investments, Inc., from 2003 to 2006. Prior to that, he was
the chief executive officer of Utility Services Business Group of
British Nuclear Fuels, plc and the former chief executive officer of
Westinghouse Electric Company. He has served on the DTE Energy Board
since 1999. (F, N)

- Josue Robles, Jr. is the President and CEO of USAA and was
previously the executive vice president, chief financial officer and
corporate treasurer of the USAA since 1994. A retired U.S. Army Major
General, Robles served more than 28 years in the military, including
an assignment as director of the Army budget and Commanding General,
1st Infantry Division, The Big Red One. He was elected to the DTE
Energy Board in 2003.
(A, P)

- Ruth G. Shaw is the former president and CEO of Duke Power Company.
Shaw joined Duke Energy in 1992, and held a number of executive
positions, including president of Duke Energy Foundation, and
president of Duke Nuclear. Prior to joining Duke Power, Shaw served as
president of Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, NC, and
president of El Centro College in Dallas, TX. Shaw joined the Board in
2008. (N, O)

- James H. Vandenberghe is the former vice chairman, Lear Corporation.
He retired in 2008. He was previously the Chief Financial Officer,
Lear Corporation. He was elected to the DTE Energy Board in 2006. (A,
F, C)

Committee membership: A - Audit, C - Corporate Governance, F -
Finance, N - Nuclear Review, O - Organization and Compensation, P -
Public Responsibility

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DTE Energy Key Facts: 2008 Annual Report

Revenues $9.3 billion
Net Income $546 million
Market Cap $4.6 billion
Assets $24.6 billion
Credit Rating BBB-
Employees 10, 471

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Stop your whining and pay your bill like we do. Yes, times are hard - BUT LEARN TO BUDGET AND CUT BACK! Get rid of your cable, your cellphone, etc. That what WE did when our income was cut back.

Besides, all their supposed "medical problems" did not come to light until days later. Original stories said he was trying to run his A/C.

(I just see now that "all comments must be approved the the blog author." I know THIS post will probably not be approved.