Oct 2, 2024
Getting RICH After POISONING A Community
BioLab, a chemical plant in Conyers, Georgia, sent a massive blast of toxic chemicals into the community around it.
- 11 minutes
Shelter in place advisory was extended
in Rockdale County, Georgia, this morning
after a fire and chemical release
erupted at a bio lab plant.
This is east of Atlanta.
Thousands of residents in the city
of Conyers had to be evacuated.
[00:00:15]
The presence of chlorine
has been confirmed by the EPA.
I feel like this story is just like
a mainstay in America these days.
A chemical plant in Georgia
erupted into a cloud of flames
[00:00:30]
and smoke on Sunday, and that resulted
in 90,000 people in the community
being ordered to shelter in place.
Now, the story is even more sinister
than you might think because as Georgia
residents were breathing in toxic levels
of chlorine and sheltering in their homes,
[00:00:48]
private equity executives were, you know,
doing what they do best,
getting real rich.
So before we get to that element of
the story, let's get to some more details
on what occurred
at the Bio Labs chemical plant. 5 a.m.
[00:01:05]
Today, as employees were inside.
A sprinkler malfunctioned, causing
a chemical to start the blaze, which is
now out and was contained to the roof.
The company saying in a statement
our team is on the scene working with
first responders and local authorities
to assess and contain the situation.
[00:01:21]
No one was injured.
The Environmental Protection Agency
is now conducting air monitoring.
Now, initially, firefighters were
successful in putting out the flames.
Unfortunately, the fire was reignited.
I should also note that chlorine is
a harmful irritant and it was in fact
[00:01:41]
detected in the air near the plant.
I mean, how could it not be considering
the explosion that we just saw images of?
And local news is reporting that residents
are already exhibiting some symptoms,
such as shortness of breath, lung
tightness, coughing and eye irritation.
[00:01:58]
Now, similar incidents have actually
happened, Dumb before this explosion
at this particular plant.
Let's watch.
This isn't the first chemical scare at
the Biolab facility that manufactures pool
and spa products, according to the U.S.
Chemical Safety Board in 2020.
[00:02:13]
A plume of hazardous chemicals
was released.
Since I've been a part of Rockdale
County for seven years, this is probably
the third incident of this magnitude.
This is insane.
Absolutely insane.
It just keeps happening.
[00:02:30]
And why does it keep happening?
Like, why doesn't bio labs
do what's necessary?
Take the measures necessary to lessen the
possibility of these types of explosions
from happening in the future.
It could be because the punishments
have been a complete and utter joke.
[00:02:47]
After the most recent bio lab fire
earlier this summer
in Westlake, Louisiana, the U.S.
Chemical Safety Board found
the company responsible for negligence
and five separate safety violations
that led to the fire.
Bio lab was fined.
[00:03:02]
Oh, wow. They were fined a measly $2,500.
Okay, not even a quarter million.
We're talking about $2,500.
John. $2,500 for causing all this harm.
That's what they paid
to the local authorities.
[00:03:19]
Yeah, we, we did a story
on the damage report this morning
about one of the most out of control
police departments in the country.
It's a small town, and there's been
so much fining going on from the cops.
A quarter of the population
has been arrested at one point or another
that, on average, each individual has
been fined $1,400 for things like,
[00:03:39]
like not getting out of their car
fast enough outside of a grocery store,
which was considered to be suspicious
and stuff like that.
- Just nonsense stuff.
- What is this the HOA like?
Exactly. Yeah, it's like it's cop via HOA.
And that's one individual impoverished
person being fined more than half
[00:03:58]
what the company is.
The reason they're fined $2,500
is that the legal regulatory system has
been set up to protect them from fines,
because it's better for business
if you if you not only that,
you don't get fined,
but because the fines don't really exist,
you don't have to really do much
to avoid causing the problems that lead
[00:04:15]
to the fines, because it's not that bad.
- If it happens.
- Exactly.
If the fines were bad, then you
might have to invest in safety procedures
or equipment or training or whatever,
and that's expensive.
They don't want to do it.
And so they elect politicians
that dismantle regulations.
And this is how you get this outcome,
where, you know,
[00:04:30]
one company can have multiple fires
and it's just a part of doing business.
Yeah.
Like the severity of the fines
need to outweigh the cost
of implementing the safety measures
to mitigate these types of disasters
[00:04:46]
or prevent these types of disasters.
But that's not the case. 2500 is not I
mean, that's not a fine for a corporation.
Like it's nothing. It's pocket change.
They looked under the cushions
of the couch and they found that Anyway,
[00:05:02]
so this story and this incident in in
Georgia is just another example, okay,
of corporations not really giving a damn
about the community that they're based in
and not taking the appropriate measures
to protect that community.
And at the same time, the executives,
[00:05:20]
are just they're getting so wealthy
and it seems like they're doing it
with a certain scheme.
We've talked about this scheme
on the show before, where they're taking
out a lot of debt for this company.
And if push comes to shove and if they're
taken to court by the local community
[00:05:39]
and they're ordered to pay,
they might just file for bankruptcy
and say, sorry, saddled with debt,
we can't pay our bills bankrupt.
Okay, so let's get
into the nitty gritty of that.
Okay. So Biolabs, Inc.
Is owned by a private equity firm.
It's called Centerbridge
Centerbridge partners, which according to
[00:05:58]
The American Prospect, has a long history.
Recent history, but extracting dividends
from businesses financed not by
the company's profits but by multibillion
dollar debt assurances, and also in part
[00:06:14]
by the recent sale of a partner company.
So, as the American Prospect reports,
just two and a half months ago, the parent
company Kik owned by Centerbridge,
announced it would be selling
Biolab sister company to the chemical
[00:06:30]
conglomerate Ricoh Chem for $850 million.
A credit rating report on the transaction
said that Centerbridge would be using
the proceeds of the sale
to pay investors sizable dividends and
[00:06:47]
modestly reduce its balance sheet debt,
adding that the transaction
would significantly elevate
Biolabs in debt indebtedness to 8.4 times
its earnings before interest, taxes,
Depreciation and amortization.
[00:07:04]
Okay. So they have a lot of debt.
They sell this, this company, right.
The sister company,
they take the proceeds of that sale
and pay their shareholders dividends.
And then they claim that they're going
to pay down some of their debt,
[00:07:20]
but they're so in debt that it's 8.4
times its earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortization.
And it looks as though the $850
million sale was almost entirely pocketed
by the investors.
[00:07:35]
So that's amazing.
So on, and it gets worse.
So on the occasion of Bio Labs
last monster dividend in June,
the credit rating agency S&P global
estimated that the parent company
would still generate enough profit to make
its interest payments on their debt.
[00:07:53]
But it hedged that confidence
with an astonishing admission
it was grading the unsecured debt
at a recovery rating of six,
denoting negligible 0%
to 10% rounded estimate. 0% recovery
[00:08:10]
in the event of a default.
So let me just.
That's a lot. I get.
I get it. If you didn't understand that.
- I understood a few of those words.
- I did too.
Okay, but I think
the American Prospect did a good job.
Kind of, simplifying it,
translate it into plain English.
[00:08:26]
This means that if the explosion totals
biolabs, chlorine plant and force.
Yeah.
Totals biolabs like, destroys biolabs
because of the, settlement
that they have to pay, and forces
the company into bankruptcy, unsecured
[00:08:44]
creditors will likely get nothing.
Okay.
And that includes
the company's pension funds.
So they might screw over their workers.
Yeah.
Any contractors, staffing agencies
or suppliers whom Biolabs owes money to,
[00:09:01]
as well as anyone who tries to sue Biolab
for the harms caused by its not one,
not two, but multiple toxic incidents.
That's how the game is played, man.
It's sick and the shareholders run off
with the fat dividends they were paid.
[00:09:17]
It's disgusting. It really is.
Well, it's the sort of story that, you
know, we and you especially have profiled
in a number of different industries
for a very long time.
There's seemingly no industry
that this model doesn't work in
where you you have people come in,
they buy it, load it down with debt,
[00:09:34]
extract whatever value you can from it.
There's no incentive whatsoever
to have the company be healthy
or sustainable in even the medium term,
let alone the long term.
And in this particular case,
it's not just the like.
The stakes are not just the destruction
of the company, the loss of the jobs
[00:09:49]
or anything along the way.
You know, maybe you sicken a couple
of towns and you do that because that's
not that's not on your balance sheet.
You're not paying for that.
And in a story like this,
it's relatively easy for us to point
to like a chemical fire and say, well,
[00:10:04]
whatever medical costs
incurred by the people in the town
from chlorine exposure or whatever is
basically being subsidized to the company,
like they pay for it, not the company.
Even though the company did it.
But bear in mind, you know,
it's harder to see it because it's not an
individual event, but carbon emissions,
that's basically what that is.
[00:10:23]
All of us suffer from respiratory
illnesses at increased rates.
Many people get sick.
Hundreds of thousands die
every single year.
We're not generating those emissions.
The companies are,
but we are paying for it.
And in some cases,
the government is paying for it.
All of this doesn't appear in their books,
but it obviously should
[00:10:39]
because they are directly causing it.
Absolutely.
And look, I understand the conservative
argument against regulation in some cases.
In fact, I'll give you a perfect example.
I do think that there are too many
regulations when it comes to construction
[00:10:56]
of new homes in states like California,
which has essentially hindered
the development
of desperately needed housing units.
So there are areas where I
think there's overregulation.
This is not one of the areas. Okay.
There are regulations
that are meant to protect communities
[00:11:14]
from corporations like this.
Regulations that ensure by law that these
corporations invest in the necessary
measures to prevent explosions like this.
So to just say regulations bad
or regulations good
[00:11:32]
doesn't really make much sense
because it's way more nuanced than that.
In areas like this,
when it comes to corporations, companies,
rail companies dealing with literally
toxic chemicals, I think there's a problem
with the lack of regulation.
It's not fair to the local communities
at all that they're dealing with this not
[00:11:51]
just once, but over and over again.
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