The St. John Parish Council scheduled a last-minute meeting for Tuesday 11/22 at 5:30pm to discuss Denver-based Greenfield’s proposed toxic grain elevator. We’ve wanted this meeting to express our opposition to the grain elevator for a while, but they only gave us a few days notice before scheduling this one.
By scheduling a last minute meeting the week of Thanksgiving, they’re hoping we won’t be able to mobilize our community and they can quietly approve the toxic grain elevator. To protect Wallace’s past, present, and future, we need to prove them wrong and show our opposition to the proposed toxic grain elevator in force.
Unfortunately, the Parish Council has no mechanism to receive public comments. Instead, we're collecting public comments and will read them out loud at the meeting. Will you submit a public comment for us to read at the meeting?
Public officials are more likely to listen to public comments if they're written in your voice and unique, but we've provided some language and information below to help you write your own public comment.
The people of St. John the Baptist Parish deserve to have a place where they can honor their family’s past, present, and future, to be able to bring their children to visit their ancestors’ graves and use their memories and wisdom to inform the present and build the future. From Wallace, to Edgard and Vacherie, the very people who built St. John Parish are now fighting for their safety and livelihood against threats from petrochemical and heavy industry, including the proposed grain elevator by Denver, Colorado-based Greenfield LLC.
For our past, our present, and our future, we need the support of our elected officials to continue in this fight and preserve Wallace, Louisiana.
Denver, Colorado-based Greenfield and its proposed grain elevator are a threat to the place we call home and the untapped potential growth of our city and parish. The plans for this massive 284-acre footprint terminal with over 50 grain silos, 300-foot-high structures (taller than a 20-story building) and 1.2 million cubic yards of excavation and fill were made without any consultation of St. John Parish residents, any consideration of our needs and quality of life, nor any concern for our dreams of what our community should look and feel like.
According to a recent analysis conducted by our partners at Together Louisiana—a statewide network of religious and civic congregations across Louisiana—government bodies like yours in St. John Parish are set to miss out on over $200 million in tax revenue over the next 30 years as part of a tax-reduction cooperative endeavor agreement between the Port of South Louisiana, the parish sheriff’s office, and Greenfield in their attempts to construct the grain elevator.
This proposal will deprive our local government bodies — including public schools, courts and the parish council for general government services — of $209 million over the course of three short decades. Can you stand by as your district loses millions of dollars to a harmful petrochemical corporation that stands to make money killing off our community, without even hearing the concerns of your constituents?
The histories of Black and Indigenous peoples in this region provide opportunities for funding new businesses, jobs, and programs around historic preservation, heritage tourism, and agritourism to stimulate our local economy. Wallace's eligibility to become its own National Historic District is supported by federal preservation authorities including the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the Advisory Council for Historic Preservation.
The proposed terminal would damage the important historical sites that ground our community in its past and offer a path towards a thriving future, including unmarked slave burial grounds, and nearby plantations, including the Whitney Plantation Museum and the Evergreen Plantation, which has been designated a national landmark and national historic district. These burial and historical sites are not only important to preserve in honor of our lineages, but are also important to the economic success of your constituents. These surrounding plantations are expected to return to pre-pandemic numbers, considering Whitney Plantation surpassed 100,000 visitors by the end of 2019. That museum visitation can translate into 100,000 people annually visiting Wallace by 2024.The grain terminal construction, noise, pollution, odors, and massive structures would disrupt the business and visitation of these historical museums, prohibiting telling the history of enslaved people in southeastern Louisiana while impacting the tourist economy.
The grain terminal would also have devastating effects on our natural environment. It would destroy portions of the marsh and impact local wildlife that are listed as endangered, federally protected and state protected.