Friday, September 24, 2010
Why we do it..
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Chicken farmer enjoys giving back to nature
Man with 92,000 chickens receives an environmental award.
By Julie Bisbee
The Oklahoman
HEAVENER — It's quiet at Homer Lee Marrow's farm. A few dogs laze in the warm sun, keeping watch over the pasture and ridges that surround the house, and the air is crisp.
Not bad for a farm that raises more than 92,000 chickens at one time in four separate houses. Marrow, a retired science teacher, is proud of the fact that his poultry operation doesn't smell like a chicken farm. Aside from the four metal houses a ways down the driveway, it really doesn't look like a chicken farm either.
Marrow Farms recently was given the Family Farm Environmental Excellence Award by the U.S. Poultry & Egg Association.
Marrow's farm is one of five family farms across the country to have received the award at this year's International Poultry Expo. The award recognizes farms that find ways to manage waste created by chickens, enhance the natural wildlife habitat around their farms and participate in outreach and education programs.
Poultry companies sued
While an Oklahoma farmer is being recognized for his environmentally friendly efforts, Oklahoma's Attorney General Drew Edmondson is suing 14poultry companies he claims were polluting a watershed in northeast Oklahoma by applying too much chicken waste on more than a million acres in the Illinois River watershed.
The lawsuit was filed in June 2005. Poultry producers in northeastern Oklahoma and Arkansas are paying companies to haul the waste away from their watershed.
Most aspects of poultry production are regulated by state and federal agencies. Farmers must comply with restrictions to ensure phosphorus-rich waste created by chickens isn't polluting soil and running off into lakes, rivers and streams.
Too much phosphorus in the water can promote the growth of algae that dies and becomes food for bacteria. With more food available, bacteria multiply, using up oxygen. This kills fish and plant life that rely on oxygen to survive.
For some, restrictions can be bothersome. For Marrow, improving the habitat around his farm is something he enjoys. He's sprouted native grasses, and planted turnips and ryegrass for whitetail deer that live on the 670 acres of Marrow's farm amid wooded plots of pine trees, prairie grass and wildflowers.
Marrow and his wife, Jean, can name the flowers that grow in their meadow plots: black-eyed Susans, Indian paintbrushes and a smattering of bluebonnets that have appeared over the years.
"Every poultry grower appreciates good water and wholesome food and fresh air. I love nature just as it is," Marrow said. "But we have to make a living in it."
Waste piles up high
Where there are thousands of chickens, there are millions of tons of chicken waste that need to be disposed of. Many producers, like Marrow, use the phosphorus-rich litter to fertilize pasture and crop land. In good years, chicken waste helps boost Marrow's production of hay, or greens up pasture land for the cattle the graze on.
In fact, Marrow, 71, became a chicken producer with two poultry houses in 1992 so he would have access to a cheap fertilizer. Two more houses were added in 2005, after Marrow's son Benny joined the operation full-time.
"Ironically, they were added to provide more economic nutrients to the soil in addition to diversifying the farm's income," Marrow wrote in his application packet for the environmental award.
Chicken litter is piled up nearly 8 feet high in the two open-air store houses near Marrow's poultry houses. It's crumbly and flaky and nearly odorless as Marrow steps across a pile of the litter. A federal conservation program helped pay for the storage barns. With the litter barns, Marrow and his son can clean out the poultry houses and store the chicken waste until conditions are right to put it on fields. The barns also keep the litter dry. Marrow also can use the litter to compost the carcasses of dead chickens.
Using chicken litter as a fertilizer isn't an easy process. Producers don't just spread the waste out over the land and hope for the best, said Kenneth Risenhoover, district conservationist for the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Poteau. Producers test their soil and adjust the amount of chicken litter they put on the land, he said.
In central Le Flore County, where Marrow has his farm, about 85 poultry producers live in the Lake Wister watershed, Risenhoover said. The lake also is where most people in the area get their drinking water.
"I think the fact that poultry producers drink the water of Wister Lake, they're just as concerned as anybody about protecting their water," Risenhoover said.
Time to practice
Inside one of Marrow's poultry houses, thousands of chickens crowd around feeders placed on the ground and scurry each time Marrow takes a step farther into the barn. He's slipped a special plastic boot over his brown leather cowboy boots in hopes of keeping germs out of the house filled with young chickens. Viruses spread easily among the birds and can take out a whole flock if gone untreated.
Each poultry house is equipped with a computer system that regulates the temperature and ventilation of the barn. Too much ventilation and too much wind can cause the odor of the chicken house to drift to near by homes, something Marrow doesn't want to happen.
Marrow is modest about being recognized for his environmental practices.
"I'm older, and I've had more years to practice and enhance the environment in our area," Marrow said. "This is an award about who did the most. I don't really think of myself as an environmental expert."
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Terry Nichols defense team seeks higher office
THE OKLAHOMAN
Published June 27
The attorneys who once defended convicted Oklahoma City bombing conspirator Terry Nichols have both filed to run for public office this year.
Brian Hermanson and Creekmore Wallace II want to help enforce the law.
Hermanson is running as a Republican for district attorney in a district that includes Kay and Noble counties. Wallace is among three people seeking a judicial seat in Creek County. Judicial elections are nonpartisan.
The men worked together for nearly a decade defending Nichols as the state brought 161 counts of murder against him. They successfully avoided a death sentence for Nichols, who is serving a life sentence in prison without the possibility of release for his role in the bombing. Hermanson and Wallace said they didn't confer before deciding to run for office.
"We didn't talk to each other; it just happened," Hermanson said.
Hermanson, 57, said he decided to run for district attorney because he wanted to see a change in his local district attorney's office.
Wallace, 66, said he made a last minute decision to run for office when the sitting associate district judge announced her retirement. For Wallace, who has made a name for himself defending high-profile death penalty cases, working as a judge will be an opportunity to focus on other endeavors.
The legal careers of both men have lasted nearly 30 years. But to many they will always be known as the attorneys who defended the rights of a man who conspired with Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. The explosion resulted in the deaths of 168 people. McVeigh was put to death after being convicted in a federal court.
"People still talk about it," Hermanson said. "The courts asked me to take that case. I didn't get rich. I didn't write a book about it. I provided the constitutional defense for somebody charged with a crime. Would it have been easy to walk way from it? Absolutely. Would it have been the right thing to do? No. You can't leave your client hanging like that."
Hermanson said his experience as a defense attorney would only enhance his ability to enforce the law as a prosecutor.
"Just because you're a defense attorney doesn't mean you don't want criminals to be punished," he said. "A defense attorney knows the ins and outs of criminal law and would be very successful as a prosecutor."
Wallace was a well-known defense attorney in eastern Oklahoma before he represented Nichols; the case only heightened his name recognition.
"I've represented ONG, oil companies. I've represented every head shop in the state," Wallace said. "And I've represented over 200 people who have chosen homicide as a problem solving technique."
Both men will face opponents in the July 27 primary election.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
OK Senate goes to GOP
STATE SENATE
WITH GOP WIN, THE PARTY TAKES LEGISLATURE LEADERSHIP
By Julie Bisbee
Capitol Bureau
jbisbee@opubco.com
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
The Republicans will have the majority in the state Senate for the first time in history.
Republicans in Tuesday's election retained incumbent seats and picked up at least two seats to get the majority in the Senate.
Vote totals in a third race between Republican incumbent Jim Reynolds and Democrat David Boren still were being counted late Tuesday in the District 43 race. Boren is not related to U.S. Rep. Dan Boren. Less than 100 votes separated the candidates.
Even with the final count still out in District 43, Republicans bested the Democrats by two seats. The Democrats and Republicans had been tied at 24 and shared control of the Senate since 2006.
Sen. Glenn Coffee, co-president pro-tempore, said having John McCain on the ballot gave the Republicans additional momentum. McCain took the majority of the votes in Oklahoma.
"He carried the state and we've had great candidates who did a good job, and the message resonated with the voters," Coffee said.
A new agenda
While bemoaning the outcome of the presidential election, Republicans celebrated their win at the state House, promising to push for pro-business, pro-tort reform and a pro-family agenda.
The newly elected candidates lined up behind Coffee onstage at the state GOP watch party.
"We're going to change Oklahoma," Coffee said. "You're looking at the best bunch of All-Americans any coach could ask for."
Republicans took control of the Senate by picking up two Democrat-held seats, including a seat in the Tulsa area held by a senator who switched parties in 2006, stoping a GOP majority that year.
Sen. Nancy Riley, D-Tulsa, lost to Republican Dan Newberry. Republicans picked up a Stillwater seat with a win by James Halligan, former Oklahoma State University president, who beat a former judge, Democrat Bob Murphy. Halligan will fill Democrat Mike Morgan's seat, who was term limited.
Democrat Sen. Charlie Laster, co-floor leader, said Barack Obama's decision not to campaign in Oklahoma hurt the state races.
"There's no question, the Obama factor was too much for us to overcome," Laster said. "When the guy at the top of the ticket abandons the state from the start and leaves us swinging in the wind, our candidates have to outperform the other candidates by nearly 16 points or more. That's just a tough deal."
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Friday, September 5, 2008
Prison Rodeo
Inmates say sport taught them value of teamwork.
By Julie Bisbee
THE OKLAHOMAN
Staff Writer
Friday, August 15, 2008
McLOUD — Lakota Wise has spent most of her life taking risks and cheating death. This weekend is no different.
But the adrenaline rush of riding on the back of rearing bull is the high 29-year-old seeks this weekend.
Wise is one of nine women who make up the "Women of the West," rodeo team from the Mabel Bassett Correctional Center in McLoud. The women, who have been training since June, will be one of two female teams to compete in the rodeo this weekend in McAlester. The women will compete in bronc riding, bull riding and cattle dogging. Teams from 10 different prisons will compete in the rodeo. Louisiana and Oklahoma are the only states with prison rodeos and Oklahoma's rodeo is the only one in the world behind prison walls.
Organizers expect 12,000 to 16,000 people to show up for the annual event tonight and Saturday night, said Terry Crenshaw, warden's assistant at the state prison. The prison rodeo in McAlester is legendary with such events as "Money The Hard Way," where inmates scramble to get a piece of ribbon attached to a bull's horns. The winner gets $100.
Few inmate teams practice with livestock before coming into the arena at McAlester.
"It's a whole lot different when you get down in the chute and see that bull," said Deborah Graumann, a rodeo team coach and health administrator at the prison.
To the rodeo
Wise is a sturdy American Indian woman who is serving a lengthy prison sentence for drug possession and forgery. It's her first year on the team.
"We're not here because we're innocent," Wise said. "We've risked our lives out on the street, now we're doing it on the back of the animal. This is something positive and the first time I've done something like this sober."
Tonight's rodeo will also be the first time the team has ridden livestock.
But on the back of a training bull, they've tackled the most formidable foe, their own doubts and fears, said Warden Millicent Newton-Embry.
"It's a demon to beat and that gives them a real sense of accomplishment," said Newton-Embry. "That bull is just a metaphor for their demon, be it fear, drugs or whatever it was that brought them into the system. They figure if they can do this, they can do anything."
Forming a bond
The afternoon sun blazes and glints off the razor wire as nine women huddle around a barrel anchored to the ground. The women have traded their prison-issued smocks for black jeans and purple work shirts. They sport cowboy boots made of smooth black leather or lace up work boots. The boots are sent in by family members specifically for rodeo training.
The women had been training well before their boots and dungarees arrived.
"We've been rolling down that hill trying to learn how to fall," said Bobbie Gragson, who is serving a sentence for manufacturing methamphetamine. "You got to learn how to ride, but you also got to learn how to fall."
Gragson, 42, is the only veteran team member. This will be her third trip to the rodeo. She takes on the role of team captain.
The first time Gragson stared down the back of a bull she was hoping to get hurt, to dull the pain of losing her mother that year.
"My first year was about self-destruction. I didn't want to be able to get through it," Gragson said. "But it helped me get in touch with my fear. I think it's helped us all blossom."
Gragson's long dark hair spills out of a black felt cowboy hat and trails behind her as she rides the bull. The women have been training on a barrel shaped like the back of a bull and anchored to the ground. On the back, two women heave the barrel to simulate the kicks of a bull. Another woman stands at the front of the barrel and pulls forward.
Lowery, 27, holds tight and lasts for six seconds. The women cheer her as she hops off the barrel. A few months ago, the thought of riding a bull or riding a horse bareback was out of the realm of possibility for Lowery, who is serving a sentence for second-degree burglary and completing a substance abuse treatment program.
Between calisthenics, weight training and riding drills, a bond has been forged.
"One of the things you never want to do in the penitentiary is trust someone," Gragson said. "But we trust each other. We trust the staff members that are working with us. They want to see us do something positive."
Under the lights of the arena and in the mud, the women feel they've earned their spot there — even if they stay on the bull for only two seconds.
"This is what separates the women from the girls," Gragson said. "You put on your rodeo face and you keep going."
IF YOU GO
Prison rodeo
Where: Oklahoma State Penitentiary, McAlester.
When: Gates open at 6 p.m., rodeo starts at 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday.
Tickets: Box seats $17; reserved $12; general admission $8. Tickets are available at the gate or can be purchased online from the McAlester Chamber of Commerce at www.mcalester.org.
Treatment plan specifically designed for female juveniles
The Oklahoman
Staff Writer
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
TECUMSEH — Three years ago, when the head of a state juvenile detention facility volunteered to accept all the female juvenile offenders in Oklahoma, the move was greeted with looks of disbelief and in some cases pity.
Today, however, the Central Oklahoma Juvenile Center has created a treatment program specifically for female offenders, and the program has become a model for other programs designed just for girls.
"We have a lot of people from other states who want to come in and see our program," said Gene Christian, executive director for the Office of Juvenile Affairs. "Very few states treat their female offenders dramatically different than their male offenders."
In Oklahoma, stemming the tide of adult female convicts is a priority. The state puts more women in jail, per capita, than any other.
At the juvenile level, officials are trying to treat problems that might otherwise send a girl down the path toward life as a criminal adult. The program for girls, whose crimes ranged from first-degree murder to assault and battery, is the first of its kind in Oklahoma.
In the past, female offenders were placed where space was available and the treatment and therapy programs were similar to what male offenders received, said Johnson, Central Oklahoma Juvenile Center's superintendent.
"They need different things," Johnson said. "You can't try to fit a square peg in a round hole. The girls need to talk more, they have questions and they have different issues."
Before the female offender program was put into place, girls who had been convicted of crimes were sent wherever there were open beds, usually the L.E. Rader facility in Sand Springs. When female offenders were consolidated, the Tecumseh facility had to take a look at the programs available. Boys were playing football and competing in volleyball tournaments.
The female offenders needed something different. Not all girls wanted to compete in tournaments or race in swim meets. Instead, the facility added programs such as quilting clubs, yoga, Girl Scouts and even a version of "Oprah's Book Club," Johnson said.
The uniforms the kids wear also changed. In the past, girls and boys wore square-cut jeans and different colored T-shirts that corresponded with their security level at the facility. Now girls and boys wear khaki pants that are more form-fitting, Johnson said. Girls also have a say in the type of swimming suits that are issued to teens.
There are 40 beds for female offenders at the Tecumseh facility, and while the number of female offenders has grown over the past few years, currently there are only 29 girls at the facility. Systemwide, female offenders make up about 10 percent of the total number of children serving time in a juvenile detention facility, according to figures from the Office of Juvenile Affairs.
Struggling through treatment
While juvenile offenders may have access to swimming pools, book clubs and radio-controlled airplane clubs, they also have to complete a treatment plan before being released.
"We hold them to it," Johnson said. "We hold their feet to the fire, and if we don't feel like they're making progress, we don't move them on."
Juveniles are not serving a sentence set by a judge, but rather completing a series of steps that will hopefully make it easier for them to cope in the outside world where temptation is great and offenders often fall back into old patterns with family or gangs. The approach isn't always popular, but officials say it works better than teaching kids to be "mini-DOC inmates."
Seth Trickey and Daniel Dillingham were both convicted of violent offenses and released from the juvenile system after completing all their phases of treatment.
Jordan, an 18-year-old from Oklahoma County, has been at the Tecumseh detention center for a little more than a year. She and her then-23-year-old boyfriend were convicted of killing Jordan's mother. Her mother had objected to their relationship, Jordan said.
Jordan is a soft-spoken, petite girl with a bright smile and soft voice. While being in treatment, she's had to understand her crime and her own personal weaknesses.
"I had a bad attitude when I came here. I didn't care about anything, and you couldn't tell me anything," she said. "There are things you do, that you don't realize are antisocial or anything. But when I came here they started pointing those things out to me, and that was hard at first."
Jordan has progressed, but still has plenty to work on. But while being at the juvenile detention facility, she's realized she has choices and goals for her life.
"Before I came here, I didn't have any goals," she said. "I was working as waitress in a restaurant, my mom was a waitress in a restaurant. I probably wasn't even going to finish high school. I like myself a lot more now."
Now she wants to pursue a cosmetology license and then eventually become a counselor, she said.
"I think I could help a lot of people," she said.
For Johnson, who has worked with troubled youth for nearly 24 years, giving kids a second chance is his motto.
"A lot of times kids get to come here to be kids," he said. "Some of them have never been to the movies before when the come here. ... We've just got to give them a chance to make positive choices."