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Lawsuit Filed Against St. James Parish Over Alleged Secret Meeting About Proposed Plant

Sharon Lavigne, founder of RISE St. James, speaks at a public hearing for the Formosa chemical plant on July 9th, 2019. RISE St. James is also opposing the proposed Wanhua chemical plant and is listed as a plaintiff in a lawsuit against St. James Parish.
Travis Lux
/
WWNO
Sharon Lavigne, founder of RISE St. James, speaks at a public hearing for the Formosa chemical plant on July 9th, 2019. RISE St. James is also opposing the proposed Wanhua chemical plant and is listed as a plaintiff in a lawsuit against St. James Parish.

Residents and a pair of environmental activist groups are suing St. James Parish over an alleged secret meeting that plaintiffs claim violated Louisiana Open Meetings Law.

Wanhua Chemical US Operation, LLC has proposed construction of a polyurethane facility on a 250 acre tract of land in Convent, Louisiana. On May 20th, 2019, the St. James Planning Commission voted 5-3 to approve the company’s industrial land use application for the site.

The lawsuit lists Genevieve Butler and Pastor Harry Joseph, Sr. as plaintiffs, as well as activist groups RISE St. James and the Louisiana Bucket Brigade. St. James Parish, St. James Parish Council, and St. James Parish Planning Commission are listed as defendants.

The lawsuit alleges that six days prior to the May 20th Planning Commission meeting, parish officials held a secret meeting to discuss the Wanhua plant. Citing emails obtained by the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic, the suit claims that St. James Parish Director of Operations, Blaise Gravois, “set up a meeting in two back-to-back sessions expressly in an attempt to avoid having a quorum of the Council or Commission present in the same room at the same time, purposefully circumventing the strictures of the Open Meetings Law.”

Lisa Jordan, Director of the Tulane Environmental Law Clinic which is representing the plaintiffs, says the proposed Wanhua plant is an important issue for the public and “has the right to observe the deliberation of public bodies,” and that the land use permit application process should be restarted.

“It is very important that [parish officials] do their business on behalf of the public, before the public,” Jordan says, “and not behind closed doors where the public can’t know what went on.”

Jordan says residents are concerned about the plant’s chemical emissions, and the fact that it’s proposed in a parish that is already home to several industrial facilities.

Officials with St. James Parish were not yet prepared to comment on the lawsuit at press time.

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Travis Lux primarily contributes science and health stories to Louisiana's Lab. He studied anthropology and sociology at Rhodes College in Memphis, TN, and picked up his first microphone at the Transom Story Workshop in Woods Hole, MA. In his spare time he loves to cook -- especially soups and casseroles.
Travis Lux
Travis is WWNO's coastal reporter.