DAVE MATTHEWS BAND Bus driver accused of dumping waste



Human waste drenched passengers on a tour boat passing under a bridge.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
CHICAGO -- The Dave Matthews Band, a rock group so "green" it has its own flavor of Ben and Jerry's ice cream, could face $70,000 in fines after one of its tour bus drivers reportedly dumped a tankful of human waste on a Chicago River sightseeing boat earlier this month.
After a two-week investigation into an episode that prompted outrage from Chicago's mayor and snickering from late-night television hosts, Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan on Tuesday accused the band and driver Stefan A. Whol of illegally dumping foul-smelling muck into the river and creating a public nuisance.
About two-thirds of the 120 passengers on the upper deck of Chicago's Little Lady were doused with a brownish-yellow liquid as the tour boat crossed under the Kinzie Street bridge during an Aug. 8 architectural sightseeing cruise.
Some of the passengers suffered nausea and vomiting after the waste cascaded into their eyes and mouths and soaked their hair and clothing. Five went to Northwestern Memorial Hospital for tests.
Investigation
Witnesses told authorities the deluge of waste came from a long black tour bus crossing the grated bridge. Several managed to spy an Oregon license plate number. Surveillance cameras at neighborhood businesses helped Madigan's investigators and Chicago police detectives trace the bus to Whol, a Texas man who is identified in the complaint as one of five drivers for the Dave Matthews Band, authorities said.
Whol was driving to pick up a band member at a Michigan Avenue hotel when the bus crossed the bridge, according to the three-count complaint filed in Cook County Circuit Court. Later that evening, the band played the second of two shows at Alpine Valley in East Troy, Wis.
A band publicist issued a statement Tuesday night saying, "Our driver has stated that he was not involved in this incident. We reserve any judgment until we see the evidence."
Luxury coaches like the ones leased by the band are equipped with 80- to 100-gallon waste tanks that are emptied underneath the vehicle by pushing a toggle switch behind the driver's seat, according to the attorney general's complaint.
Evaluation
In addition to seeking fines for violations of state laws, Madigan said she is asking the court to order an evaluation of the band's waste disposal practices. State officials said most charter buses dump waste at licensed disposal facilities.
"This incident may be unique, but that does not lessen the environmental or public health risks posed by the release of at least 800 pounds of liquid human waste into a busy waterway and onto a crowded tour boat," Madigan said in a statement. "This situation clearly demonstrates the environmental and public health problems that can occur when laws are ignored. This act was not only offensive, it was illegal."
Two weeks ago, another driver for the band, Jerry Fitzpatrick, denied responsibility for the incident, saying his bus had been parked at a nearby hotel at the time. He even coaxed a police officer to inspect the bus and report that the waste tank was nearly full.
"This band is very environmentally conscious," Fitzpatrick said then. "We wouldn't have anything to do with this sort of thing."
Environmentalism
In several interviews, Dave Matthews has said one of the reasons his band contributes to environmental causes is to offset air pollution from its tour buses.
Ben and Jerry's, the socially conscious ice cream maker, named its One Sweet Whirled flavor (caramel and coffee ice creams with marshmallow and caramel swirls and coffee-flavored fudge chips) after one of the band's songs. Half of the band's royalties from sales of the ice cream are donated to a coalition of environmental groups to combat global climate change.
The band also won the 2002 Missions in Music award from the Environmental Media Association, a group of Hollywood celebrities that seeks to "have a profound effect on how the public receives environmental information."
The group cited the band's environmental advocacy while on tour, which "not only used music to educate and motivate the public on environmental issues, but benefited national environmental organizations as well."