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Cineplex Rex

makes videos about gas drilling’s effects on communities.

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Right now, there are 57 videos on CineplexRex’s YouTube channel about drilling’s effects on communities:  water issues, air quality issues, property rights issues, property values issues, dust issues, privacy issues, safety issues, noise issues, odor issues, traffic issues, livestock issues, health issues … oh, and

lots and lots of tense meetings with citizens asking gas company reps questions about how their situations will ever be put to rights, and gas company reps making assurances they won’t follow through on… hearings, meetings with lawyers and state and town officials.

Notice how it’s always the gas company reps and the officials who are
at the head of the room, like teachers, and the affected citizens are in the audience, as if they were students in a classroom?

These are OUR homes.  Shouldn’t it be the other way around?
When do WE tell THEM how it’s going to be?

How about NOW?

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TribStar.com report:
Rockville, Indiana

May 6, 2010

Parke couple feeling burned by pipeline company

Year after gas explosion, Earls are still waiting for settlement

Howard Greninger The Tribune-Star

ROCKVILLE — It was a year ago this week that Gary J. and Sharon L. Earl saw a huge cloud of smoke near their Parke County home, as flames reached as high as 700 feet into the air and were visible for miles.

“It was a horrifying experience. I was just coming home with the grandkids in the back seat. You could see it from Bellmore and even [Indiana] 47,” Sharon Earl said, recalling May 5, 2009.

It was about 4:22 p.m. when a 24-inch natural gas pipeline exploded not far from the Earls’ house, about 3.6 miles northeast of Rockville, releasing about 7.4 million cubic feet of natural gas, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.

It caused a section of pipe about 10 feet in length to be blasted out of the ground, leaving a crater. The ensuing fire torched hundreds of trees and 49 homes were temporarily evacuated within a 1-mile radius of the blast.

The PHMSA indicated a possibility of external corrosion in its corrective action order to Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co., issued May 13, 2009.

The Sunday prior to the explosion, Gary Earl was on a hill in a vehicle with his grandchildren near where the explosion happened. “Just 48 hours prior to the explosion, I was on that hill. I wouldn’t be here today if I was there when it exploded,” he said.

Since that blast, the Earls have documented costs to their restore their property to pre-blast conditions and have been trying, unsuccessfully, to get Eastern Panhandle to cover those costs plus other damages.

Dark, burned trees can be seen along the back end of their property. While they own 200 acres, about 8 acres were engulfed in flames. Those trees now pose a potential danger of falling, especially along a road the couple uses to access a private lake on their property.

In addition, the Earls would often search for mushrooms or ginseng roots among those trees.

“We can’t go in these woods; it’s too dangerous,” said Sharon Earl.

The Earls are seeking to have Panhandle Eastern cut down the burned trees, with new saplings planted in their place.

Another concern comes from large chunks of concrete, used on the original natural gas line from the 1940s, which are strewn across their property. The Earls have spent $12,000 to $15,000 to re-side their house, as siding on the west side melted from the blast, as well as adding rock on a road to access their property.

In addition, the trees that burned had been placed in a state timber management plan. The trees were to be maintained for a future timber harvest.

“We will never see a dime of profit off the trees that were burnt,” Gary Earl said. “That was part of the program that makes the land work for you. That was part of our retirement program.”

Gary Earl said he was more than accommodating in allowing Panhandle Eastern access to repair the damaged line shortly after last year’s explosion.

“They led us to believe they would repair all of this, but once the gas was flowing again, they said it was too rainy and then three days later, they took everything out,” he said.

Panhandle Eastern, in a Nov. 18, 2009, letter, declined to accept an offer for settlement from the Earls and offered to go to a non-binding mediation. The Earls say they have an original right-of-way agreement from the 1930s, which calls for a binding mediation, with each side showing costs. If an agreement is not reached, a third party, selected by both the landowner and company, makes a final decision.

It was in such a meeting that Sharon Earl said the gas company’s attorney simply ended the session and walked out.

“Our attorney was outgunned,” Sharon said. “We are hiring a different attorney. We are pursuing it.” The Earls meet with the new attorney in early June.

“They are bullies, that is how I see it,” Sharon Earl said. “We don’t need their money to live. It is just making right what they have destroyed and abiding by an agreement they made” in the original right-of-way agreement.

In addition, the Earls said they have notified the gas company of another potential problem, a spot about 350 feet from their home where land has subsided next to what is called the “400 line.” The company has since put up an orange-colored fence around that spot.

John Barnett, spokesman for Panhandle Eastern Pipeline Co., said he could not specifically comment on any action involving the Earls as they “have their own legal counsel. We have tried to be a good neighbor since the pipeline was built in that area and work with all of the neighbors to resolve any conflict,” Barnett said.

Barnett said the pipeline was reopened on May 26, 2009, initially at a 20 percent reduction in pressure as required by the PHMSA.

“The line is now in service operating at a 10 percent reduction in pressure, at 90 percent of our operating pressure as we continue to work with the PHMSA, which oversees that,” Barnett said.

“We replaced a lot of pipeline in that area. We replaced 634 feet of pipe, which included the damaged section,” Barnett said.

On the 400 line, Barnett said, “There is nothing wrong with the 400 line. There is some subsidence in that area and that is why we put the safety fencing up, to try to block it off so that somebody didn’t accidentally drive some machinery, a tractor or a car over that and cause some problems.

“We did have a geophysics firm into look at that site and they are currently evaluating it. They took all sorts of measurements and they will propose whatever remediation measure they feel is appropriate,” Barnett said.

The Earls said they are accustomed to having pipelines cross through their land, which has been in Gary Earl’s family for three generations. The property now has five natural gas lines that cut through their property.

“We understand that it is part of living in the United States to have utilities and we understand the risk, but the obligation and legal responsibility is to make us whole again. We’re the injured party here. It’s sad. It makes you disillusioned about how you think things are done, which should be the right, moral, ethical way,” Sharon Earl said.

To see photos, please visit the original article at TribStar.com

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Cartoon courtesy of MARQUIL at EmpireWire.com

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Cartoon courtesy of MARQUIL at EmpireWire.com

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Blowout preventers are used on gas wells too.


CORPORATE CRIME REPORTER
May 6, 2010

http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com/nabors050610.htm

Former Oil Rig Worker Says Cheating on Blowout Preventer Tests Widespread
24 Corporate Crime Reporter 19, May 6, 2010

BP will not be happy with Mike Mason.

Mason is a 27 year oil industry veteran who worked on oil rigs at BP facilities on the North Slope of Alaska.

He knows the ins and outs of blowout preventers.

And he says that cheating on tests for blowout preventers is widespread in the industry.

He says he’s witnessed BP cheating on such tests in the North Slope.

On January 21, 2005, Corporate Crime Reporter ran an article detailing Mason’s allegations of BP’s cheating on blowout preventer tests.

At the time, Mason was working for Nabors Alaska Drilling Inc.  a BP contractor on the North Slope.

Mason witnessed two blowouts of BP wells on the North Slope in 2003  one on July 3 and one on December 6.

At the time, Mason was feeding information to oil industry critic Charles Hamel.

Hamel wrote to then Senator Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), asking for an investigation.

“BP and Nabors Alaska Drilling are reported to be falsifying drilling records and critical AOGCC (Alaska Oil and Gas Conservation Commission) required Blow Out Prevention tests as well as concealing from AOGCC and ADEC (Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation) at least two reportable blow-out/spills,” Hamel wrote.

The Wall Street Journal followed up with a story on February 5, 2005.

As a result of the Corporate Crime Reporter and Wall Street Journal articles, investigations were launched.

In June 2005, the Alaska Oil & Gas Conservation Commission (AOGCC) ruled that a Nabors’ employee had falsified blowout preventer tests.

How?

Chart spinning.

What is chart spinning?

Well, to test a blowout preventer, you build up the pressure for five minutes.

And you record the pressure test on a chart.

The Commission found that the Nabors employee cheated.

They built up the pressure for only one minute.

Or two minutes.

And then manually moved the chart to show that it had been pressurized for the required five minutes.

Nabors also investigated the situation and agreed with the Commission’s findings.

The Commission ordered Nabors to pay $10,000 in costs.

And according to Mason, Nabors fired the responsible manager.

But Mason says that that was just one instance.

He says that cheating on blow out prevention tests is a way of life in the oil industry.

“They cheat to save money and time,” Mason said.

Mason says he personally witnessed BP managers repeatedly cheating on blowout prevention tests.

But BP was never charged.

Why not?

Mason says that he spoke with the Nabors manager who was fired.

And the Nabors manager who was fired said that he wouldn’t tell investigators who at BP was complicit.

Why did the Nabors manager take the fall for the BP managers?

“That’s just the type of person he was,” Mason says. “He wasn’t the type of person who was going to turn other people in.”

Mason was fired from his job at Nabors on July 16, 2006, four days after he wrote a letter to the editor of the Anchorage Daily News.

Read complete story at Corporate Crime Reporter

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Business Week reports:

Beer Flows, Strippers Promote at Oil Conference After Rig Blast

May 5 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc’s oil spill after a fatal rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico hasn’t stopped the party in Houston, where the world’s offshore energy industry is gathered for its biggest event of the year.

Beer and wine flow at the Offshore Technology Conference’s concession booths, and exhibitors use humor and titillation to get the attention of 67,000 predominantly male attendees from more than 100 countries. Some guests leaving the exhibit hall May 3 found fliers stuck on their cars promoting a strip club. The ads offered free admission and had photos of a rig on one side and a woman removing her clothes on the other.

The April 20 explosion and fire on Transocean Ltd.’s Deepwater Horizon rig killed 11 workers and triggered a leak from a BP well that continues to spew oil into the ocean. President Barack Obama said May 3 that the spill may become an “unprecedented environmental disaster.”

“You want to respect the people that gave their life for this industry,” said Jim Bullen, sales manager for TorcUp Inc., an Easton, Pennsylvania-based maker of drilling tools. “At the end of the day, we’ve got a business to run and life goes on. It’s sad. It just exemplifies how dangerous an industry offshore drilling really is.”

A sign at TorcUp’s exhibit booth reads, “Tools for studs … with big nuts.” Women wearing high heels and short, racing- themed suits with zippers up the front hand guests a power tool to spin the Wheel of Torque for a chance to win a gift card.

Please click on link to read entire story:
Business Week: Beer Flows, Strippers Promote at Oil Conference

Landowners and politicians, there isn’t a prayer of “working it out” with an industry that has no sense of decency.

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Slick Operator: The BP I’ve Known Too Well

Wednesday 05 May 2010

photo

I’ve seen this movie before. In 1989, I was a fraud investigator hired to dig into the cause of the Exxon Valdez disaster. Despite Exxon’s name on that boat, I found the party most to blame for the destruction was … British Petroleum (BP).

That’s important to know, because the way BP caused devastation in Alaska is exactly the way BP is now sliming the entire Gulf Coast.

Tankers run aground, wells blow out, pipes burst. It shouldn’t happen, but it does. And when it does, the name of the game is containment. Both in Alaska, when the Exxon Valdez grounded, and in the Gulf last week, when the Deepwater Horizon platform blew, it was British Petroleum that was charged with carrying out the Oil Spill Response Plans (OSRP), which the company itself drafted and filed with the government.

What’s so insane, when I look over that sickening slick moving toward the Delta, is that containing spilled oil is really quite simple and easy. And from my investigation, BP has figured out a very low-cost way to prepare for this task: BP lies. BP prevaricates, BP fabricates and BP obfuscates.

That’s because responding to a spill may be easy and simple, but not at all cheap. And BP is cheap. Deadly cheap.

To contain a spill, the main thing you need is a lot of rubber, long skirts of it called a “boom.” Quickly surround a spill, leak or burst, then pump it out into skimmers, or disperse it, sink it or burn it. Simple.

But there’s one thing about the rubber skirts: you’ve got to have lots of them at the ready, with crews on standby in helicopters and on containment barges ready to roll. They have to be in place round the clock, all the time, just like a fire department, even when all is operating A-O.K. Because rapid response is the key. In Alaska, that was BP’s job, as principal owner of the pipeline consortium Alyeska. It is, as well, BP’s job in the Gulf, as principal lessee of the deepwater oil concession.

Before the Exxon Valdez grounding, BP’s Alyeska group claimed it had these full-time, oil spill response crews. Alyeska had hired Alaskan natives, trained them to drop from helicopters into the freezing water and set booms in case of emergency. Alyeska also certified in writing that a containment barge with equipment was within five hours sailing of any point in the Prince William Sound. Alyeska also told the state and federal government it had plenty of boom and equipment cached on Bligh Island.

But it was all a lie. On that March night in 1989 when the Exxon Valdez hit Bligh Reef in the Prince William Sound, the BP group had, in fact, not a lick of boom there. And Alyeska had fired the natives who had manned the full-time response teams, replacing them with phantom crews, lists of untrained employees with no idea how to control a spill. And that containment barge at the ready was, in fact, laid up in a drydock in Cordova, locked under ice, 12 hours away.

As a result, the oil from the Exxon Valdez, which could have and should have been contained around the ship, spread out in a sludge tide that wrecked 1,200 miles of shoreline.

And here we go again. Valdez goes Cajun.

BP’s CEO Tony Hayward reportedly asked, “What the hell did we do to deserve this?”

It’s what you didn’t do, Mr. Hayward. Where was BP’s containment barge and response crew? Why was the containment boom laid so damn late, too late and too little? Why is it that the US Navy is hauling in 12 miles of rubber boom and fielding seven skimmers, instead of BP?

Last year, CEO Hayward boasted that, despite increased oil production in exotic deep waters, he had cut BP’s costs by an extra one billion dollars a year. Now we know how he did it.

As chance would have it, I was meeting last week with Louisiana lawyer Daniel Becnel Jr. when word came in of the platform explosion. Daniel represents oil workers on those platforms; now, he’ll represent their bereaved families. The Coast Guard called him. They had found the emergency evacuation capsule floating in the sea and were afraid to open it and disturb the cooked bodies.

I wonder if BP painted the capsule green, like they paint their gas stations.

Becnel, yesterday by phone from his office from the town of Reserve, Louisiana, said the spill response crews were told they weren’t needed because the company had already sealed the well. Like everything else from BP mouthpieces, it was a lie.

In the end, this is bigger than BP and its policy of cheaping out and skiving the rules. This is about the anti-regulatory mania, which has infected the American body politic. While the tea baggers are simply its extreme expression, US politicians of all stripes love to attack “the little bureaucrat with the fat rule book.” It began with Ronald Reagan and was promoted, most vociferously, by Bill Clinton and the head of Clinton’s deregulation committee, one Al Gore.

Americans want government off our backs … that is, until a folding crib crushes the skull of our baby, Toyota accelerators speed us to our death, banks blow our savings on gambling sprees and crude oil smothers the Mississippi.

Then, suddenly, it’s, “Where was hell was the government? Why didn’t the government do something to stop it?”

The answer is because government took you at your word they should get out of the way of business, that business could be trusted to police itself. It was only last month that BP, lobbying for new deepwater drilling, testified to Congress that additional equipment and inspection wasn’t needed.

You should meet some of these little bureaucrats with the fat rule books. Like Dan Lawn, the inspector from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, who warned and warned and warned, before the Exxon Valdez grounding, that BP and Alyeska were courting disaster in their arrogant disregard of the rule book. In 2006, I printed his latest warnings about BP’s culture of negligence. When the choice is between Lawn’s rule book and a bag of tea, Lawn’s my man.

This just in: Becnel tells me that one of the platform workers has informed him that the BP well was apparently deeper than the 18,000 feet depth reported. BP failed to communicate that additional depth to Halliburton crews, who, therefore, poured in too small a cement cap for the additional pressure caused by the extra depth. So, it blew.

Why didn’t Halliburton check? “Gross negligence on everyone’s part,” said Becnel. Negligence driven by penny-pinching, bottom-line squeezing. BP says its worker is lying. Someone’s lying here, man on the platform or the company that has practiced prevarication from Alaska to Louisiana.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.

by: Greg Palast, t r u t h o u t | News Analysis

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Frack Country Blues


Frack Country Blues posts feature original cartoons with salient commentary.

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