St Pete Times: Truth o meter statement: Obama blames 30 day legal limit for role in oil spill

http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2010/jun/01/barack-obama/obama-blames-30-day-limit-law-role-oil-spill/

Yeah, I’ve been on the other side of this when getting state permits in Florida; the agency “asks” you to seek an extension of time in which to reply while they get it together.   DV

Politifact: The Truth-O-Meter Says:

“The Interior Department has only 30 days to review an exploration plan submitted by an oil company. That leaves no time for the appropriate environmental review. The result is, they are continually waived.”    Barack Obama on Thursday, May 27th, 2010 in a press conference at the White House.

As anger grows over the massive, uncontained oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the procedure for issuing federal drilling permits for the Gulf Coast has begun to attract intense scrutiny. During a May 27, 2010, press conference, President Barack Obama — under pressure for the failure to stem the underwater leak — laid a large portion of the blame on the existing law that governs the permitting process, as well as the regulations to implement that law, which were drawn up by the Minerals Management Service, the Interior Department office that oversees oil and gas leases.

“What’s also been made clear from this disaster is that, for years, the oil and gas industry has leveraged such power that they have effectively been allowed to regulate themselves,” Obama said. “One example, under current law, the Interior Department has only 30 days to review an exploration plan submitted by an oil company. That leaves no time for the appropriate environmental review. The result is, they are continually waived. And this is just one example of a law that was tailored by the industry to serve their needs instead of the public’s. So Congress needs to address these issues as soon as possible, and my administration will work with them to do so.”

We wondered whether the president is correct that the law mandates such a short period for an environmental review.

The law in question is the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act. The law was originally passed in 1953, though the amendments relevant to the Obama’s statement were added in 1978.

Under the law, a proposal to drill must pass through several stages before it can be approved. First, the Interior Department must choose the locations it will open to leasing. Then, the department puts those areas up for lease.

Once a lease is purchased by an energy company, the leaseholder must submit an “exploration plan” to the Interior Secretary before exercising its right to drill. Interior Department regulations specify that the regional supervisor of MMS has 15 working days after receiving a proposed plan to rule a submission packet complete. At that point, a 30-day clock starts ticking. If the secretary finds problems during this period, modifications can be ordered or, if modifications are insufficient to solve the problem, the lease can be canceled. But if the secretary finds the plan acceptable, it must be approved within that same 30-day window.

So Obama is correct about the law’s 30-day limit. He’s also correct that waivers are common. The Interior Department says that in recent years, MMS has granted 250 to 400 waivers annually for Gulf of Mexico projects alone. (The department was unable to provide PolitiFact with the number of cases in which a waiver was not granted.) The Deepwater Horizon project had been given a “categorical exclusion” from detailed environmental review more than a year before the disaster occurred — a decision that is supposed to be granted to projects that are expected to have minimal environmental impact.

Meanwhile, on Obama’s assertion that 30 days is too short a window to conduct a credible environmental review — much less a plan to respond to a major malfunction — many experts we spoke to agreed with the president.

In general, then, Obama’s statement is on target. But we think it’s worth noting that the 30-day limit is not the only factor that explains the failure of MMS to study the environmental impact of Gulf of Mexico projects.

The exploration plan Obama referenced is not the only environmental study that is supposed to be conducted during this process. Studies are also required when the lease locations are chosen and when the leases are sold, and they don’t have statutory time limits.

Critics say that, in their current form, these earlier-stage studies do not include enough detail on the specific drilling locations to qualify as a full-scale environmental assessment. But if MMS — or Congress, or the industry — had wanted to beef up these earlier studies as a way of getting around the 30-day limit, they could have done so. But they never did. In their absence, the courts have sometimes stepped in: In 2009, a federal appeals court threw out the initial five-year leasing plan for drilling in Alaska’s Chukchi Sea, citing shortcomings in the plan’s environmental assessment.

Holly Doremus, a law professor at the University of California-Berkeley who has studied the MMS permitting process, called it “a bit disingenuous” for Obama to focus solely on the 30-day limit.

“The categorical exclusion has never been formally justified by the short time line, and so far as I know MMS has never — until after this blow-out — asked Congress for more time to review exploration plans,” she said in an interview. “I think rather that MMS has thought, and acted, as if it didn’t need to do detailed environmental review at the exploration plan stage” because it does them at the two earlier stages. “If that review were more thorough, and considered true worst-case scenarios, it might well be the case that 30 days would be enough to look at the environmental impacts of exploration in a particular location,” she said.

Meanwhile, some say that Congress ought to shoulder a portion of the blame for letting an inadequate permitting process fester for more than 30 years.

“If that is too short for a review, then Congress should change it,” Gary Wolfram, an economics and public policy professor at Hillsdale College. “My suspicion is that, as with all central planners, Congress doesn’t know the proper amount of time it takes to review a project.”
Belatedly, Congress — prodded, also belatedly, by the Obama administration — is looking to change the rules. On May 11, 2010, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar released a legislative package that includes a proposal to eliminate the 30-day deadline. “Changing this 30-day mandatory deadline to a 90-day timeline that can be further extended to complete environmental and safety reviews, as needed, would provide MMS more time to conduct additional environmental analysis on an exploration plan,” the department said in its announcement.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., the chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, sought to attach the change to a supplemental spending bill before the congressional Memorial Day recess, but the effort was unsuccessful. Supporters vow to push on. “I am not aware of any pending free-standing legislation on this, but I do know that Congress will revisit the topic when it gets back,” said Bill Wicker, a spokesman for Bingaman.

Ultimately, Obama was correct on everything he said about the law — the 30-day limit, the difficulties of conducting a full study in that time frame, and the frequent waivers. But we’re marking him down slightly for implying that the 30-day limit tied the administration’s hands. If the administration had wanted to change MMS procedures short of rewriting the law, it could have done so by proposing more stringent requirements for the other environmental assessments undertaken during the permitting process, which are not time-limited under the law. And it could have pushed earlier to rewrite the law. On balance, we rate his statement Mostly True.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

CNN:Oil Spill spreads to Mississippi, Alabama

By the CNN Wire Staff
June 1, 2010 6:59 p.m. EDT

Tar balls and puddles of oil are reported on Alabama's Dauphin Island.

Tar balls and puddles of oil are reported on Alabama’s Dauphin Island.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • U.S. begins criminal investigation into oil spill
  • Robots make latest attempt to stop the oil leak
  • Spill makes a third of Gulf off-limits to fishing
  • BP puts cost of spill response at $990 million

(CNN) — Oil from BP’s massive Gulf of Mexico crude spill reached the shores of Mississippi on Tuesday, Gov. Haley Barbour’s office reported. Residents and researchers reported oil in Alabama.

In Mississippi, a long, narrow strand of oil came ashore on Petit Bois Island, Barbour’s office said. The strand of oil was about 2 miles long but only 3 feet wide, said Laura Hipp, a spokeswoman for Barbour’s office. Cleanup crews were on the scene Tuesday evening, she said.

Petit Bois Island is off Pascagoula, Mississippi. It’s about five miles west of Dauphin Island, Alabama, where oil was also washing ashore Tuesday afternoon. But Hipp said most of the oil remained more than 35 miles off Horn Island, the largest of Mississippi’s barrier islands.

The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration had warned earlier this week that the spreading slick from an undersea BP oil well was heading toward the Alabama and Mississippi coasts. Tar balls associated with the Gulf spill had hit Dauphin Island, about 35 miles south of Mobile, in early May, but residents said that Tuesday was the first time they had seen oil hitting the beach. Nevertheless, people were still on the beaches and swimming in the blue-green waters.

BP began its latest attempt to curtail the flow of oil from an underwater well in the Gulf of Mexico on Tuesday, using robot submarines to cut into a damaged pipe a mile down.

The operation carries the risk that the flow of crude from the ruptured well, already the largest oil spill in U.S. history, will increase — but if successful, the company says it will be able to catch most of that oil with a cap it plans to place over the severed lower marine riser pipe.

“Even with an increased flow rate, this cap will be able to handle this,” BP Managing Director Bob Dudley told CNN’s “American Morning.”

Meanwhile, the Obama administration distanced itself from BP by announcing it would no longer hold joint news conferences with the company; and Attorney General Eric Holder, after meeting with Gulf-Coast-state attorneys general, told reporters the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into the oil spill.

The engineering involved in the latest work on the damaged well has never been attempted at a depth of 5,000 feet. But Dudley said Tuesday the latest attempt is “more straightforward” than previous, unsuccessful efforts.

A mechanical claw began squeezing the heavy riser pipe late Tuesday morning, the first step in a series of planned cuts. After that, a diamond-cut saw was being brought in to make a “clean cut,” preparing the way for the custom-made cap to be fitted over the lower marine riser package.

Oil has been gushing from the undersea well since April 20 when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded and later sank. Government estimates are that up to 19,000 barrels (798,000 gallons) of oil a day are flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Dudley said that could increase by up to 20 percent — nearly 160,000 gallons — when the pipe is cut, but he said the company has learned lessons from its earlier attempts that it is applying to the new process.

Warm water and methanol will be pumped into the cap to limit the growth of gas hydrate crystals that thwarted an earlier attempt to cap the spill, he said. And a second line is planned to draw more oil off the well’s blowout preventer, a critical piece of safety equipment that has so far failed to shut down the well, using equipment involved in last week’s failed “top kill” operation.

BP’s handling of the spill and its statements regarding the status of operations have been sharply criticized by some in recent weeks. The Obama administration announced Tuesday that it would no longer hold joint news briefings with the company and that Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, its point man on the spill, will now become the face of the government’s response effort.

Allen told reporters in New Orleans, Louisiana, that his job is to speak “very frankly with the American public.”

“I think we need to be communicating with the American people through my voice as the national incident commander,” he said.

Rear Adm. Mary Landry, who has been the Coast Guard’s on-scene coordinator for five weeks, will be returning to her duties as chief of the service’s New Orleans district office. Coast Guard Commandant Robert Papp said the plan always has been for Landry to resume that role in preparation for the Atlantic hurricane season, which began Tuesday.

Allen praised Landry’s work leading “an anomalous and unprecedented response” to the spill, but said Landry now needs to focus “on the larger array of threats” to her district, which includes the U.S. Southeast and Midwest.

The oil spill has spread across much of the northern Gulf of Mexico, washing ashore in the environmentally sensitive marshes along the Louisiana coast that serve as the cradle of the region’s fishing industry. Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said crude has fouled 24 miles and about 2,965 acres of the state’s coastline, and the start of hurricane season raised new worries that a storm could drive more oil ashore.

“We don’t want to scare anybody, but we need to be realistic about it,” Nungesser said. “If a storm does top out levees, it will probably bring oil with it.” He said residents who evacuate ahead of a hurricane might return “not to a flooded home, but to a home that is completely contaminated with this oil.”

“I don’t know how to soft-pedal that,” he said.

Tuesday also marked the start of the recreational fishing season for red snapper, a big draw for sport anglers in the region. But the season opened with a new blow to the region’s fisheries industry as the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration extended its restrictions on fishing to nearly a third of the Gulf.

The latest closures extend southward to a point about 240 miles west of the tip of Florida and eastward to federal waters off the Alabama-Florida state line.

Holder met with state attorneys general and federal prosecutors from Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi on Tuesday, emerging to tell reporters that the Justice Department was looking at possible criminal violations in connection with the spill as well as working to make sure BP paid the full cost of the cleanup.

Justice Department launches investigation

“If we find evidence of illegal behavior, we will be forceful in our response,” he said. “We have already instructed all relevant parties to preserve any documents that may shed light on the facts surrounding this disaster.”

A group of senators asked Holder to look into whether BP had leveled with federal officials in the exploration plan it filed with the government for the site, expressing concerns about BP’s “truthfulness and accuracy.” But in a reply to that letter last week, a Justice Department official did not say whether a criminal investigation had begun.

In a statement issued in response to Holder’s announcement, BP said it would cooperate with any inquiry, “just as we are doing in response to the other inquires that are already ongoing.”

BP, as the well’s owner, is responsible for the costs of the cleanup under federal law. The company said Tuesday that the tab for its response to date was $990 million. BP, rig owner Transocean Ltd. and oilfield services company Halliburton have blamed each other for the disaster, which left 11 workers dead.

BP stock has taken a beating on Wall Street since the spill and plunged 15 percent on Tuesday after the failure of the “top kill” plan, which pumped heavy drilling fluid into the damaged well in hopes of holding back the flow. The company’s stock value is down more than a third since the April 20 explosion on the rig.

The spill may not be completely under control until August, when BP expects to complete relief wells that will take the pressure off the one now spewing into the Gulf. If attempts to capture more of the leaking oil fail, White House energy adviser Carol Browner said, “we would be in a situation where it is conceivable that there would be oil leaking at a rate of something on the order of 12 to 20,000 barrels a day until the relief wells are dug.”

The Obama administration has always hoped for the best, “but we are preparing for the worst,” she said.

Florida Oil Spill Law: Crist appoints former BP lobbyist to spearhead Florida’s legal response to BP oil spill

http://www.floridaoilspilllaw.com/crist-appoints-former-bp-lobbyist-to-spearhead-floridas-legal-response-to-bp-oil-spill

Jim Smith 

With Louisiana’s shoreline turning blacker by the day, an elite team of two former attorneys general is cautiously laying the groundwork for Florida’s legal response to BP’s Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

Gov. Charlie Crist appointed the political odd couple – Democrat Bob Butterworth and Republican Jim Smith – almost two weeks ago to spearhead what could be the biggest and most complex lawsuit ever attempted by the state. So far, the beaches remain clear and a state lawsuit, if there ever is one, is nowhere in sight.

BP has paid out more than $2 million to Floridians for individual lost-income claims, and kept most of the cases open for future payment. That’s on top of the $50 million it gave the state for emergency preparations and a tourism promotion campaign.

So far, that’s good enough for Smith.

“At this point, I’m satisfied that BP is trying to do the right thing,” Smith said. “My sense is that this thing is still unfolding. Nobody could really even assess damages at this point.”

That’s not good enough for environmentalists who see only foot-dragging and politics as usual. They complain that Smith wasn’t a good choice to direct the legal charge because he was a registered BP lobbyist on and off between 2001 and 2005.

Smith acknowledges that his lobbying firm, one of the largest and most influential in the state, represented BP, but that he had no personal involvement with that client and has no loyalty to it today. He said he only registered as a BP lobbyist out of an abundance of caution.

The environmentalists want the state to haul BP into court now, and force it to pay for more booms and skimmers so Florida will be better prepared than Louisiana if and when the devastation rolls ashore.

The $25 million BP paid to help local governments prepare area contingency plans is a drop in the bucket, the critics charge. They also point out that last week, when BP CEO Tony Hayward traveled to Louisiana, he acknowledged that the company didn’t do enough to protect the beaches.

Special thanks to Progress Florida

CNN: Fisherman files restraining order against BP; BP says fishermen illness due to food poisoning

http://readersupportednews.com/off-site-news-section/49-49/2085-fisherman-files-restraining-order-against-bp

By Elizabeth Cohen, CNN
May 31, 2010 11:32 a.m. EDT

New Orleans, Louisiana (CNN) — A fisherman who was hospitalized after becoming ill while cleaning up oil in the Gulf of Mexico has filed a temporary restraining order in federal court against oil company BP.

John Wunstell Jr., is asking BP to give the workers masks and not harass workers who publicly voice their health concerns.

Wunstell, a shrimper, said he was paid by BP to use his boat, Ramie’s Wish, to clean up oil that has been gushing into the Gulf since an oil rig sank about 40 miles off the Louisiana coast, gushing an estimated 19,000 barrels (798, 000 gallons) of crude a day.

In an affidavit, Wunstell wrote he started experiencing severe headaches and nasal irritation on May 24. Over the next few days, he also developed nosebleeds, an upset stomach, and aches.

On Friday, Wunstell was airlifted to West Jefferson Medical Center in Marrero, Louisiana, where he remained hospitalized Sunday.

Eight other workers were brought to the hospital this week and were all released.

“We need to start protecting these guys,” said Jim Klick, Wunstell’s lawyer.

In his affidavit, Wunstell described his experience at the hospital.

“At West Jefferson, there were tents set up outside the hospital, where I was stripped of my clothing, washed with water and several showers, before I was allowed into the hospital,” Wunstell said. “When I asked for my clothing, I was told that BP had confiscated all of my clothing and it would not be returned.”

The restraining order requests that BP refrain from “altering, testing or destroying clothing or any other evidence or potential evidence” when workers become ill.

Graham MacEwen, a spokesman for BP, said he could not comment on the restraining order, or on allegations that BP confiscated clothing.

He denied accusations from Clint Guidry, president of the Louisiana Shrimpers Association, that BP has been threatening workers who speak out about health concerns.

Fishermen contacted by CNN have declined to speak publicly.

Some, who are making as much as $3,000 a day cleaning up the oil, have said they fear losing their jobs with BP.

“The BP oil spill wiped out their professions and their jobs this year and possibly years down the road,” Klick said. “The only work they can get right now is with BP.”

The BP spokesman said there have been no threats against workers for speaking out.

“If they have any concerns, they should raise them with their supervisors,” MacEwen said. “They can also call the joint information center and make complaints anonymously.”

Wunstell is one of nine clean-up workers who were sent to the hospital with symptoms such as shortness of breath, nose and throat irritation, headaches, and dizziness.

The restraining order requests that BP stop using dispersants without providing “appropriate personal protective equipment” to workers.

Corexit, a dispersant, is being sprayed into the Gulf to break down the oil. The safety data information sheet from the manufacturer states that people should “avoid breathing in vapor” from Corexit, and that masks should be work when Corexit is present in certain concentrations in the air.
BP has not supplied workers with masks when they work near the oil and dispersants.

“We’re been carrying out very extensive air quality since early on in this exercise, to make sure that we have working safe conditions, and thus far not found situations where there are air quality concerns that would require face masks,” MacEwen said.

He added that workers who want to wear masks are “free to do so” as long as they receive instructions from their supervisors on how to use them.

According to Guidry from the shrimpers’ association, BP told workers they were not allowed to wear masks.

“Some of our men asked, and they were told they’d be fired if they wore masks,” he said.

Tony Hayward, the chief executive officer of BP, offered another explanation for the fishermen’s illness: spoiled food.

“Food poisoning is clearly a big issue,” Hayward said Sunday. “It’s something we’ve got to be very mindful of. It’s one of the big issues of keeping the Army operating. You know, the Army marches on their stomachs.”

An expert on foodborne illness cast doubt on Hayward’s theory.

“Headaches, shortness of breath, nosebleeds — there’s nothing there that suggests foodborne illness,” said Dr. Michael Osterholm, a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health. “I don’t know what these people have, but it sounds more like a respiratory illness.”

— CNN’s Jennifer Bixler contributed to this report

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Florida News Service: FL Groups Demand Full EPA Disclosure of Chemicals In Dispersants

http://www.publicnewsservice.org/index.php?/content/article/14260-1
              
June 1, 2010
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Conservation groups want to get to the bottom of the chemicals being poured into the Gulf of Mexico in an effort to break up the oil gushing from the Deepwater Horizon spill. Earthjustice, the Florida Wildlife Federation, and the Gulf Restoration Network are demanding disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) of the actual formula of the 800,000 gallons of dispersants that have been pumped into the Gulf in the last month.

David Guest, managing attorney for Earthjustice, says they’ve also requested proof of effectiveness and toxicity reports for the dispersant, called Corexet, because they’re concerned about its threat to people, wildlife, and the environment.

“It’s so toxic that you can’t touch it with your bare skin, and if it’s something that is that powerful, we should have our eyes open about putting hundreds of thousands of gallons of it into the sea.”

Guest says the spill, which now has spread over 10,000 square miles, will have long-term economic and ecological effects on Florida and the entire Gulf region. He says once the EPA discloses the ingredients used in the dispersants, researchers can begin studying the impact of the chemicals.

“You need to know things like: If a school of fish swims through a plume of Corexet do they all die? Does it sink to the sea bottom and kill all the shrimp eggs so you wipe out the shrimp fisheries for many years? Those are the things you need to know.”

The groups are calling on the EPA to make this information public, in spite of the objections of the oil company BP and the dispersant manufacturers. Guest says the chemicals are being dumped into the Gulf in unprecedented amounts, and more knowledge is critical to protecting the Gulf from further damage.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

"Be the change you want to see in the world." Mahatma Gandhi