Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Wednesday Report

Sierra Club pushes our Scoping links. please share this widely.
The last thing we need is more unsafe crude oil shipped through Washington! Take action now to put the brakes on these dangerous proposals.
After a year of oil train disaster after disaster, we know that any community can be thrown into chaos in the blink of an eye. Washington's natural beauty and communities are simply too important to be part of Big Oil's crude-by-rail gamble.
Thank you for protecting our communities,
Michael MarxSierra Club Beyond Oil Campaign Director

A Call to Arms
via Rolling Stone
This is an invitation, an invitation to come to New York City. An invitation to anyone who'd like to prove to themselves, and to their children, that they give a damn about the biggest crisis our civilization has ever faced. 

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/a-call-to-arms-an-invitation-to-demand-action-on-climate-change-20140521#ixzz32QATbjLi Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

from Michael Dickerson
Operators of the U.S. fleet of DOT-111 tank cars are fighting the emerging consensus that the cars and their contents are the key culprits in the succession of oil train conflagrations that started last July 6 at Lac-Mégantic, Quebec.Keeping trains on the tracks should be the priority in the reform of crude-by-rail, said the Washington-based policy advocate for the petroleum refiners that own much of the North American tank car fleet.Too much focus is on the presumed weaknesses of the DOT-111 general-purpose tank car and on the particular properties of crude oil fracked from Bakken shale, said the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM) in a May 14 submission to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Both are safe for haulage, the refiners argue in a contrarian view that rubs against the otherwise unanimous opinion of accident investigators, regulators, and railroaders that the DOT-111 and Bakken oil are an unacceptably risky pairing.In an interview with Railway Age May 16, AFPM president Charles Drevna asked: “Can we have an intellectually honest discussion about mechanical and track integrity on the rails? You shouldn’t blame the cargo for an accident.”At the same time, Canada’s oil shippers are resisting any requirement that they cover their consignments with public liability insurance. Legal and financial responsibility for the consequences of rail accidents should remain entirely with railroads and railroad insurers, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers and the Canadian Fuels Association argued in a joint submission to a Transport Canada review arising from the Lac-Megantic accident.Both Canadian Class I railroads and the Railway Association of Canada submitted that shippers should indeed insure their cargos against loss of life and environmental damages. Furthermore, CN and CP want the right to refuse consignments they judge to be too dangerous. Currently, as common carriers, railroads in both the U.S. and Canada are obliged to haul any legal cargo in authorized containers.Thus, as the anniversary of the Lac-Mégantic catastrophe approaches, what had seemed to be a public consensus that the ultra-light Bakken crude is inherently too volatile for DOT-111 carriage is fracturing into open dispute between oil shippers and rail carriers.“As the standards are today for flammable liquids, Bakken crude fits right in, and the DOT-111 cars should be fine,” Drevna said.While the AFPM supports regulatory adoption of the 2011 standard proposed by a cross-industry committee, Drevna said he doubts that Canada's phase-out of DOT-111s can be accomplished within the three-year timeline. Any additional new tank car specification beyond the industry-sponsored CPC-1232 standard should be delayed until comprehensive derailment data has been collected and analyzed.No practical tank car would have survived the 64-mph derailment of Montreal, Maine & Atlantic's runaway at Lac-Mégantic, said Frits Wybenga of Dangerous Goods Transport Consulting, who on behalf of AFPM analyzed a survey of Bakken oil samples by organization members. “You can’t design-out a tank car rupturing in those circumstances. You can make them heavier and heavier and make a tank car that would withstand those forces, but you wouldn’t be able to carry much crude oil in it.”Products considerably more hazardous are routinely and legally transported in DOT-111 cars and Bakken crude should continue to be classified and transported like any other Class 3 flammable liquid under the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR), said the AFPM.“Bakken crude oil currently is transported in compliance with the HMR as a Class 3 Flammable Liquid in either Packing Group I, II, or III. In conclusion, there is no identifiable basis for regulating Bakken crude differently than other flammable liquids regulated by the DOT Hazardous Materials Regulations,” says the AFPM submission to DOT.The AFPM report included an assessment of routine assays performed by its own members in the course of loading and receiving Bakken crude. With just one exceptionally high concentration of hydrogen sulfide among the 1,400 samples drawn between loading terminals and destination refineries, the AFPM concludes that Bakken crude falls comfortably within Class 3 Flammable Liquid specifications for carriage in DOT-111 cars. Furthermore, the DOT-111 was a safe vessel for any flavor of crude oil—providing railroads keep the cars on the tracks.“Bakken crude oil was found to be well within the limits for what is acceptable for transportation as a flammable liquid,” the AFPM reported. “Bakken crude oil was compared with other light crude oils and determined to be within the norm in the case of light hydrocarbon content, including dissolved flammable gases. Measured tank car pressures show that even the older DOT-111s authorized to transport Bakken crude oil are built with a wide margin of safety relative to the pressures that rail tanks may experience when transporting Bakken crude oil.”The report relies substantially on the “Reid Vapor Pressure” test, which was abandoned in 1990 for U.S. hazmat classification in favor of the dual criteria of whether a material is liquid or gas at 20°C (68°F) or, alternatively, has a vapor pressure of more than 300 kPa (43.5 psia) at 50°C (122°F). The Reid test remains a common industry measure of vapor pressure at 100°F (38°C) and transposes accurately to the HMR-approved pressure scale, says the AFPM.“AFPM and its members appreciate the concerns raised in relation to rail transport of Bakken crude oil and stand ready to work cooperatively with DOT and other governmental organizations to ensure the safe transportation of Bakken crude oil,” the report says. “This survey shows that Bakken crude oil does not pose risks that are significantly different than other crude oils and other flammable liquids authorized for transportation as flammable liquids.”

via NBC Right Now
The Yakama Nation protest Ambre's Coal Terminal plans. Click the Yakima tab to see this morning's action.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Thursday Meeting & News Updates

GENERAL MEETING OF GRAYS HARBOR

 COALITION FOR INFRUSTRUCTURE

Aberdeen -- The meeting will be between 

5:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m.

Thursday, May 22nd at the Furford 

Gathering Center (near Baskin

Robins) at 104 S Chehalis St., Aberdeen, WA

 98520.

The public is respectfully invited to come 

and participate. For more

information call 360-580-8564.

Rail re-opens
The rail line between Centralia and Aberdeen re-opened at 5 a.m. Monday morning, Genesee &Wyoming spokesman Michael Williams said.“Following the highly unusual string of low-speed derailments, all 56 miles were intensely inspected over the weekend, based on last week’s third-party geometry-car data, and any issues have been remediated,” Williams said. 

Central Oregon Grapples With Rising Oil Train Safety Risks

 “All of a sudden there’s this increasing awareness of how many trains are moving through our region,” said Bend City Councilor Sally Russell, who noted that a set of shared BNSF and Union Pacific railroad tracks run right through her city. “We straddle that rail line, so all this really volatile oil is moving right through the center of Bend -– and really all of Central Oregon. It’s very much a concern.”

Caution: Toxic Tax Exempt Oil Train Crossing Ahead

via Oil Change

Last Thursday, Plains All American’s “Line 2000” pipeline that runs through California ruptured, spraying oil 20 feet in the air andspilling an estimated 10,000 gallons of oilinto the street of a Los Angeles neighborhood and creating knee-deep pools of crude oil up to 40-feet wide.The 20-inch break occurred at a nearby pump station on the pipeline’s 130-mile route between the central California oil fields in the San Joaquin Valley and refineries in Long Beach, including those owned by Phillips 66, Valero, and Tesoro.Those are the bare facts of this latest oil industry incident.  But a closer examination reveals Plains All American’s callous attitude towards safety that is enabled by taxpayer dollars, and expanding to more and more communities around the U.S.


Crude by rail input will not come from Grays Harbor County Commissioners

via KXRO radio
Commissioner Wes Cormier said that he didn’t believe that it was the place of the board to make such a resolution and speak not only for the entire region.Cormier and Commissioner Herb Welch both voted no on the resolution and Cosmopolis Mayor Vickie Raines also spoke during the public comment period asking that they did not pass the resolution and she tells KXRO that she believes the public should have had more of an opportunity to see the resolution before it was discussed.

Monday, May 19, 2014

Monday links

Railroad CEO Wants To Send Oil Trains Through Town Where Derailment Killed 47 Last Year

Oil trains could soon be traveling through Lac Mégantic, the tiny Quebec town that was the scene of one of the deadliest train accidents in Canadian history last July.The new owner of the railroad company responsible for the Lac Mégantic oil train disaster, a derailment which killed 47 people and destroyed much of the town’s center, said this week that within the next ten days he wants to have an agreement with Lac Mégantic officials to restart oil train shipments through the town.
If you want to read a book about the relationship between oil and slaves, check out "The Energy of Slaves" by Andrew Nikiforuk. 2012. Greystone Books. His previous book, "Tar Sands", won the Rachel Carson Environment Book Award.  

~Thanks, Dan


From The Nation magazine:
The New Abolitionism
As the great abolitionist Frederick Douglass said, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.” What the climate justice movement is demanding is the ultimate abolition of fossil fuels. And our fates all depend on whether they succeed.

~Thanks, Claudia

34 Years Ago, Volcano!


Risk Assessment and Railroads
via Sightline
“There is not currently enough available coverage in the commercial insurance market anywhere in the world to cover the worst-case [train derailment] scenario.” —James Beardsley, global rail practice leader for Marsh & McLennan Cos.’ insurance brokerage unit.

In Landmark Class Action, Farmers Insurance Sues Local Governments For Ignoring Climate Change

Last month, Farmers Insurance Co. filed nine class-action lawsuits arguing that local governments in the Chicago area are aware that climate change is leading to heavier rainfall but are failing to prepare accordingly. The suits allege that the localities did not do enough to prepare sewers and stormwater drains in the area during a two-day downpour last April. In what could foreshadow a legal reckoning of who is liable for the costs of climate change, the class actions against nearly 200 Chicago-area communities look to place responsibility on municipalities, perhaps spurring them to take a more forward-looking approach in designing and engineering for a future made different by climate change.


Open an extra tab, and compose your comment as you read these articles. Then, hit send:
http://wecprotects.org/oil-trains-in-grays-harbor


WASHINGTON STATE AGENCIES RELATED TO RAIL

h/t Dan L.
WDOT. Charged with planning a multimodal transportation system. It acts as conduit for state and federal transporation dollars. It has an office of Freight Strategy and Policy. Freight Systems Division. Barb Ivanov, Freight Systems Director. 705.7941.barbara.ivanov@wsdot.wa.gov Also. Kerri Woehler, Rail Operations. Program Manager. 705.6902. Kerri.Woehler@wsdot.wa.gov


WUTC. Responsible for rail safety. The rail group is part of the safety and consumer protection division. Works with FRA to inspect rail shipments of hazardous materials. There are 300 inspection points in the state including shippers' facilities, railroad yards and terminals. Director of Safety and Consumer Protection is vacant on organizational chart. Rail Manager is Kathy Hunter. 664-1257. Bob Boston is Railroad Carrier Specialist. 664-1264. There are twenty-five railroads operating in Washington state. Two first class: BNSF and UPRR. The UTC fined BNSF $105,000 for seven crossing defects on February 25, 2013. Bob Johnson (664-1235) bjohnson@utc.wa.gov He is responsible for FRA railroad hazardous materials inspections. David Pratt is Assistant Director of Transportation Safety.


FMSIB. Freight Mobility Strategic Investment Board. Created in 1998 to lessen impacts of freight movement on local communities and facilitate efficient/profitable movement. Karen Schmidt is ED 586-9695. schmidk@fmsib.wa.gov 1063 Capitol Way, Rm. 201. O. 98504-40965. Ten member board. Dan Gatchet is Chair (trucking background). Terry Finn is BNSF.Terry.finn@bnsf.com


CERB. Department of Commerce. Jane A.Eddy@commerce.wa.gov (725-3151) and
Dawn Eychaner@commerce. (725-4052). 1011 Plum SE. O. 98502. Grants and loans to create/maintain jobs. $1 million dollar loan to Port of Longview to construct a second rail line for processing newly imported cars. Upcoming rail projects?


DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY. This agency is responsible for spill prevention and is a part of the national spill response project. NW Area Contingency Plan.Www.RRT10nwac.com/NWACP.

Dale Jensen gave a presentation to the Port of Grays Harbor. He is listed as Program Manager, Depart of Ecology. Dale.jensen@ecy.wa.gov (407-7450). Spill prevention, preparedness and response plan. Crude by rail not taxed. Less regulatory authority over rail. Oil characteristics unknown. Gaps between rail companies and “state adopted incident command system.”

Ecology sponsored a two day workshop in April 2013 on Alberta Old Sands.


Danielle Bustick, David Byers, Robert Carrell, Linda Pilkey-Jarvis from Ecology participated in the two day workshop.


SHORELINES HEARING BOARD.

Created by the Shoreline Management Act (RCW 90.58) as an independent agency, the Board hears appeals (petitions for reviews) from permitting decisions by local governments and/or Department of Ecology. A decision by the Board can be appealed to the Superior Court or appellant can ask for a reconsideration by the Board.

Board members: Tom McDonald, Kathleen D. Mix, Joan Marchioro and Pamela Krueger (DNR), Rob Gelder (Assn of Counties), Mary Alice Burleigh (Assn of Cities).

Administrative Judges: Kay M. Brown and Kristie C. Elliott. Administrative Manager, Paulette Yorke


ENERGY FACILITY SITE EVALUATION COUNCIL

P0 Box 43172. 1300 S. Evergreen Park Dr. SW. Olympia. 98504-3172.

Created in 1970 as a one stop for licensing of large energy projects. (RCW 80.50). EPA delegated authority for the Council to issue permits under Water Pollution Control Act and Clean Water Act. Also ensures response to nuclear plants. Staff are part of the UTC.

BOARD. Bill Lynch (Chair), Liz Green-Taylor (Commerce), Cullen Stephenson (Ecology), Fish and Wild life (Joe Stohr), DNR (Andrew Hayes), UTC (Dennis Moss).

Several were added to the Board due to Port of Vancouver plans for oil terminal from Clark County, the City, the Port and DOT.

1300 S. Evergreen Park S. PO Box 43172. Olympia 98504. Sonja Bumpus is EFS Specialist with regard to Rail expansion by Tesoro/Savage at th Port of Vancouver. 664-1363.

Final decision rests with the Governor.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Ten days

We have ten days left in the Scoping Comments period. Robin sends this:

I just sent in two scoping comments.  Each comment gets a number.  There have only been 152 comments sent by email so far.  I know many of us wrote out comment cards.  But we have to keep the momentum up on this process.  They are not going to be moved by protests, parades, or press coverage.  That stuff is for us, for our morale and entertainment.  And is important. But we still have to inundate the EIS with lots of problems to be addressed.  The railroad is going to make this track sparkle and shine, a showcase of "Safety is our first priority" propaganda.  Then watch the mayors fall back in the pro-business line.  We have to force them to admit to all the other, non-railroad, dangers. 
Ten Days. What will you do with them? Please leave your brilliant comment here.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Sometimes they just fall over

KIRO7 reports:

Feds will investigate three train derailments in Grays Harbor County


MONTESANO, Wash. — 
Eleven grain cars derailed near Montesano Thursday, just days after two similar spills in Aberdeen.
The first two derailments were caused by the failure of saturated railroad ties.  
The Puget Sound & Pacific Railroad is still trying to figure out what went wrong with the third train.
In an emailed statement, the railroad’s president, Joel Haka, said, “This string of low-speed derailments is not acceptable.” 
It's not acceptable to many Grays Harbor County residents either, like Montesano resident Tom Fredriksen.  He worries that crude oil tanker cars may someday run on the same track, the only track to the Port of Grays Harbor. 

Q13 Fox reports

Feds investigating string of train derailments in Grays Harbor County
“We will not move another train until this rail is safe,” said Haka.
Some neighbors worry about sabotage, perhaps an attempt to derail plans to transport crude oil on trains.
“Social media is blowing up with that,” said Katainen. “Everybody on social media is talking sabotage because of the whole oil thing.”
But police don’t think criminal activity led to the crashes, and railroad officials say the track would have to be substantially upgraded before any oil would move along these lines.

Railroad responds to recent Grays Harbor derailments

According to Michael Williams, Director of Corporate Communications for Genesee & Wyoming, he tells KXRO that “This series of minor derailments is a highly unusual, unacceptable occurrence and subject to a rigorous investigation. The first two derailments were caused by localized failure of railroad ties that were saturated with moisture from recent heavy rains. Other locations experiencing this issue have been identified and are being corrected prior to receiving another train. The cause of yesterday’s derailment is still being determined.“
“Safety is always our first priority, and PSAP will not run another train while we examine the recent track inspection results,” says PSAP president Joel Haka. “Any issues will be addressed prior to resuming service on the affected portion of the line.”

h/t Lyndon C.

Trains stop running after 3rd derailment
via The Daily World
Puget Sound & Pacific railroad has promised aggressive action to find out what caused a third train to derail near Montesano yesterday. An official called the three derailments in the area within 16 days “highly unusual and unacceptable.”Failed ties were found to be the cause of the first two derailments, and the railroad has found the issue in eight to 10 other areas of the track. Trains will not run until the ties are repaired, said Michael Williams of Genesee & Wyoming, PSAP’s parent company....With the number of recent derailments, some have questioned whether foul play might have been involved given the heated debate over crude-by-rail facilities proposed at the Port of Grays Harbor. Williams said the railroad does not suspect anything of the kind.“We don’t suspect any vandalism,” he said.

From facebook: Jim George
The Cities and the Port are saying they have no power. Not true in the case of the Port, as it is their land the oil is to go to. They, essentially, are enemies of sound oil policy so no real hope there. No one from any City Government I know of has been leading the fight in any significant way, (though thanks to Kathy Hoder for her statements last night).

That brings us down to the Governor and the Federal Government. The World op ed today rightly focuses on the Governor. He can do something, if he will. Currently he is not doing anything I know of and that is tacit support for the railroads. We need to switch him over to opposition. He needs to understand we will hold him responsible if he does nothing until it is too late.

Our Senators and Congressman are our strongest voices in the Federal Government that took all control over rail safety away from local governments and cave it to a railroad-controlled Federal Commission. That was a Federal action passed by the Congress. Right now our folks in D.C. are of the party of the President. They need to be held accountable for doing everything they can to prevent this disaster and know they will be held accountable when it occurs.

We need to focus on these 4 people.

Governor Jay Inslee, Office of the Governor, PO Box 40002. Olympia, WA 98504-0002 or call 360-902-4111 Fax360-753-4110 e-mail https://fortress.wa.gov/es/governor/
Senator Patty Murray (D- WA) 202-224-2621 fax202-224-0238http://www.murray.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/contactme or Senate Office Building, Washington D.C.
Senator Maria Cantwell (D- WA) 202-224-3441 fax202-228-0514 http://www.cantwell.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/email-maria
Representative Derek Kilmer (D - 06) 202-225-5916 fax202-226-3575 https://kilmer.house.gov/contact/email-me or House Office Building, Washington D.C.

http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/uscongress/a/letterscongress.htm provides guidance on writing letters to Congress.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

3rd Derailment

Today at about 4pm
update:
Daily World report here.
Daily World commenters speculate wildly about sabotage here.

update 2:
KXRO reports here.

Puget Sound & Pacific Railway crews are on scene following this afternoon’s derailment outside of Montesano.
7 cars are tipped over near a railroad crossing on the Old Highway. These grain cars were heading west, into Aberdeen, and heading to the Port of Grays Harbor.
A PSP worker on site told KXRO that the cause is still under investigation. Additional crews are en route.


I'll update as soon as I see anything more than FB chatter.