Sunday, June 5, 2016

Track Failure Likely Cause of Oil Train Derailment and Spill/Fire in Oregon





The Associated PressThis aerial view provided by the Washington State Department of Ecology shows scattered and burned oil tank cars, Saturday, June 4, 2016, after the train derailed and burned near Mosier, Ore., Friday. Union Pacific Railroad says it had recently inspected the section of track near Mosier, about 70 miles east of Portland, and had been inspected at least six times since March 21. (Washington Department of Ecology via AP)





By donna gordon blankinship, associated press

SEATTLE — Jun 5, 2016, 7:32 PM ET



Track failure was likely the cause of the oil train derailment in Oregon, an official with Union Pacific Railroad said Sunday.

A failure of the fastener between the railroad tie and the line was likely the problem, but more investigation will be required before railroad officials know for sure, Raquel Espinoza said Sunday.

Union Pacific inspects the tracks that run through Mosier, Oregon, twice a week, and the most recent inspection took place on May 31, Espinoza said. Union Pacific had completed a more detailed and technical inspection of this section of track at the end of April and found no problems.

The railroad is focused on removing the crude oil from the damaged cars as safely and quickly as possible, Espinoza said. Its priority is to bring people home safe to Mosier, where 16 of 96 tank cars train derailed Friday and started a fire in four of the cars.

"We're doing everything we can to get you back home, but we're not going to risk your safety," Espinoza said at a news conference. When asked if she knew how much the cleanup was going to cost the company, Espinoza said, "I don't know and it doesn't matter."

"Our priority here is bringing people home. Nothing else matters," she added. Repairs to a water treatment system, which runs under the tracks, would need to be completed before people could return to their homes, the railroad said.

About a hundred people — a quarter of the town's population — have been evacuated from their homes since Friday in an area about a quarter mile around the train.

Mosier's mayor and fire chief said Sunday the derailment and fire in their town could have been a lot worse.

Fire Chief Jim Appleton says the usual amount of wind in Mosier — about 25 mph — could have turned this incident into a major disaster, destroying the town and sending flames across state lines.

"My attention was focused on the incident that didn't happen," Appleton said. "It probably would have burned its way close to Omaha, Nebraska. That's how big it would have been."

Mayor Arlene Burns said the people of Mosier were "incredibly lucky."

"I count myself lucky that we dodged a bullet," Burns said, after noting that her own child was at school within a few blocks of the derailment. "We hope that this is a wake-up call."

The fire and derailment damaged essential city services in the small Oregon town, authorities said Sunday.

The Mosier waste water treatment plant and sewer system were not operational Sunday. Residents were told not to flush their toilets and advised to boil any water before they drank it or cooked with it. Mosier exhausted its water reserves fighting the fire and cooling the trains. Burns said the aquifers were completely depleted.

Officials have been conducting continuous water and air monitoring since plumes of black smoke filled the sky near the scenic Columbia River Gorge.

"Today's priority is focused on safely restoring essential services to the community of Mosier as soon as possible," incident spokeswoman Judy Smith of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said in a statement.

Authorities were working to clean up an oil sheen in the Columbia River near the scene of the derailment, while the oil inside the remaining tank cars was being moved to trucks.

No injuries have been reported. But Oregon health officials are asking people with questions or concerns to call a hotline to talk to a health expert at 888-623-3120.

Including Friday's incident, at least 26 oil trains have been involved in major fires or derailments during the past decade in the U.S. and Canada, according to an Associated Press analysis of accident records from the two countries. The worst was a 2013 derailment that killed 47 people in Lac-Megantic, Quebec. Damage from that accident has been estimated at $1.2 billion or higher.

Coast Guard Station Wilmette Harbor rescues 3 men in Lake Michigan after boat capsized




Jun 5th, 2016


MILWAUKEE — The Coast Guard rescued three people after their boat capsized in Lake Michigan, 11 miles east of Lake Forest, Illinois, Saturday.

At approximately 11:45 a.m., a search-and-rescue controller at Coast Guard Sector Lake Michigan in Milwaukee received a call from the Lake Forest Police Department relaying a report that a vessel had capsized and three people were in the water approximately 11 miles east of Lake Forest in Lake Michigan.

A boat crew from Coast Guard Station Wilmette Harbor aboard a 25-foot response boat was conducting training in the area and was dispatched immediately.

The crew arrived on scene within a few minutes and rescued the three men.

The men were brought to the Coast Guard station where they declined emergency medical services and were released.

“Despite the distance from shore and severity of the incident, the fact that all three men demonstrated good boating safety habits by wearing their life jackets and staying with boat really made a difference and greatly increased their chances of survival,” said Cmdr. Carolyn Moberley, Sector Lake Michigan’s search and rescue coordinator.

“The strong relationship between Station Wilmette Harbor and local 911 dispatchers really contributed to this rescue being a success, as the local 911 center was able to triangulate the men’s position using their initial cell phone call,” said Petty Officer 2nd Class Scott Fischer, the coxswain aboard the 25-foot response boat. “That allowed us to get on scene as quickly and efficiently as possible.”

The owner of the capsized vessel is arranging for salvage of the vessel and the Coast Guard will continue to issue safety information broadcasts to mariners warning them of the vessel until it is removed.



Pedestrian deaths/injuries on the rise: Pedestrian struck and killed by taxi in Port Jefferson Station, Long Island




Eyewitness News
Sunday, June 05, 2016 10:46AM
PORT JEFFERSON STATION, Long Island (WABC) -- Police on Long Island are investigating after a pedestrian was fatally struck by a taxi early Sunday morning.

Suffolk County Police say Gail Oses was walking on Route 112 in Port Jefferson Station when she was struck by a southbound 2010 Crown Victoria, driven by Brendan Hurst, at approximately 3:05 a.m.

Oses was taken to John T. Mather Memorial Hospital in Port Jefferson where she was pronounced dead.

Hurst, 64, of Centereach, and his two male passengers were not injured.

The vehicle, which is owned and operated by Lindy's Taxi, was impounded for a safety check and the investigation is continuing.

1 dead, 1 injured after truck crashes into Lake Minnehaha, Florida





UPDATED 3:08 PM EDT Jun 05, 2016










CLERMONT, Fla. —One person died and another was injured in a crash Sunday on County Road 561 in Clermont.

 

The crash was reported about 11:15 a.m. near 12th Street.

Clermont police said they found one of the two pickups involved partially submerged in Lake Minnehaha. The driver of the submerged truck was pronounced dead at the scene. Police have not released the identity of the driver.


The driver of a second pickup was taken to South Lake Hospital with minor injuries.

The cause of the crash remains under investigation.

There is heartbreak in the foothills of Idaho after a landslide has destroyed a number of homes.


Heartbreak as landslide tears homes apart in Boise





Neighbors say they feel helpless to stop the problems surrounding their homes (KTRK)






Sunday, June 05, 2016 09:54AM

BOISE, ID -- There is heartbreak in the foothills of Idaho after a landslide has destroyed a number of homes.

"You're going to hear lots of cracking through here, and that's normal."

Stacy says the signs of damage were small at first.

See also: Raging 500-acre fire in California threatens thousands of homes


<iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc13.com/video/embed/?pid=1372038" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

"So this is the first crack I noticed, and at the time it was only a millimeter big. You can see what has happened since," Stacy says. "It's just snowballed fast since then."

Throughout her once beautiful family home, piles of debris and framing are strewn about the home as the wood floor and foundation crumble beneath.

The landslide has pulled the house from its foundation, displaying the incredible force of the earth's movement.

See also: Four injured, house destroyed in N. Houston gas explosion


<iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc13.com/video/embed/?pid=1365985" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

The situation, Stacy says, has been hard to explain to her children as they flee their home for safety.

"My second grader started taping up the walls and the hardwood, trying to fix all the cracks," she says.

Down the street, her neighbor Leslie says their home is in better shape, but are unsure for how long.

A concrete step which once met the walkway outside her front door is now significantly lower than it once was.

See also: 'Filthiest home in Houston' gets at least 13 offers


<iframe width="476" height="267" src="http://abc13.com/video/embed/?pid=1164715" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

Inside the home, the same tell-tale signs of cracking walls and foundation are becoming evident as they did for Stacy.

"Once we started seeing the cracks inside, we realized we were kind of following the same path," Leslie says.

Several agencies say they are working to stop the slide, but neighbors say it isn't happening.

Moving trucks have denied their requests for help because of insurance concerns. In the meantime, neighbors are finding themselves in dire straits financially after being caught without landslide insurance.

"It just feels like everyone who could help us in this situation has left," Leslie says. "That, think to me, is the hardest thing to really digest."

Tropical Depression #3 has just formed in the southern Gulf of Mexico and is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Colin


Tropical Depression #3 forms in the southern Gulf of Mexico





Elita Loresca has the latest on the chance of a tropical depression or storm forming. (KTRK)










Updated 2 hrs 29 mins ago 

Tropical Depression #3 has just formed in the southern Gulf of Mexico and is forecast to strengthen into Tropical Storm Colin as early as today.

The National Hurricane Center has issued a Tropical Storm Warning for parts of Florida's west coast from Indian Pass to Englewood, Florida.





The storm is expected to move north northeast across the eastern Gulf of Mexico and towards Florida's west coast.

We're following this story on Eyewitness News. Watch for updates on air, online and on our mobile news app.


New efforts are underway to track what is going into our rivers and streams and eventually into Lake Erie


New tracking of pollutants into rivers and Lake Erie



By Shaun Hegarty |
Posted: Fri 5:48 PM, Jun 03, 2016

 
TOLEDO (13abc Action News) - New efforts are underway to track what is going into our rivers and streams and eventually into Lake Erie. It’s a project undertaken by Lucas County and the city of Toledo. All with the hope to make sure you have clean drinking water.



While so many people worry about the health of Lake Erie and the algae bloom out there, the problems really start in rivers and streams. Now new research tries to pin down exactly where it's coming from and how much is going in.

Before Lake Erie looks more like that green pea soup, nutrients have to get into the lake from places like streams and rivers.

"We have to look to the entire Lake Erie basin in order to understand how to solve these phosphorus problems and where in the world is it all coming from," said Lucas County Commissioner Tina Skeldon Wozniak.

Lucas County and Toledo now enter into the next phase of tracking those pollutants like phosphorus. Research and tracking will identify places like fields, wastewater treatment plants even septic tanks that could be putting these harmful items in the water.


"It provides for us to locally have information that we will have more local control and local information to understand how we address this issue," said Toledo Mayor Paula Hicks-Hudson.

"Right now the lake is in great shape, excellent shape," said charter boat captain Dave Spangler.

Spangler sees lake conditions first hand every day. He says with the calm weather in some parts clarity of the lake goes down 20 feet.

"The clarity of the water is unbelievably clean for the past week," said Capt. Spangler.

With this tracking the ultimate goal is to determine who's putting what into the rivers and streams and where it's happening. That data will go online for everyone to see.

"They're showing some leadership on getting us critical information on exactly where the nutrient runoff is coming from," said Frank Szollosi of the National Wildlife Federation.

"Right now I am optimistic, yes. But all it will take is one mammoth rain like we had last year and that will change immediately," said Capt. Spangler. This research and data isn't free. Mayor Hicks-Hudson said the city council will get legislation to spend $125,000 from the storm water fund to pay for this next round of research.

Ohio's attempt at slowing down the toxic algae turning Lake Erie green hinges on a plan that relies too much on voluntary programs


Will Ohio's Lake Erie strategy work? Answers won't come soon



By JOHN SEEWER (AP) |
Posted: Sun 2:39 PM, Jun 05, 2016

 
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's attempt at slowing down the toxic algae turning Lake Erie green hinges on a plan that some environmental groups say relies too much on voluntary programs and lacks the sense of urgency needed to thwart the growing threat to the region's drinking water.

The state's strategy outlined recently by Ohio's Environmental Protection Agency is centered on new regulations and programs put in place within the past year.

Now the question is will it be enough to thwart the algae blooms.

How well those changes - stopping farmers from spreading manure on frozen fields and encouraging them to use the right amount of fertilizer - work won't be known for a couple more years.

The moves are part of the state blueprint for a 40 percent reduction in the amount of phosphorus runoff that fuels the algae in the lake's western end. Ohio, along with Michigan and the Canadian province of Ontario, all have pledged to reach that goal within the next 10 years.

"It's possible but it's going to be difficult," said Mike Shriberg, regional executive director of the National Wildlife Federation's Great Lakes office.


Last year's algae bloom was the biggest on record, and another in 2014 left more than 400,000 people in Toledo and southeastern Michigan unable to drink tap water for two days.

Ohio's plan deserves credit, Shriberg said, for including a strong focus on coordination and monitoring efforts to fight the algae. But he doesn't see the sense of urgency that's needed.

"This plan makes the assumption that doing more of the same will get us there," Shriberg said.

More than anything, the state should be requiring and verifying that all farmers are taking steps to reduce field runoff, he said.

Scientists say fertilizers and livestock manure from the region's farms are the main sources of the phosphorus feeding the harmful algae. Sewage from treatment plants and leaking septic tanks play a role, too.

Farm organizations say they are doing their part by promoting voluntary efforts aimed at cutting runoff and by contributing to ongoing research projects.

A report released earlier this year by the University of Michigan Water Center said not enough farmers in Ohio and Michigan are taking part in the voluntary practices and say sweeping changes are needed to cut enough phosphorus to stop the algae blooms. Agriculture groups criticized the study for focusing only on farms.

Karl Gebhardt, deputy director for water resources at the Ohio EPA, said the state's plan will be evolving over the next decade and if what's being done now isn't working, changes will be made.

He said what's most important is "are we seeing an improvement in water quality?" (Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)

Durfee student killed in fatal car accident on way to prom


 Posted: Jun 03, 2016 10:46 PM EST Updated: Jun 03, 2016 10:58 PM EST



By: News Staff

news@abc6.com

Fall River, Mass- Hannah Raposo, a senior at Durfee High School in Fall River, Mass has died as a result of a fatal crash in Fall River. The accident occurred at 6 pm on Friday night on Route 24 South approximately three miles from the Route 195 exit.

Raposo,18, of Fall River, was ejected from her vehicle as her Ford Explorer rolled over several times.

Raposo was on her way to her prom at White's of Westport with a male passenger. Both were transported to RI Hospital were Raposo was pronounced dead. The passenger is reported to be in stable condition.The accident is under investigation

516-acre brush fire continues to burn through Calabasas area in California








Fire crews continued on Sunday to fight a 500-acre brush fire burning in Calabasas over the weekend.





By ABC7.com staff
Updated 1 hr 54 mins ago
CALABASAS, Calif. (KABC) -- About 300 firefighters continued on Sunday to fight a 516-acre brush fire burning in Calabasas over the weekend.

The raging blaze, which threatened thousands of homes and buildings, was at 30 percent containment, officials from the Los Angeles County Fire Department said in a morning news briefing.

Fire crews stated several structures were reached by the fire, including two homes with minor damage and a commercial building that was destroyed. Three firefighters were also injured in the fire fight, mainly due to the steep terrain.


"If anyone is familiar with the area, we're talking about very steep terrain, very limited access, very windy roads. This is very difficult for our apparatuses...they are very large pieces of machinery, they need a lot of room to operate...," said Edward Osorio of the L.A. County Fire Department.

About 3,000 homes were initially evacuated, but many Calabasas residents were allowed to return at about 2 a.m., according to L.A. County fire officials. Mandatory evacuations were lifted for the Calabasas area but were still in effect for Topanga Canyon, mainly due to dry fuels.

The Los Angeles Region American Red Cross responded to Agoura High School to provide evacuated residents with information, food, water, and emotional support.

The City of Calabasas stated horses and large animals were to be evacuated to Pierce College, while small animals, like dogs and cats, were to be evacuated to the Agoura Animal Shelter. Camp Bow Wow also offered housing for evacuated pet dogs that are over four months old, spayed/neutered and up to date with all vaccinations.

Capt. Keith Mora stated the initial call on the fire Saturday was around 4:10 p.m. for a car crash into a power pole with power lines down.

Deputies with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said a black truck struck a pole in the 2300 block of Mulholland Highway. Witnesses told investigators the truck was speeding before it hit the power pole, knocking it over and causing a transformer to explode, sparking the fire.

The California Highway Patrol announced that Topanga Canyon Boulevard between the Pacific Coast Highway and Cezanne Avenue would be closed until further notice.

Ashes from the fire were reported in North Hollywood and Burbank, and even as far as Arcadia.


The South Coast Air Quality Management District issued a smoke advisory in the San Fernando Valley, Santa Clarita Valley and surrounding areas due to the fire. Officials said the blaze has caused poor air quality and urged all individuals in these areas, or areas where there is visible smoke or the odor of smoke, to avoid unnecessary outdoor exposure.

Pedestrian casualties are on the rise; be careful out there: Montclair, CA hit-and-driver allegedly strikes pedestrian, sought


Police were searching for a hit-and-run driver accused of striking a pedestrian and fleeing in Montclair early Sunday.

Officers responded to the scene in the 5000 block of Kingsley Street at about 12:15 a.m., according to a press release issued by the Montclair Police Department.

Police said a green or black older model Honda Civic struck a female who was walking in the roadway.

A witness said the suspect got out of his car and looked toward the victim, who was face down on the street. The suspect then got back inside his car and fled westbound on Kingsley Street.

The suspect was only described as a white man 40-45 years old, wearing a gray or black tank top.

The victim sustained a dislocated right knee and a laceration on her head and was airlifted to Loma Linda Hospital.

Police said she was in stable condition and expected to be released soon.

One Dead After Two Skydivers Collide Over South Carolina during CarolinaFest







MICHAEL EDISON HAYDEN
Updated 54 mins ago

Two skydivers collided in midair last night during CarolinaFest, an annual skydiving event hosted in South Carolina, resulting in one death, according to police.

The body of Bond Springer was found this morning in a wooded area near Skydive! Carolina, a popular "drop zone" for skydivers.

"Both skydivers in the incident were experienced and executing advanced wingsuit maneuvers at the time of the crash," a statement from Skydive! Carolina said. "No malfunction is believed to have occurred with any equipment and all was normal leading [up] to the collision."

A "wingsuit" is a one-piece garment that enables a skydiver to glide through the air during his or her fall.

The whereabouts and health of the other diver are unknown at this time. Police said that the case is still under investigation.

A 1985 Beech F33A small plane crashed while attempting a landing at Essex County airport in New Jersey Sunday afternoon


Pilot, wife escape injury when small plane crashes at Essex County Airport in New Jersey






Updated 1 hr 9 mins ago
FAIRFIELD, New Jersey (WABC) -- A small plane crashed while attempting a landing at an airport in New Jersey Sunday afternoon but a New York City couple on board escaped without injury, authorities say.

At about 12:15 p.m., the Fairfield Police Department received a call from the operations tower at the Essex County Airport reporting a plane crash having just occurred.

Police say a preliminary investigation indicated that the 1985 Beech F33A fixed wing, single engine plane was being piloted by Tal Kienan, 4j6, of New York City.

He was attempting to land on Runway 10 when it is believed that the plane may have clipped a tree on its approach.

Kienan and his wife, whose name was not released, were the only people on board and refused medical attention at the scene, police said.

The pilot told police he had experienced some engine problems upon his approach.

The airport and its runways were closed while authorities investigated the crash.

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement is continuing its investigation of the oil release from Shell Offshore Inc.’s Glider Field


BSEE Announces Investigation Panel for Oil Release in the Gulf of Mexico
05/16/2016

NEW ORLEANS - The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement is continuing its investigation of the oil release from Shell Offshore Inc.’s Glider Field on May 12. The Glider Field, located approximately 97 miles south of Port Fourchon, LA, includes subsea wells and the field’s production flows to the Brutus Platform.

BSEE Gulf of Mexico Regional Director Lars Herbst formally established an Investigative Panel May 16. The seven-member panel is comprised of BSEE engineers, inspectors, and investigators. The panel will conduct a thorough investigation of the incident in order to identify the causes and any contributing issues that led to the release. The panel will make recommendations in its final report on how to strengthen existing safety and environmental management systems, and identify any reforms to existing regulations that may be needed. The focus of these recommendations is to prevent a similar incident from occurring.

BSEE approved Shell’s plan for recovery of the damaged flowline segment. A BSEE inspector is on board the recovery vessel to observe the recovery operations. All repair plans for the subsea flow lines and production systems will be submitted to BSEE for review.

Production remains shut-in from the two subsea fields that flow to the Brutus platform. BSEE will not approve production restart of these subsea fields until all safety concerns and applicable regulations have been met.






///-----------------------////////////////



More than 2,000 barrels of oil spilled in Gulf of Mexico.


Release comes nearly a month after federal regulators introduced new rules for offshore work.
By Daniel J. Graeber | May 13, 2016 at 10:02 AM

 










Shell reports more than 2,000 barrels of oil spilled from beneath a platform operating about 100 miles off the coast of Louisiana in the Gulf of Mexico. Map courtesy of the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement





NEW ORLEANS, May 13 (UPI) -- More than 2,000 barrels of oil were released into the U.S. waters of the Gulf of Mexico about 97 miles from the southern tip of Louisiana, Shell said.

Shell said it observed oil sheen near its production facilities in the Green Canyon oil reserve area in the Gulf of Mexico. Shell is working there on operations at its Glider oil field. The company said it isolated the incident and closed down production after observing the sheen.


"At this time, Shell estimates that 2,100 barrels of oil were released," the company said in a statement.

Federal regulators with the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement are on scene examining the incident tied to the Brutus oil platform, leased by Shell for the activities in waters that are 2,900 feet deep. The BSEE said it was able to confirm Shell's release estimate, adding no injuries were reported and no personnel have been evacuated from the rig.

The U.S. Coast Guard said the oil was released from a subsea pipeline. In a statement, the Coast Guard said Shell contracted two independent parties to start clean up and containment operations.

Shell said there were no drilling activities underway at the Brutus platform at the time of the release, stressing it was not associated with a well control incident.

The release comes nearly a month after the BSEE released new rules aimed at preventing loss of life and environmental harm resulting from a potential failure at an offshore well. Those new rules came almost six years to the day after the disaster at the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico.

Last year, the Interior Department proposed dozens of new rules for offshore drilling equipment in order to ensure the series of failures that led to the 2010 rig disaster and subsequent oil spill won't happen again.

The final rules are sweeping in scope, focusing on everything from well control operations to cementing operations of offshore wells.

BP released 3.2 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico in 2010 following the string of failures that led to the collapse of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. The incident left 11 rig workers dead and resulted in one of the worst environmental disasters for the industry.

Several failures at the Macondo well beneath the Deepwater Horizon triggered what the industry calls a blowout.





BSEE and BOEM Comprehensive analysis finds no significant environmental impacts from Well Stimulation Treatments in Federal Waters off California


BSEE and BOEM Publish Joint Environmental Assessment on Use of Well Stimulation Treatments in Federal Waters off California
BSEE and BOEM Comprehensive analysis finds no significant environmental impacts from Well Stimulation Treatments in Federal Waters off California

 05/27/2016
WASHINGTON

Contact: BSEE Guy Hayes 907.334.5333/Cell: 907.301.2473
BOEM John Romero 805.384.6324 /Cell: 805.312.1429

The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) and Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) have completed a comprehensive environmental analysis evaluating the potential impacts from the use of well stimulation treatments on the 23 oil and gas platforms currently in operation on the Outer Continental Shelf offshore California.

Based on the analysis in this joint Programmatic Environmental Assessment (EA), BSEE and BOEM issued a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) from the use of specific well stimulation treatments in oil and gas activities on the Pacific Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). The EA and the FONSI are available for viewing here.

“Drawing on the best available science, the EA provides information and analysis on the use of well stimulation treatments in federal waters offshore California. The comprehensive analysis shows that these practices, conducted according to permit requirements, have minimal impact,” said BOEM Director Abigail Ross Hopper. “As always, coordination with other key agencies, and input from the public and non-governmental organizations, were vitally important as we developed this assessment.”

The programmatic EA evaluated several categories of treatments, including hydraulic fracturing, a range of alternatives, and all environmental resources that could potentially be impacted. The analysis indicated no significant environmental impacts associated with any of the alternatives considered. The EA provides valuable information that BSEE’s Pacific Region will consider in future processing of permits involving Well Stimulation Treatments.

“BSEE is fully committed to safeguarding the environment,” said BSEE Director Brian Salerno. “Anyone familiar with our regulations understands that they not only address worker and operational safety, but also require the industry to function as environmental stewards. We consider vigorous environmental enforcement central to the Bureau’s mission.”

The EA was conducted as part of settlement agreements to resolve lawsuits regarding the Bureaus’ compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act, Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, and Coastal Zone Management Act. Pending completion of the EA, BSEE agreed to withhold approvals of future Applications for Permit to Drill and Applications for Permit to Modify involving hydraulic fracturing and certain well stimulation treatments on the Pacific Outer Continental Shelf. Under the agreements, BSEE will develop a mechanism to increase transparency in the permit approval process, as well as a method to alert the public of newly submitted complete permit applications for hydraulic fracturing or acid well stimulation.

BSEE and BOEM received more than 10,000 comments on the draft assessment during the 30-day public comment period that ended on March 23, 2016. After carefully reviewing those comments, the Bureaus revised the text of the final EA where appropriate, including amending the statement of Purpose and Need, clarifying the descriptions of alternatives, and adding information on greenhouse gases and climate change.

The resource areas evaluated in the offshore environment include water quality impacts from discharges of produced water, and the potential for associated impacts to fish and wildlife. Considering the low expected concentrations of well stimulation treatment chemicals and the protective nature of the EPA’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System General Permit and required monitoring of aquatic life, the analysis in the EA affirms that wastewater discharges from proposed well stimulation activities will not have a significant impact on the environment. Accidental releases of well stimulation treatment fluids have a relatively higher potential to cause impacts, but the probability of an accident occurring and the reasonably foreseeable size of a resulting release are so small that such accidents would not be expected to cause a significant impact.

There have been 24 well stimulation treatments (21 of which involved hydraulic fracturing) on the OCS offshore California between 1982 and 2014, and these were conducted on four of the 23 platforms. Reservoirs on the OCS off Southern California tend to be much more permeable than onshore reservoirs, and are already highly naturally fractured. Therefore, little permeability enhancement has been required for their development. As described in the scenario evaluated in the EA, the future use of Well Stimulation Treatments is expected to continue to be occasional rather than essential to hydrocarbon production from these platforms.

The Department of the Interior remains committed to safe offshore operations and appropriate environmental reviews of associated activities. BSEE and BOEM continue to fully comply with the terms of the settlement agreements in an effort to enhance the transparency of the permitting process.

Cargo vessel AMADEUS AMETHIST crushed after colliding with bridge in Belgium






June 1, 2016 at 05:42 by Mikhail Voytenko in Accidents

General cargo vessel AMADEUS AMETHIST collided with bridge at Jzerlaan in Albertkanaal, Belgium, at around 2230 LT May 31. 


Vessel got stuck under the bridge, suffering heavy damages. Judging from photo, vessel’s superstructure is smashed. One of the eight crew was seriously injured, he was taken to hospital. Bridge traffic is closed. Vessel was freed from under the bridge, and secured alongside the canal. Cause of an accident yet unknown. Vessel was en route from Antwerp to Genk, Belgium. Photos from DS Dee Standaard, all photos full-scale: http://www.standaard.be/cnt/dmf20160601_02317682





Related vessels



AMADEUS AMETHIST

Vessel type: Ship
Position: Antwerpen, BE (4 d)
IMO: 9223435

Bulk carrier CALUMET allided with embankment along Cuyahoga river, Cleveland, Lake Erie


Bulk carrier CALUMET, Lake Erie

June 4, 2016 at 06:02 by Mikhail Voytenko

Bulk carrier CALUMET allided with embankment along Cuyahoga river, Cleveland, Lake Erie, in the evening June 3. Vessel was maneuvering to pass the area. No injures reported, damages are to be estimated. Video at http://www.wkyc.com/news/local/cleveland/freighter-strikes-shooters-dock-causing-damage/230771997


Passenger ship ORTELIUS with 146 people on board suffered engine failure in Norway, Arctic ocean


Passenger ship ORTELIUS, Arctic ocean

June 5, 2016 at 15:35 by Mikhail Voytenko in Accidents 39


Passenger ship ORTELIUS with 146 people on board suffered engine failure at night June 3 in Hinlopen Strait between Spitsbergen and Nordaustlandet, Svalbard Archipelago, Norway, Arctic ocean. Offshore supply tug POLARSYSSEL (IMO 9690949) was sent to assist, and though problem can be fixed by crew, it was decided to tow ORTELIUS to Longyearbyen. Probably problem was fixed, at least partially, because in the morning June 5 ORTELIUS was proceeding at some 9 knots speed.
Source:https://www.fleetmon.com/maritime-news/2016/13187/passenger-ship-ortelius-arctic-ocean/

Michigan-43 closed after two people are killed in fiery crash







by Kate Nadolski, Updated at 10:07am, June 5, 2016 

GLENDALE, Mich. — M-43 is closed between 46th and 50th streets after two people died in a two-vehicle crash early Sunday morning.

Van Buren County Sheriff’s Department deputies were called to the scene around 5 a.m. on reports of two cars on fire. When they arrived they were able to determine that both cars were involved in a crash.

They also have confirmed that both drivers died in the accident.

Police on horseback and in a helicopter are now scanning the surrounding area to see if anybody else was involved in the crash.

Burlington man killed in boating accident on the Neosho River in Kansa






By KVOE |
Updated: Sat 2:30 PM, Jun 04, 2016

 
EMPORIA, Kan. (KVOE) -- Two Burlington men had a boating accident near the town Friday evening. One, unfortunately, did not survive.

Coffey County Sheriff Randy Rogers says authorities were alerted to a boating accident on the Neosho River near Burlington City Dam around 7:30 pm Friday. The boat carrying 53-year-olds John Massoth and Michael Myers had capsized, according to Rogers.

Emergency responders soon found Massoth unharmed, but a search for Myers had to be called off shortly before midnight due to unsafe conditions. Myers' body was found shortly after the search resumed around 7 am Saturday.

The accident is under investigation. Numerous Coffey County agencies were involved in the search and rescue effort and later the recovery effort, as well as the Kansas Highway Patrol and Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks.

20 Percent of Criminals Commit 80 Percent of the Offenses. Criminal immigrants reoffend at higher rates.



Criminal immigrants reoffend at higher rates than ICE has suggested



Richard Drew/Associated Press
By Maria Sacchetti Globe Staff June 04, 2016

They were among the nation’s top priorities for deportation, criminals who were supposed to be sent back to their home countries. But instead they were released, one by one, in secret across the United States. Federal officials said that many of the criminals posed little threat to the public, but did little to verify whether that was true.

It wasn’t.   I guess these people never understood that 20 Percent of Criminals Commit 80 Percent of the Offenses. Tod bad.

A Globe review of 323 criminals released in New England from 2008 to 2012 found that as many as 30 percent committed new offenses, including rape, attempted murder, and child molestation — a rate that is markedly higher than Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have suggested to Congress in the past.

The names of these criminals have never before been made public and are coming to light now only because the Globe sued the federal government for the list of criminals immigration authorities returned to neighborhoods across the country. A judge ordered the names released in 2013, and the Globe then undertook the work that the federal government didn’t, scouring court records to find out how many released criminals reoffended.

The Globe has also published, in conjunction with this story, a searchable database of the thousands of names that were disclosed to the news organization, so that crime victims, law enforcement officials, and managers of sex offender registries — who are often unaware of these releases — can find out if the criminals may still be in the United States.



The review does not indicate that immigrants are any more likely to commit crimes than native-born Americans — and in fact studies have shown that not to be the case. But the review reveals the damage inflicted on victims by criminals who were ordered to be deported when their sentences were complete, and were not, and it raises questions about how the government handled their cases.

The public rarely learns about ICE’s decisions to release criminals until something goes wrong — because immigration is the only law enforcement system in the United States that keeps such records secret.

ICE maintains that immigration records are generally private, and therefore exempt from disclosure under federal law. But others say the public should know who is making these decisions and why.

“There’s a serious question of who ICE represents. Who do they work for?” said Chester Fairlie, a lawyer for the mother of Casey Chadwick, a Connecticut woman murdered last year by a released criminal — a case that is intensifying calls for reform in ICE. “Public safety should trump any claim of privilege or confidentiality. It doesn’t come from statute. It doesn’t come from law. It comes from ICE deciding that that’s how it’s going to do things.”

Immigration officials have long insisted that the decision to release criminals — some of whom initially came to this country legally — is often out of their hands because the Supreme Court ruled in 2001 that the government cannot jail immigrants indefinitely. If immigration officials cannot deport them after six months, the court said, they should generally set them free.

“So to sit there and say that the proud women and men of law enforcement in ICE are choosing to release criminals is absolutely unforgivable,” ICE Director Sarah Saldaña told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in April, after lawmakers grilled her about releasing criminals in the United States. “And they do not go around trying to put criminals on the street.”

Stephen Crowley/New York Times

ICE Director Sarah Saldaña.

But often, that’s where they end up.

The Globe found that a Massachusetts man was supposed to be deported after he served jail time for bashing his ex-girlfriend on the head with a hammer — but ICE released him in October 2009. Three months later, he found the ex-girlfriend and stabbed her repeatedly. A Rhode Island man who had served prison time for a home invasion was also released from immigration detention in 2009; five years later, he was arrested for attacking his former girlfriend. In 2010, ICE released a man with a lengthy criminal record in Maine; a few months later he grabbed a man outside a 7-Eleven, held a knife to the man’s throat, and robbed him.

Some members of Congress appear to be losing patience with ICE’s argument that it is powerless to stop these releases. Critics say ICE could seek civil commitment for mentally ill immigrants who commit crimes, arrest reoffenders, and ask the Department of State to use diplomatic means to punish nations such as Haiti, China, and Jamaica when they refuse to take back their own citizens.

At the House oversight hearing on April 28, committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, a Utah Republican, said ICE’s decisions to release criminals who can’t be deported are leading to thousands of preventable crimes, according to ICE’s own statistics. The recent reoffenses include more than 130 murders or attempted murders since 2010, according to a letter ICE provided in February to Senator Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican who is chairman of the Judiciary Committee.

“What’s going on with Immigration and Customs Enforcement is one of the most infuriating things I think I’ve seen in this government yet,” Chaffetz said. To Saldaña, he added, after referring to crime victims in these cases, “How do you look those people in the eye?”

The Globe’s review was limited to the 323 immigrants released in New England between 2008 and 2012.

Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Representative Jason Chaffetz is a Utah Republican.

To calculate the recidivism rate in New England, the Globe scoured public police logs, Internet databases, and news media reports from Maine to southern Connecticut to identify the courts where criminal convictions occurred. Then the Globe traveled to or called the court houses to request records. The effort took three years, because most courts in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine do not have online databases where the public can search for records.

The public records in criminal courts made it possible to scrutinize an immigration system that rarely opens its files to the public — or even to US lawmakers.

For instance, the public did not know that ICE had struggled to deport Jean Jacques to Haiti in 2012, after he served time for attempted murder in Connecticut. ICE said in an e-mail that the agency repeatedly tried to deport Jacques, but had to release him when Haiti refused to accept him back to his home country. Then in 2015, he fatally stabbed 25-year-old Casey Chadwick of Norwich, Conn., and stuffed her body in a closet. A jury convicted him of murder in April.

Chadwick’s death outraged lawmakers, who said they got few answers from the federal immigration system about the handling of Jacques’ case. Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal and two other Democrats called for an inquiry by Homeland Security’s inspector general.

“It is unacceptable that ICE failed to remove a convicted attempted murderer subject to a final deportation order — a measure that would have saved the life of Casey Chadwick,” Blumenthal and others said in a statement in January. “ICE’s responses thus far to our repeated inquiries into this case have been incomplete and unsatisfactory, and we hope that this independent inquiry will finally uncover the facts surrounding this tragedy, enabling reforms necessary to ensure that this never happens again.”

Clear answers are hard to come by in a system that aggressively keeps its records from the public.

Sait Serkan Gurbuz/Associated Press

US Senator Richard Blumenthal.

For example, ICE had insisted in court records that reoffenders were “isolated examples.” To Congress, ICE officials suggested that reoffenders were rare, less than 10 percent.

But the reoffender rate among the immigrants on the Globe’s list is clearly much higher, at 30 percent.

Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors limiting immigration, said she believes the reoffender rate is probably even higher, given the Globe’s limited access to immigrants’ criminal histories. Some names, for instance, were too common to verify against court records. She said the government should track the rate itself.

“This is exactly what the government should be doing to evaluate the impact of its own policy, to make sure that it’s not causing harm,” she said. “They shouldn’t be doing this blindly without taking the time to evaluate the effects of the policy, the public safety consequences.”

Immigration officials acknowledge they have not calculated a recidivism rate, but say they are “working to provide this data.”

“ICE is committed to continually improving the agency’s ability to track and manage ever evolving agency-related data, but the agency does not have statistically reliable information on recidivism rates prior to FY13,” ICE spokesman Shawn Neudauer said in an e-mail.

Immigration officials have also pointed out that they are increasingly focusing on deporting criminals, which they argue is likely to contribute to a lower recidivism rate.

Since 2008, ICE has deported hundreds of thousands of criminals. During the last fiscal year, 59 percent of the immigrants they deported had been convicted of at least one crime. And ICE officials say they are constantly pressing other countries to take back their citizens. Some of the released criminals were later taken back into custody and deported.

But ICE has also released tens of thousands of criminals in the United States — and in far greater numbers than they have disclosed to the Globe.

ICE told the news organization that the agency freed 12,941 criminals nationwide from 2008 to early 2014.

But Saldaña, the ICE director, told the House committee that the agency freed 36,007 criminals in fiscal 2013 alone. They are among 86,288 criminals they released from 2013 to fiscal 2015.

ICE officials said in an e-mail that the agency only provided the Globe the names of criminals they were forced to release under the Supreme Court decision; the additional releases were for other reasons. They did not elaborate, but ICE has told Congress it has also released criminals because of budget constraints, humanitarian reasons, or when an immigration judge ordered a release.

ICE has also suggested in court records that “many” of the criminals they released were traffic violators or other nonviolent offenders. But the news organization’s analysis shows that nationwide, immigration officials freed more convicted killers (201) than traffic violators (116) from 2008 to 2012.

ICE has also told Congress, as recently as May, that just 23 nations were failing to cooperate with deportations.

But ICE records show that as recently as 2016, there were about 140 nations that refused to take back at least some of their citizens, including Armenia, the Bahamas, St. Lucia, and many others.

In New England, about a quarter of the criminals released from 2008 to 2012 were previously convicted of rape, murder, or other violent crimes, based on the criminal histories that ICE provided to the Globe.

Court records show that, for a variety of reasons, some released criminals went on to enjoy privileges that otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants usually can’t enjoy, such as obtaining driver’s licenses. Five released criminals were even registered to vote in Massachusetts, putting them in the jury pool. State officials said none had ever voted, and they removed them from the list after being asked about them.

One released criminal thwarted his own deportation three times by kicking and screaming on an airplane bound for his homeland, prompting the pilot to throw him off while they were still on the ground, according to federal court records.

But more troubling are the criminals who left a string of new victims once immigration officials set them free.

In January 2010, a Framingham woman walked out of a Stop & Shop and saw her ex-boyfriend, Oscoe Housen — the same man who had served time for attacking her with a hammer. He was supposed to have been deported to Jamaica, but ICE released him instead.

Art Illman/MetroWest Daily News

Oscoe Housen.

Early the next morning, Housen broke into the woman’s home and stabbed her and a friend with a large knife as her children slept nearby. Police said they discovered a gruesome scene — the man was bleeding heavily and the woman asked “if she was going to die.” She lived, and Housen, 64, is serving up to 12 years in prison.

ICE also released Nhoeuth Nhim, one of several masked gang members who led a frightening home invasion and robbery in 2000 in Cranston, R.I. The gang used duct tape to bind, gag, and blindfold a family of five, including a 6-year-old. After robbing them of money and jewelry, the gang set a fire in the basement and dragged the family into the flames. The family, hard-working immigrants from Cambodia, all escaped.

After serving prison time, Nhim was supposed to face deportation, but instead ICE released him in 2009 and he returned to Rhode Island, where he later was charged with sexually assaulting his ex-girlfriend. He pleaded no contest to felony assault and is in prison.

In 2009, ICE released Bo Kang Me, a 48-year-old Cambodian immigrant with a long criminal record. He was soon rearrested for new crimes and probation violations. But he was free in 2013 when a Providence school let him pick up a child from school, even though he was not authorized to do so. He molested the child and is serving prison time for second-degree child molestation.

ICE had no comment on the cases, but said, “The decisions made in every case are made with the best available information ICE is able to obtain at the time.”

On April 25, ICE unexpectedly sent the Globe a new list of released criminals that showed that 83 percent of the criminals released nationwide from 2012 to 2016 are convicted felons.

Critics say it’s likely that ICE will continue to release serious criminals in the future, but unless the agency changes its privacy policies, there is no guarantee that the public will ever know.


Jeremy C. Fox of the Globe staff contributed to this report. Maria Sacchetti can be reached at maria.sacchetti@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @mariasacchetti.

A man has died following a hit-and-run crash in Chelsea, Mass. late Saturday night



Man dies following Chelsea hit-and-run crash
  By Reenat Sinay Globe Correspondent June 05, 2016

A man has died following a hit-and-run crash in Chelsea late Saturday night, authorities said Sunday.

The victim, a 26-year-old Chelsea resident, was struck in the area of 284 Washington Ave. around 10:15 p.m. before the vehicle fled from the scene, according to a statement from Chelsea police Captain Keith Houghton.

The man had been transported to Massachusetts General Hospital, according to a tweet from Chelsea police Chief Brian Kyes.

Police are looking for a silver Toyota four-door sedan with front-end damage, according to Kyes.

4 dead, 7 injured in single-vehicle crash on I-95 in Titusville, FL, after a front tire on the SUV malfunctioned at high spped, causing the vehicle to flip around





4 dead, 7 injured in single-vehicle crash on I-95 in Titusville
Toddler survived being tossed from SUV, officials said
UPDATED 10:41 PM EDT May 31, 2016




TITUSVILLE, Fla. —A fourth person has died as a result of a crash on Interstate 95 in Titusville on Monday night.

 

Troopers believe a front tire on the SUV malfunctioned, causing the vehicle to flip around 

Troopers believe a front tire on the SUV malfunctioned, causing the vehicle to flip around 6:40 p.m. Three girls were pronounced dead at the scene, and a fourth person was confirmed dead Tuesday morning.



The Florida Highway Patrol said the four deceased are sisters. Their mother was driving the vehicle, authorities said.

The four sisters were identified as Nadia Cruz, 10; Jazmin Cruz; Niashia Cruz, 13; and Amunya Cruz, 15.

Seven others in the vehicle suffered minor injuries, according to the highway patrol.

"We just got hit by flying debris. We were going southbound and it hit our car," a caller told a 911 dispatcher.

Among those injured was a 3-year-old child in a car seat, which was thrown from the vehicle over a 20-foot barrier wall. Rescuers heard the child crying, and at last check, the infant was in stable condition, suffering only minor injuries.

"We believe it was on the left hand side of the roadway, lost control, flipped multiple times, came to rest against the perimeter wall," said Steven Montiero with the Florida Highway Patrol.

"Who would think something like that could even happen? Over the top of that wall?" said local resident Dan Gumieny.

Amunya Cruz attended Leesburg High School.

The school district brought in grief counselors to all of the schools to help students and staff cope.

Niashia Cruz and her sister Jazmin attended Carver Middle School in Leesburg.

Nadia Cruz was a student at Beverly Shores Elementary School. FHP said she died overnight at Arnold Palmer Hospital.

Some Leesburg High School students wore white on Tuesday in memory of Amunya Cruz.

Couselors will be at the schools as long as it takes to help students and staff get through the tragedy.

Construction worker suffered serious burns after falling into hot asphalt in Florida




UPDATED 2:11 PM EDT Jun 03, 2016



LAKE COUNTY, Fla. —A construction worker suffered serious burns Friday after falling into hot asphalt while working in Lake County.


Fire officials said they were called to a road resurfacing project on U.S. 27 near Four Corners about 12:30 p.m.


The worker who had fallen into the hot asphalt, had been pulled out by the time rescue crews arrived, the Lake County Fire Department said.

The worker was flown to the burn center at Orlando Regional Medical Center.

New York City announces new hurricane safety initiatives








AccuWeather Meteorologist Amy Freeze has the latest details.





Eyewitness News
Wednesday, June 01, 2016 05:05PM
STATEN ISLAND (WABC) -- New safety initiatives were announced Wednesday aimed at protecting New Yorkers during the upcoming hurricane season.

The city's Office of Emergency Management unveiled new coastal storm evacuation route signs during a news conference on Staten Island.

FEMA was part of the announcement, which included details on 100,000 "know your zone" brochures in 13 languages that will be hand-delivered to residents in each zone.

Officials also unveiled a high water mark sign at Midland Beach "Splaza" (splash plaza). The new sign is part of FEMA's pilot program to promote and increase public awareness about storm surge risk in order to build resiliency against future flooding.

Hurricane season officially began Wednesday, even though we've already had two named storms.

U.S. government forecasters are expecting a near-normal Atlantic hurricane season after three relatively slow years.

Mandatory evacuation, curfew issued for parts of Brazoria County, Texas








Water rescues starting at daybreak in Brazoria County.





Marla Carter
Updated 55 mins ago
MANDATORY EVACUATION:
Brazoria County officials have issued a mandatory evacuation order for the Longhorn Estates neighborhood and residents along County Road 28 in Angleton.

The mandatory curfew in the area has been temporarily lifted so that residents can evacuate safely; it will be reinstated Sunday evening.




(Brazoria County OEM)
Homes are completely surrounded by water in the area. The Brazoria Office of Emergency Management says residents there and in the Holiday Lakes area.

Yesterday emergency crews rescued ten people in Brazoria County. 114 people evacuated. More evacuations are expected to take place again on Sunday.





(Brazoria County OEM)
There are two shelters in place in Brazoria County. One in Angleton is at capacity, the other one in Rosharon still has some room.

The Brazoria County Office of Emergency Management says it plans to open a third shelter. It has not said where that will be yet.

MANDATORY CURFEW:

Effective immediately, officials have issued a mandatory dusk-dawn curfew for areas of Brazoria County under an evacuation order.

During the curfew, citizens are forbidden from remaining on or traveling upon property -- public or private -- within the evacuation area unless the person owns or has been invited to the property.

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SkyEye video from Friday, June 3, in Ft. Bend County