Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Spill baby, spill

So this story continues to piss me off daily.

BP knew of problems hours before blast

By Steve Hargreaves, Senior writerMay 12, 2010: 2:35 PM ET

(CNNMoney.com) -- BP knew of problems with an offshore well hours before it exploded last month, spilling millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, a House committee chairman said Wednesday.

Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., said the oil company told the Energy and Commerce subcommittee on oversight privately that the well failed a key pressure test just hours before it exploded on April 20.

The test indicated pressure was building up in the well, which could indicate oil or gas was seeping in and could lead to an explosion, said Waxman.

"Yet it appears the companies did not suspend operations, and now 11 workers are dead and the Gulf faces an environmental catastrophe," he said, asking why work wasn't stopped on the well.

Witnesses before the panel, which included executives from the three primary companies working on the well - BP, Transocean, and Halliburton - said the course of events and actions leading up to the explosion is still under investigation, and will come to light over time.

BP's deepwater oil well, 40 miles off the coast of Louisiana, is now leaking some 200,000 gallons of crude a day following theexplosion that claimed 11 lives.

Lawmakers also wanted to know a valve sitting atop the well, known as a blowout preventer, known as a BOP, failed to close and avert the disaster.

"It is far too early to draw conclusions about how the incident occurred," said Jack Moore, president and CEO of Cameron International (CAM, Fortune 500), the company that built the device. "Our BOPs have a very long history of reliable performance, including performance in some of the harshest operating conditions in the world."

Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., said the blowout preventer may have failed for four reasons: Modifications to it may have reduced the number of shears that can close the well; a hydraulic leak may have knocked it out of commission; it may have hit a section of pipe that was too thick to cut; and its battery power may have died.

The executives said the blowout preventer is not designed to handle all situations, especially when it becomes clogged with debris from an actual explosion.

"I would think that your blowout preventer should be designed to handle that," said Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas.

Lawmakers also criticized proposed efforts to seal the well by injecting rubber debris down the top, including old golf balls and bits of tires.

"The American people expect a response on par with the Apollo Project, not Project Runway," said Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass.

Senate hearings

On Tuesday, hearings in the Senate focused on similar themes: what caused the well to explode, and why the blowout preventer did not work.

Three executives from the three principal companies working on the well all blamed each other.

BP (BP), which owns the well and subcontracted the other companies to work on it, said it was Transocean's job to ensure that the blowout preventer was functioning. Transocean was the owner of the drilling rig that sunk, the Deepwater Horizon, and also owned the blowout preventer.

Transocean (RIG) said the blowout preventer worked just fine in tests, and that it may have gotten jammed with concrete or other well fluids that were injected by a third contractor, causing the well to explode. Either way, argued Transocean's president, it was the faulty well, not the rig or the blowout preventer, that ultimately caused the leak.

Halliburton (HAL, Fortune 500) was the third contractor; it injected cement and other well fluids into the hole before the explosion. But a Halliburton exec said it was only following the orders of BP, which wanted a heavier fluid, known as mud, removed from the well before the well was capped with a concrete plug.

The risks and rewards of offshore drilling

Some senators, citing a Wall Street Journal report, said this process of removing the heavy fluid before the concrete plug is installed is unusual in deep water drilling, and suggested it may have caused the accident by allowing the highly pressurized oil and gas to escape. But Halliburton's executive said the process was not out of the ordinary.

The Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that regulates offshore drilling, has also come under fire in the wake of the spill.

On Tuesday, senators wanted to know why there weren't other back-up systems in place to stop a leak besides the blowout preventer, and questioned why the blowout preventer may not have been able to cut through thicker sections of pipe to pinch it shut and stop a leak. Lawmakers also questioned the agency's relationship with the oil industry, which some have described as cozy.

The Obama administration announced plans Tuesday to split the agency in two, thus removing an apparent conflict of interest between the drive to maximize oil production and efforts to ensure safety, which could slow drilling down.
Under federal law, BP, as the lead project operator, is responsible for all clean-up costs associated with the spill.

While the subcontractors are thought to have some legal indemnification from BP and the federal government, lawyers say they could still be open to lawsuits from fisherman and others affected by the spill.

Ultimately, experts have said the total cost of the spill could range from $2 billion to $14 billion or higher, depending on when the leaking well is closed and where the oil washes ashore.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Senator Is the Centerfold

He's now holding the "people's seat" in MA. Poor Teddy, I imagine he's rolling over in his grave.


Senator Is the Centerfold

Long before he was a politician, the Republican candidate vying for Ted Kennedy’s U.S. Senate seat posed nude for the centerfold of Cosmo. Scott Brown won our “America’s Sexiest Man” contest and appeared in the June 1982 issue. In those days he was a 22-year-old law student at Boston College who was cramming for finals just days before stripping down for our photographer.

“Here at Cosmo we’ve had bachelors go on to be actors, models, and reality show stars, so we’re thrilled that one has gone on to become a politician,” says Kate White, Cosmo’s editor in chief. Obviously we know how to pick ’em. This particular bachelor has always had political ambitions and even admitted to being “a bit of a patriot” when we interviewed him.

Compared to some men in the GOP, this politician looks pretty damn good for his age. We bet he still has an amazing body underneath his suit and tie. There have been plenty of pics of our president running around without his shirt, so now that a precedent has been set, we’re hoping to see Scott shirtless again.

Thursday, January 07, 2010

How to um....lose your pension

Man pleads no contest for masturbating in Kohl's store
Wednesday, January 6, 2010 3:18 AM


A former Grove City police sergeant will be sentenced March 9 after he pleaded no contest to a public-indecency charge yesterday.

A security officer at the Kohl's store on Morse Road confronted Steven J. Howard on July 2 after someone complained he was masturbating in the store.

Howard, 54, of Zuber Road in Jackson Township, resigned from the police department before he could be investigated. He was a 26-year veteran whose last assignment involved the supervision of a crime-prevention bureau and school resource officers.

Howard declined to comment through his attorney, Mark C. Collins.

By pleading no contest to the misdemeanor charge, he was found guilty without admitting guilt. He could be sentenced to 60 days in jail and fined $500 by Franklin County Municipal Judge James E. Green.

-- Bruce Cadwallader

bcadwallader@dispatch.com

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Nuff Said

2010 starts off with a Rose Bowl with for the Buckeyes!


A game to remember
Terrelle Pryor, Buckeyes make a statement
Saturday, January 2, 2010 3:13 AM
By Rob Oller

The Columbus Dispatch

PASADENA, Calif. -- Ben Bodie's long solo trip -- 35 hours from Ohio to his seat in the Rose Bowl -- in many ways mirrored the difficult journey traveled by the Dublin resident's favorite team the past three seasons.

Like Bodie, who ran into heavy snow during his 2 1/2 -day drive, the Ohio State Buckeyes faced tough sledding in their past three Bowl Championship Series games, losing all three to collect the unwanted label of "Can't win the big one."

Well, they don't get much bigger than the Rose Bowl, and No. 8-ranked OSU shook the monkey off its back with a 26-17 win against No. 7 Oregon as a crowd of 93,963 witnessed the Granddaddy of all bowl games.

No less inspiring than a golden sunset that turned the surrounding San Gabriel Mountains into a rose-colored postcard, the Buckeyes painted their own pretty picture on the passing of sophomore quarterback Terrelle Pryor and the strength of a defense that handcuffed a high-flying Ducks offense. The result was the offensive player-of-the-game award for Pryor and the Buckeyes' first bowl victory since the 2006 Fiesta Bowl against Notre Dame.

"To win the Rose Bowl is unbelievable," said Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, who improved to 5-4 in bowl games and 4-3 in BCS games.

To win it the way the Buckeyes did -- throwing the ball a season-high 37 times -- was equally unbelievable, considering that Ohio State (11-2) had won its last five games by pounding the ball on the ground.

"This game felt like we needed to come in flinging it around, and (we) felt as long as we were doing it well we had a chance to keep doing it," Tressel said. "I thought T.P. made good decisions."

Pryor showed composure in orchestrating the Buckeyes' last two scoring drives. His 36-yard pass to receiver DeVier Posey set up Ohio State's go-ahead field goal in the third quarter, and he led a 13-play drive in the fourth quarter that covered 81 yards and ended with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Posey with 7:02 to play.

Oregon (10-3) made one last push to close the gap but missed a 44-yard field goal with 5:10 left. The Buckeyes then ran out the clock to win their first Rose Bowl since 1997.

"I'm just so glad to be a part of this team, to come out and win for these seniors," said Pryor, who completed 23 passes -- more than he attempted in his previous three games.

Most of those 19 seniors had not experienced a bowl win, so beating Oregon was the end of a long voyage.

Tressel praised those upperclassmen, then gave a shout out to the 50,000 or so OSU fans who turned the Rose Bowl into the Scarlet Bowl.

"Our fans showed up all the way from home," he said.

Bodie was among them. The 31-year-old paid $145 for his ticket and had hoped to make the trip with friends. But they sold their tickets, leaving him to drive the nearly 2,000 miles alone.

No big deal.

"I love Ohio State football," he said. "We have a great legacy."

That legacy just added another sterling chapter.

roller@dispatch.com