It’s not just
BP...
The BP oil gusher is
just the latest in a long line of
assaults on the Gulf of Mexico
By Dianne Wilson
May 28, 2010
Source:
http://www.grist.org/article/2010-05-28-the-bp-oil-gusher-is-just-the-latest-in-a-long-line-of-assaults-
I’m a
fourth-generation fisherwoman from the
Texas Gulf Coast, on a boat since I was
eight. Over the last two decades, I’ve
become a self-appointed watchdog of the
chemical, oil, and gas corporations that
are decimating the Gulf.
I hate to say it,
but what I’m seeing now in the Gulf
ain’t nothing new. The toxic releases,
the lies, the cover-ups, the skimping on
safety, the nonexistent documents, the
“swinging door” with regulators, the
deaths. Same ole same ole.
What is new
is the massive nature of the oil gusher
and the fact that it can’t be covered up
because it’s ongoing and being videoed.
This elephant can’t be swept under the
carpet, but I’m sure if BP could, BP
would.
There are
politicians out there -- we’ve all heard
them -- who say this oil spill is just
one accident and one accident does not a
case make. Heck, one plane crashes and
you don’t stop flying, do ya? Well,
this isn’t just one accident.
This is the biggest flame among the
thousands of fires set by Corporate
America on its Sherman-like march across
the Gulf.
I run an
injured-workers group for people who got
canned after they got sick or injured,
and for whistleblowers and others who
tried to make changes that their
companies didn’t want. For many of them,
there’s nobody to talk to except me -- a
high school educated fisherwoman with a
pile of kids and a broke-down truck.
One worked in wastewater and said his
supervisors were manipulating and hiding
wastewater data, sometimes dumping
outright or siphoning material out of
test samples. Sometimes gauge needles
were bent to keep them from showing what
they should have been showing. A few
times, the worker had to wade through a
diked wastewater area the size of
two-city blocks with toxic waste coming
over his boots. He lost his hard hat,
lost his gloves, maggots were crawling
everywhere, and right next to him was a
high-voltage pump. He said a lot of
days he thought he’d die, but telling
didn’t do any good. As any good workers
knows: You keep your mouth shut, ‘cause
a good way to lose your job or lose your
bonus is to report a worker injury or a
safety violation.
That wasn’t my
first dance at that rodeo. I’ve had a
Texas wastewater investigator pass me
information because he couldn’t do
anything with test results showing
extremely high levels of priority
pollutants like vinyl chloride and
ethylene dichloride in the water. He
said every time he tried to pass it up
further in enforcement, something
blocked it. It just so happened that
his boss, the director, had applied for
a job at the polluting plant. He sure
didn’t want to think what that was all
about. Made him sick just thinking
about it.
Made me sick, too.
Made me want to get on a boat and go out
on the bay and forget all of it. Last
time I was on the bay, however, a
seismograph crew breezed in, looking for
oil and gas deposits. There are
approximately 4,000 oil and gas rigs out
in the Gulf, but there are a sizable
number in the bays, too. Seismologist
teams sometimes use dynamite blasts to
produce sound waves that pinpoint oil
and gas deposits. Generally, dynamite
charges aren’t allowed near the reefs
and they’re not supposed to be so
powerful that they blow up fish. That’s
the law, anyhow, but who’s listening? I
was trotlining for black drum and I had
a string of lines near an oyster reef
that black drum love to hang around. I
picked up my line and there, hanging off
the hooks, was a very long line of
dynamite charges. Things really got
messy when the dynamite blasts started
rocking the fishermen’s boats and
blowing fish out of the water. To stop
the obvious show of dead fish, the
company brought in a three airboats. An
airboat can generate decibels equivalent
to a jet plane, so imagine three giant
airplanes ripping and running up and
down the bay to scare the fish out of
the bay. Well, they accomplished their
goal. All the fish ran out of the bay
and there went our fish for the entire
season. It was nothing but a bleep on an
oil company’s corporate work sheet, but
for our family-based inshore fishermen,
it was devastating.
That’s not all.
Just listen. The oil industry dumps over
a billion pounds of mercury-contaminated
drilling-mud wastes into the Gulf each
year. Drilling muds are used to cool
and lubricate drill bits as they bore
into the earth while plumbing for oil
and natural gas. The mercury is present
in an element called barite, the main
ingredient in the muds. In l996, the EPA
limited the amount of mercury that could
be present in the drilling muds to one
part per million, which could still
allow l,000 pounds of mercury to be
dumped from the Gulf platforms each
year. For 50 years prior to the EPA
rule, there were no limits on mercury in
barite. A report published by the
Society of Petroleum Engineers suggested
that, in the past, barite with mercury
up to 30 parts per million could have
been used. Looking at information
supplied by the oil industry and the
EPA, hundreds of thousands of pounds of
mercury have been dumped in the Gulf via
drilling muds since the l960s.
So it shouldn’t be
surprising at all that some oil and gas
rigs in the Gulf of Mexico are so
contaminated by mercury that they could
qualify for Superfund status. The
mercury concentrations in many fish
sampled near at least one rig were high
enough to qualify the area as a
contaminated fishery.
And the
contaminated drilling mud doesn’t stay
in the Gulf. Some of it gets dumped
into marshes along small fishing
villages on the Gulf Coast. I’ve seen
tanker trucks dump 200 loads into a
marsh outside of Seadrift, Texas, and
another load dumped a half-mile from my
trailer. My frequent calls to the Texas
Natural Resource Conservation Commission
were answered with, “It’s harmless.” I
guess I should tell that to my autistic
son.
The bottom line is
that the Gulf of Mexico dies a little
every day from the tens of thousands of
chemical plants, oil refineries, and oil
and gas rigs that pockmark the Gulf and
its coastlines. It’s a death of ten
thousand cuts, and many of these
offenses don’t get reported at all. We,
the public, really have no way of
knowing. The companies and the agencies
certainly aren’t going to tell us.
They’ve proved that time and time
again. The truth of the matter only
becomes clear when something monstrous
like the BP oil spill comes along and
wakes us up to the nightmare.
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