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Today In Oil News — Why Now?
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Today In Oil News

Gulf Gusher symbolIf you look at the Leak Meter at the top of the page you may notice that it has jumped to 75+ million gallons and the default rate is now 1.47 million gallons per day. It reflects the new estimate of the teams that are actually using several methods to measure the rate at which the oil is flowing, rather than a number pulled out of the air by BP.

The Pensacola News Journal says that Florida to get its own oil spill chief

Florida, Alabama and Mississippi will each get its own deputy incident commander to lead oil response and cleanup efforts.

President Barack Obama discussed the move today in Pensacola with U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen, the national incident commander who established the three deputies.

So, there is a problem in communications, and the President decides to add another intermediate layer to the table of organization. What a typical MBA/bureaucratic solution – let’s make it even harder to get answers. 😈

The Local Puppy Trainer has my county’s response to the problem: Okaloosa defies Unified Command over East Pass plans

DESTIN — Okaloosa County isn’t taking oil spill orders any more.

County commissioners voted unanimously to give their emergency management team the power to take whatever action it deems necessary to prevent oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill from entering Choctawhatchee Bay through the East Pass.

They are tired of coming up with solutions and then waiting for them to be approved by the Florida DEP, the Coast Guard, and BP. They are also fed up that the state has told the counties to bill BP, rather than asking for some of the $25 million BP has already given to the state. What the hell is the state doing with the money that it was given to cover the immediate costs of dealing with the oil?

Jams O’Donnell has given me a wonderful idea for dealing with BP management, soak them in Obsession For Men and send them on a safari. 😈

5 comments

1 Kryten42 { 06.16.10 at 12:21 am }

Jams O’Donnell has given me a wonderful idea for dealing with BP management, soak them in Obsession For Men and send them on a safari.

haha… yeah! Sounds like a plan to me! 😈

2 Bryan { 06.16.10 at 12:25 am }

I mean, it’s expensive stuff, and vacations are nice. There’s no need to get hostile with torches and pitchforks, or tar and feathers.

This is what anger management is all about… 😉

3 Kryten42 { 06.16.10 at 12:53 am }

This is what anger management is all about…

Yup!! Couldn’t agree more Bryan! I prefer to let Nature take care of things, I’m not above giving Her a little help… It’s our duty to help Nature after all! 😈

4 Badtux { 06.16.10 at 11:33 am }

I think part of the problem is that modern communications gives high level officials the delusion that they can properly manage local issues from afar. Federal response to the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake was quick and decisive because the commander on the spot at the Presidio had full authority to make decisions regarding the rescue and recovery operations. He promptly marched his troops to City Hall and formally said to the Mayor, “we are at your command, sir” and the Mayor promptly dispatched them to fight the fires that were sweeping the city, then after that crisis, to handle looters. Meanwhile he sent a boat across to Oakland with a telegram to the War Department requesting every tent in the Army’s inventory be sent via train ASAP, and within 24 hours every tent was on the way.

I cannot think of any commander on the ground today who has the authority to put his troops under the command of a local official, or who could send a telegram to the Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army and get every Army resource available flowing to the area to deal with the disaster. Folks in Washington at the time knew they couldn’t micromanage things because of the turnaround time for communications — it took hours to get a message rowed across the San Francisco Bay. But today’s folks in Washington, or BP HQ, or whatever, because they can pick up a phone and talk to the folks actually on the ground, think they’re as qualified as the folks actually on the ground to decide what the folks on the ground really need. By and large, they aren’t — and that has been crippling disaster response for the past decade, at least.

– Badtux the Micromanagement Penguin

5 Bryan { 06.16.10 at 7:53 pm }

You can’t go wrong leaving things up to Mom, Kryten.

You have the basic outline of the problem, Badtux, the decisions are being made in London and Washington, not on the Gulf Coast. Local county officials take care of business during hurricanes and the system works because the state and Federal governments act as staff and support services.

The big problem with FEMA under the Hedgemony is that the Feds wanted to take control, and they didn’t know what was going on.