News around Washington State

lewiston.tribuneMega-loads, many fears

Plan to transport huge equipment on U.S. Highway 12 prompts worries by some who wonder if more shipments are on the way

By Elaine Williams of the Tribune
 Sunday, May 30, 2010

Idaho Transportation Department crews were removing tree limbs last week along a section of U.S. Highway 12 just east of Kooskia.

Some wonder if the work is state-funded preparations to turn Highway 12 into a regular route for mega-trucks that block two lanes of traffic, are roughly two-thirds the length of a football field and provide little economic benefit to the region, said Linwood Laughy, who lives near Kooskia along the affected route.

The cargo is being routed by oil companies on a highway, and not interstate, in part because interstate overpasses are too low to provide clearance. The highway trips, originating at the Port of Lewiston, would happen at night and the trucks would pull over every 15 minutes to allow traffic to pass.

A plan by one of the project contractors shows branches near that stretch of road that will need to be cut to permit the cargo to pass, said Laughy, who owns businesses that do historic tours and publish books about the region.

"We're just trimming trees as a matter of standard maintenance," said Doral Hoff, district maintenance engineer with ITD in Lewiston.

What help, if any, the state gives the oil companies is only one of the concerns Laughy has. He believes the economic benefits of accommodating the trucks have been exaggerated and the safety risks have been underplayed.

Residents of Orofino, Kamiah and Kooskia could see two rounds of the oversized trucks pass by their communities, perhaps starting this summer, carrying loads for oil companies, although ITD has issued no permits for any of the trips yet.

The first round of trips will be four 375,000-pound, 25-foot diameter drums that were shipped for ConocoPhillips from Japan to the Port of Lewiston, where they arrived May 17. They initially expected to start the next leg of the journey to Billings, Mont., as early as next week, but construction at the Arrow Bridge has prevented that, said Hoff, who declined to estimate what the new date will be.

The second, planned for November, is more than 200 loads of processing equipment for Imperial Oil/Exxon Mobil. The equipment was made in South Korea and is headed for the Kearl Oil Sands Project in Alberta, Canada. The heaviest load would approach 580,000 pounds, counting the hauling equipment, and the lengths would range from 170 to 210 feet. A typical tractor-trailer load weighs about 80,000 pounds and is approximately 90 feet long.

The vast majority of the jobs being created are foreign and the reason is cheap labor, said Borg Hendrickson, Laughy's wife.

In both instances the equipment is manufactured overseas and hauled by contractors headquartered outside the area and destined for work sites in places other than Idaho. "Exxon Mobil executives are probably toasting Idaho's stupidity," Hendrickson said.
Views like Hendrickson's miss the larger picture, said David Doeringsfeld, manager of the Port of Lewiston. The equipment will move across the continent one way or another. Right now they go through the Panama Canal before being shipped across the center of the country and following an itinerary that, with its higher number of land and sea miles, consumes significantly more fossil fuels, Doeringsfeld said. "You have a huge reduced carbon footprint."

The reason American companies didn't get the job of manufacturing the equipment was they didn't have the same level of expertise as foreign ones, said Pius Rolheiser, a spokesman for Imperial Oil in Calgary, Alberta. "South Korea has the largest and most sophisticated oil and gas module fabrication capabilities in the world."
The truck drivers and other technicians capable of moving such loads have years of training, he said. "We refuse to compromise on safety and ability to execute the project."

Rolheiser referred questions about how many people would be on the crews, how many of them, if any, would be local and what local services the crews would use to Mammoet, the contractor doing the moving for Imperial Oil/Exxon Mobil.

Mammoet officials indicated purchases would be made at local gas stations, supermarkets, convenience stores, restaurants and hotels. Mammoet didn't respond to the additional questions.

Any commerce the crews generate could easily be offset by tourism business lost by the deterrence from traffic delays, said Robert Simmons, president of the Kamiah Chamber of Commerce.

If the crews have 12 people and 24 travelers avoid Highway 12 it becomes a negative effect, said Simmons, who owns sanitation companies that serve Orofino and Kamiah and portions of Idaho and Lewis counties.

The best initial indication of how much cash the loads will bring to the area comes from Doeringsfeld. The port received $7,000 for a week of labor it did in preparation for the arrival of the drums. That compares with $2,500 to $8,000 it might make from loading a single container barge, which is the port's regular line of business.
It also charges as much as $8,000 for the first month of storage for the drums and as much as $4,000 for the second month. The number drops because less room will be needed after equipment for the haul across the panhandle has been fabricated, Doeringsfeld said.

Those figures don't count what crew members and their wives are spending at stores, restaurants and hotels, Doeringsfeld said. The first technicians came the week before the drums and now number about 30.

Laughy believes the mega-load transports will be happening for a longer time than has been publicized. The maker of Exxon Mobil's modules told other media organizations they expect more orders from Exxon Mobil, which, by Laughy's estimates, would be for hundreds more than the 200 modules under discussion.

Exxon Mobil has no plans to use Highway 12 for anything other than the 200 modules, Rolheiser said.

Even if Exxon Mobil has no additional plans for Highway 12, other companies might, Doeringsfeld said. He received a recent inquiry with few details about big steam generators arriving from overseas at the Port of Lewiston, "Local electricians, or something like that, might be installing switches on this equipment."

In addition to economic development, Laughy and Simmons, a captain of the Kamiah Fire Department, worry about safety. Off-duty Idaho State Police officers will be paid by the oil companies to escort each load so they can be in communication with any emergency personnel who might be blocked.

But Simmons and Laughy think the extra duty could deplete a force that's already stretched thin.

The ISP has specific rules regarding overtime aimed at preventing officers from getting too fatigued, such as requiring them to be off for at least eight hours before they start a shift and working no more than seven consecutive days, said Lt. Allen Oswald with ISP in Lewiston. "I'm not going to rob from my regular patrol schedule. We're not going to reduce our manpower."

Simmons and Laughy also wonder if the oil companies and ITD have really thought through how emergency response happens in rural communities where the responders are volunteers.

How will the caravans recognize civilian vehicles with volunteer paramedics, or firefighters going to a station, or private citizens heading to hospitals with medical emergencies because they decided they could get there faster on their own? Laughy asked.

Such problems could be compounded by a number of variables, including how many oversized trucks are on the road and how well they adhere to the rules, Simmons said.
Exxon Mobil estimates three to five modules will be moving per week and that never more than two a day would go, Rolheiser said.

Since Exxon Mobil will do the Idaho leg of the trip in three segments and each will take a single night, as many as six of the vehicles could be between Lewiston and the Montana border at any given time.

"Is there a fine if they don't meet the 15-minute rule and is that fine substantial enough to make them want to meet the 15-minute rule?" Simmons asked. "... If the fine is small, they could run this whole thing without ever worrying about meeting the 15-minute rule."

The penalty for the companies is not getting the needed permit for the next load, said Hoff from ITD.

Representatives of Exxon Mobil have said a travel schedule will be posted on the Internet, but they don't know how specific it will be. "We want to inconvenience the fewest number of people to the least extent possible," Rolheiser said.

It's possible the companies could make the moves happen in a way that satisfies all the communities' concerns, but given the slim amount of communication so far it's hard to know what will happen, Simmons said.

Williams may be contacted at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or (208) 848-2261.

 
 

Working Snake River: Saving Salmon--and Jobs.

HuffingtonPost-Logoby Waylon Lewis - July 1st, 2010

The environment is our environment.

Yet another example (think tourism-rich Florida, which banned offshore drilling decades ago, vs. drill rig-happy Louisiana re: the BP Oil Spill) of how tourism can be just as fruitful--economically-speaking--as harming our earth for quick and dirty profit.

The below comes via Working Snake River:

In the conservation movement, it's crucial to remember that everything is always interconnected. Be it economics, social or environmental implications, one decision affects another--and often, in a big way. That's what's currently taking place in Washington State, where business and community leaders are taking a stand on an issue that relates to salmon, energy, agriculture, and transportation issues and has political implications for the state and the broader Pacific Northwest region. The effort is called Working Snake River, and it's a concentrated effort to bring citizens, businesses, and elected leaders together to restore salmon and steelhead and ensure economic prosperity for the state and regional economy.

So how do fish and economy go hand in hand?

"Salmon aren't just a part of our state's natural heritage, they are also important to our economy," said Jeremy Brown, commercial salmon troller and Washington Trollers Association board member. "Especially in our coastal and river communities, salmon has traditionally been a huge source of good jobs and income. The population declines of Columbia Basin salmon in the past several decades have taken a heavy toll on the health of our communities. It's time to sit down together to figure out how we can constructively address these issues for people on both sides of the mountains."

Read more from Waylon Lewis at the Huffington Post

 
 

kitsap.sun




New K-Pod Orca Calf Identified

Special Note: Ken Balcomb from the Center for Whale Research asked us to relay a very important message: this baby will not have a life without salmon. Salmon make up the majority of their diet and they are good at finding and catching them; but, what happens if salmon populations continue to decline? More about Puget Sound orcas and their connection to Columbia-Snake River salmon.

June 11, 2010
FRIDAY HARBOR — A new orca calf has been born in K pod, one of the three groups of killer whales that frequent the Salish Sea and Puget Sound, experts say.

The young calf, designated K-43, was spotted Tuesday swimming with K-12, presumed to be the mother, according to biologists with the Center for Whale Research. It is the third calf born to the three Southern Resident pods this year.

K pod returned to the San Juan Islands this week by way of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, but apparently turned back. All three groups are beginning to settle in for a summer of fishing in and around the islands. J pod and portions of L pod have already arrived, but both pods have been coming and going, apparently not finding many chinook salmon, experts say.

Read more from the Kitsap Sun "New K-Pod Orca Calf Identified"

 
   

crosscut.logoLet's really talk about taking down
those Snake River dams

Economic effects have long been cited as reasons to keep the dams in place. While some inland businesses and farmers are willing to look at how dam removal could work for their communities, the leadership for a larger conversation has been missing. Are you listening, Sen. Murray?

By Daniel Jack Chasan

June 7th, 2010 - If the four lower Snake River dams come down, will they drag the economy of eastern Washington and western Idaho down with them? Salmon advocates don't think so.

They think that anyone who takes an unbiased look at the costs and benefits of those dams will call in the bulldozers. They have argued for years that the dams should be breached, so that Idaho salmon populations have a better shot at recovery. But they say they'll take a chance that if someone weighed all the costs and benefits, the dams would stay. They want somebody to do the math.

Save Our Wild Salmon and its allies in a new Working Snake River for Washington coalition have gotten more than 60 "business owners and community leaders in eastern Washington and its border communities in Idaho" to write Sens. Patty Murray and Maria Cantwell, asking them to "bring the affected stakeholders in our region together, to talk and work directly together to seek solutions."

Last year, Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo — who received a similar letter from business representatives in the Lewiston area — talked about convening such a group. "Some Lewiston businesspeople believe that taking out the dams would kill this region's economy," Doug Nadvornick reported last year on Spokane public radio. "That's why they've fought dam breaching so fiercely here.

"But the concept isn't going away," Nadvornick said, "and Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo knows it." But as a Republican in a Democratic Senate, Crapo didn"t have the political clout to pull everyone together.

Murray does.

Read more of Daniel Jack Chasan's article "Let's really talk about taking down those Snake River dams"


 
 

seattletimeslogo_homeCrafting the operating manual for
the Columbia River system

Federal District Judge James Redden is getting an updated operating plan for the Columbia River hydro system. He will decide if it is a technical fix he sought, or whether it provides him with reassurances about backup plans for changing river and fish conditions.

Years of battling about how best to manage the Columbia River hydroelectric system without doing greater harm to endangered salmon and steelhead is coming to another decision point.

Attempts to craft a workable plan for a spectrum of needs and uses — power, irrigation, flood control, navigation and recreation — have exhausted Cabinet secretaries and frustrated environmentalists.

The Obama administration seeks approval for a massaged Bush administration plan, and it faces a tough arbiter, federal District Judge James Redden.

The controlling document, a biological opinion, lays out how the river will be operated for up to 10 years. Redden sought inclusion of an adaptive management-implementation plan to supplement the underlying document.

Did the judge ask for a technical fix to satisfy federal administrative procedures, so an inventory of scientific data was all that was needed to bulk up the submission, or did he want more?

Read more of the "Crafting the operating manual for the Columbia River system."

 
   

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