Wednesday 30 April 2014

Tank cars catch fire as crude train derails in Virginia


A CSX Corp. crude train derailed in Lynchburg, Virginia, sparking a fire in at least three tank cars, spilling oil into a river and forcing a partial evacuation of the city’s downtown.


No injuries were reported, and the fire was out within about three hours after Wednesday’s accident. About 15 tank cars came off the tracks as the train rolled through Virginia from Chicago, according to a statement from CSX, the largest carrier in the eastern U.S.


Crude, once an almost-negligible cargo for North American railroads, has grabbed regulators’ attention after recent U.S. and Canadian crashes including the Quebec derailment that killed 47 people in July. Canada tightened tank-car standards this month, and the U.S. is studying whether to follow suit. The Federal Railroad Administration sent inspectors to Lynchburg.


The train was en route to a so-called transloading facility where crude is transferred to barges, Chief Executive Officer Mike Ward said by telephone. Virginia is the home of a Plains All American Pipeline LP center in Yorktown with daily capacity to unload about 140,000 barrels. Brad Leone, a spokesman, didn’t immediately respond to e-mail and phone messages for comment.


Video broadcast by WSLS-TV in Roanoke, Virginia, showed thick black smoke and flames billowing from the side of tracks holding a row of tank cars. The accident occurred near the James River, which flows through the heart of Lynchburg, about 181 miles (291 kilometers) southwest of Washington.


The cause wasn’t immediately known, according a statement on the city’s website. LuAnn Hunt, a city spokeswoman, said the fire department had let the fire burn out while looking for ways to contain the oil dumped into the James. She said the accident occurred about 2 p.m. New York time.


About 300 to 350 people were evacuated from the area, Hunt said. Lynchburg has a population of 76,500 and is located at the eastern edge of the Blue Ridge Mountains.


“We are aware of the derailment in Lynchburg and are sending FRA inspectors to the scene now,” the agency’s associate administrator, Kevin Thompson, said in a statement.


Wednesday’s accident was the first to spill crude from a CSX train, Ward said. The Jacksonville, Florida-based railroad had a low-speed incident earlier this year in Philadelphia that didn’t release any oil, Ward said.


Oil tank cars made up the entirety of the cargo, according to Ward, who said he didn’t know the length of the train involved in the crash. A train carrying only crude would typically be about 100 cars, Ward said.


CSX rose 0.2 percent to $28.22 at the close in New York, paring the carrier’s decline this year to 1.9 percent.


The accident occurred shortly before New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D, urged the White House to strengthen oil-transport regulations. A letter from Cuomo and a state report on crude safety sent to U.S. officials were aimed at helping “prevent the disasters that have occurred in other states and Canada as transit infrastructures adjust to the crude oil boom,” according to a statement from the governor’s office.


Companies from PBF Energy Inc. to Phillips 66 are looking to boost crude-by-rail shipments to refineries on the U.S. East and West Coasts.


Phillips 66 said Wednesday it plans to take delivery of 1,200 railcars by year’s end and have new rail terminals operating in New Jersey and Washington state in 2014’s second half. PBF is expanding rail capacity to 240,000 barrels a day by the end of next quarter and studying a new rail terminal in Toledo, Ohio.



Spencer announces he’ll run for prosecutor


Aberdeen attorney and former county prosecutor Mike Spencer announced Wednesday he intends to run for his old office, after failing to get a spot on a list of recommended candidates from the Grays Harbor Democrats.


“After having talked with judges, members of law enforcement, elected officials, attorneys and members of the community who I respect, I feel there is overwhelming support for my candidacy,” Spencer wrote in a press release. “As a result, I intend to file and run fo the postion of Grays Harbor County Prosecuting Attorney.”


Spencer quickly announced his intent to seek the position after Prosecutor Stew Menefee announced his retirement in September of last year, along with current interim Chief Criminal Deputy Prosecutor Katie Svoboda.


Spencer was Menefee’s immediate predecessor, leaving the Prosecutor’s Office after six years to serve as a Superior Court judge, a position he also held for six years before entering private practice. He’s a senior partner at Brown, Lewis, Janhunen & Spencer with offices in Aberdeen and Montesano.


To fill the vacancy for the partisan position, county Democrats met in October to create a list of three candidates to submit to the County Commission. The process usually then goes to the commissioners, who chose one of the candidates to fill the office until the end of the current term, ending this year.


Instead, controversy erupted as Democrats were accused of intentionally excluding Spencer from the list in order to force the commissioners to select Svoboda, the party’s preferred candidate. Attorneys Vini Samuel and George Smylie rounded out the list, despite expressing no interest in the office.


Commissioners chose Samuel in spite of the party’s preference. Samuel declined the job in late November, and the dispute between the county and local party members has continued, settling in a stalemate after state officials declined to get force the parties into a resolution.



Fiery freight train derailment in Lynchburg, Va., forces evacuations


Flames and thick black smoke rose into the air after a train with tanker cars derailed in downtown Lynchburg in central Virginia on Wednesday afternoon.


Lynchburg police advised motorists to keep away from the area and for nearby businesses to evacuate. Photos from the scene showed several black tanker cars on their side alongside the railroad tracks, but authorities did not immediately say what was inside the containers.


The derailment was along the James River near the Depot Grille restaurant, according to witness accounts on social media.


Philip Wilmarth felt the heat from the fire on the sixth floor of a building a couple of hundred yards away. He told the Los Angeles Times that he didn’t hear an explosion, but he saw at least a handful of train cars off the tracks.


“The train had completely come off the tracks, and the fireball, it’s very large,” Wilmarth said. “They evacuated us out pretty quickly. My guess is something ruptured in the tanks, and they got sparks from cars hitting together.”


He said he couldn’t see the end of the train, but all of the cars he saw were exactly the same — black cylinders.


While waiting out on the street before being told to leave the area completely, other witnesses told Wilmarth that the explosion had blown the windows off Depot Grille.


Authorities did not immediately report any injuries.



Coroner Dan Burns to retire


After five years as Grays Harbor County Coroner and 40 years in public service, Dan Burns has announced he’ll retire from the Coroner’s Office effective June 1.


“My decision to retire was made after discussions with family and friends and I decided that now is the right time to retire,” Burns said. “My wife, Lorene, and I are ready to spend more time with our children and four, soon to be five grandchildren.”


The Burnses will stay in the Grays Harbor area, he said, where they’ve been since 1975 when Burns was assigned to the area as a Washington State Patrol trooper.


“We’re going to some vacationing, some traveling and do the things you do in retirement,” Burns said.


He served as a trooper for 25 years before joining the Grays Harbor County Coroner’s Office.


“It was quite an honor to get Police Officer of the Year from The Daily World,” Burns said. “My law enforcement career was challenging, at times exciting. When I compare that with the job of the coroner, I think this job here is more of a rewarding job, because you’re there to help the families when they’re going through some difficult times.”


Burns became interim Coroner in 2009 and was later voted in for a full term.


“It’s quite an honor, at least I look at it that way, to get elected to a position,” Burns said. “It’s definitely a highlight for me.”


Burns’ term expires at the end of the year. He plans to recommend Chief Deputy Coroner Lane Youmans to serve as coroner in the interim.


Burns said Youmans has his support and the experience necessary to take the job on a permanent basis, but the decision on who will take over the office until the November election will fall to the Grays Harbor Democrats and the County Commission.


As with the vacancy caused by County Prosecutor Stew Menefee’s retirement last year, the party will provide a list of three candidates to the commissioners, who will chose the replacement.


That process has been mired in controversy for months, with still no permanent appointment.


Asked if the issues with that appointment process has given him any concern, Burns said, “Lane is by far the most qualified candidate that I know of currently here in the county. No, I don’t have any concerns there.”


Youmans is a former Grays Harbor County Sheriff’s Office detective and has been with the Coroner’s Office for seven years.


“He knows the responsibilities of the Coroner’s Office very, very well,” Burns said.


Burns said there won’t be any specific retirement function, but people are welcome to “stop by and say hi” May 12 through 16.


That’s also filing week for anyone who wants to run for county office. For elections information, call the Grays Harbor County Auditor’s Office at 360-964-1556 or visit 1.usa.gov/R49fPd.



Grain car derailment in Aberdeen spurs debate over crude by rail shipments


The cause of two AGP grain cars derailing in Aberdeen Tuesday morning is still under investigation, but what it means in relationship to the possibility of oil trains coming to Grays Harbor is the question most people were asking in the aftermath.


More than five cars separated from the train not far from the Chehalis River, spilling grain at the crossing at South Washington Street. Michael Williams, director of corporate communications for the Genesee & Wyoming railroad, said the train was traveling at 5 mph when it derailed.


“The railroad is safe and operates safely and efficiently today,” Williams said. “Cars that transport hazardous materials such as crude oil are much more secure than covered hopper grain cars. There would be upgrades and improvements to the line before handling unit trains of crude oil. There’s different operating protocols in place for unit trains of crude oil. So there’s really no comparison. It would be different track, different cars, different operating protocols.”


Genesee & Wyoming is the parent company of the Puget Sound & Pacific Railroad, the shortline rail operator responsible for the Grays Harbor area.


“I’ve not been impressed by the railroad so far, but statements like that don’t boost my confidence an awful lot,” said Arnie Martin of Citizens for a Clean Harbor, a group working to oppose oil terminals on Grays Harbor. “The railroads are the least revealing people I know. So far I’m quite impressed with them hiding behind all the federal agencies, Homeland Security and so on. I wish they’d tell us more about their plans” for crude oil shipping and spill cleanup.


Rail safety has been high on the list of concerns for opponents of three proposals to ship and store crude oil at the Port of Grays Harbor. Westway Terminals and Imperium Renewables are looking to expand their existing facilities to include crude oil, and are currently in the scoping process for an Environmental Impact Statement. U.S. Development has filed permit applications to start a third facility dedicated to crude oil shipping.


All three facilities would rely on rail shipments of crude oil.


Asked whether the derailment gives Port commissioners any concern about crude oil, Commission President Stan Pinnick said “We’re always concerned on a train derailment of any kind, and want to know the reasons why and how come and what can happen to prevent it.”


“I think it just shows the importance of inspection, maintenance and I know the railroad, before any oil would ever come in, has plans to enhance and strengthen the main line, so a lot of work would be done before crude-by-rail would be coming through,” Pinnick added.


The track is inspected once a week, according to Federal Rail Administration guidelines, railroad officials said.


“In my opinion, it’s not at all relevant” to crude oil, Port of Grays Harbor Executive Director Gary Nelson said of the derailment. “You hate to see it happen, glad nobody got hurt, and no damage other than to the cars. It’s just a matter of picking it up. It does happen from time to time.”


Nelson said a grain car derailment happened once several years ago, but couldn’t recall the date. He said Tuesday’s incident and the quick response demonstrates the railroad’s commitment to safety, and regional leaders for the railroad would be changing policies if needed to prevent a similar incident in the future.


“The G&W commitment to safety pays off in these situations as they demonstrate firsthand their ability to respond quickly and efficiently to minimize damage and delays to the community,” he added. “With a common goal to create jobs and commerce by safely moving goods to global markets, the Port is proud to have a partner like the PSAP that is committed to safety while at the same time working to create jobs in our community.”


“It just speaks so poorly of the track maintenance,” Martin said. “I can’t imagine why they would let the track get in such bad condition that they can have a derailment at 5 miles per hour.”



Tuesday 29 April 2014

Hoquiam lays off four firefighters


The City of Hoquiam plans to lay off four firefighters, officials announced Tuesday morning. Declining revenue and fewer ambulance calls were cited as the reasons for the cuts.


“These people we are laying off, they are excellent firefighters. They are dedicated to serving and protecting the people of Hoquiam,” said Chief Paul Dean in a press release.


This is the second major announcement from the city and fire department in recent weeks. City officials announced April 24 that Hoquiam and Aberdeen were considering merging their fire departments.


The Hoquiam Fire Department will now operate with 23 firefighters.


Ambulance calls decreased by 9 percent in 2013, and fire department revenue dropped about 10 percent, said City Administrator Brian Shay. The city’s ambulance fund borrowed $100,000 from the city’s general fund for the 2014 budget, and further declines in ambulance calls and revenue are forecasted for this year.


“We had hoped that 2013 was an anomaly and that calls for service would pick up in 2014 and return to 2012 levels. But they have continued to decline even further,” said Finance Director Mike Folkers.


Hoquiam Mayor Jack Durney called the layoffs regrettable, but necessary.


“These layoffs of our youngest is painful,” Durney said. “We hired them and work with them every day. They define what kind of professional organization we wish to be and it is regrettable that the combination of your local economy, the reduction in calls for service and the reduction in medical reimbursements has caused this to be needed.”



Grain cars derail in Aberdeen


Two AGP grain cars tipped over, the grain spilling out Tuesday morning after several grain cars went off the tracks at the South Washington Street crossing just south of State Street and near the Port of Grays Harbor in Aberdeen early Tuesday morning.


More than five cars had been separated from a longer train in the industrial area near the banks of the Chehalis River, their wheels off the tracks and dug into the dirt beside the rails. Several of the adjoining cars tipped toward a toppled car, while another car rested on its belly on South Washington Street, its wheels off the tracks as well.


Crews were surveying the scene Tuesday morning.


Puget Sound and Pacific Railroad General Manager Larry Sorensen said the cause is being investigated. ” … Men and equipment are still en route,” he said Tuesday. “A lot depends on getting everything assembled … there doesn’t appear to be (much of) a loss of product and very little damage to the cars themselves.”


Asked about obvious comparisons to proposed and controversial shipment of crude-by-rail, Sorensen replied: “This was a grain car, you know. In regard to crude, I have no comment, it’s not even on the radar right now.”


He added: “Historically, rail transportation is very safe … we pride ourselves on maintaining a very safe railroad.”


Train speed is less than 10 mph in that area, he said. The company will review a computer record of train speed as part of the investigation. The grain “hopper” cars are part of a “relatively new fleet” with estimated ages between 10 and 15 years, he said.


The track should be cleared by Wednesday morning, Sorensen said. He did not yet have an estimate for the cost.


The single track is inspected once a week per Federal Railroad Administration guidelines, Sorensen wasn’t sure what day the last inspection took place.


Use of the single main track on the Harbor is very efficient and isn’t even close to maximum capacity in terms of use, he said. He would not put a percentage on how much capacity the railroad currently uses.


The railroad transports grain, automobiles and canola oil used for biodiesel, among other commodities and products, he said.



Flocking to Bowerman


Tens of thousands of migrating shorebirds gathering for food at the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge provided an incredible sight for attendees of the 2014 Grays Harbor Shorebird Festival this weekend. While many of the birds currently in the area will be migrating north in the coming days, other types of shorebirds, such as the red knot, will be making their way through the area in the near future.



National high school graduation rate exceeds 80% for the first time


WASHINGTON, D.C. — The national high school graduation rate has reached a record high of more than 80%, but disparities based on students’ racial, socio-economic and disability status remain alarming, according to an annual report by America’s Promise Alliance, a nonprofit group founded by former Secretary of State Colin Powell.


An estimated four out of five public high school students obtained their diploma in 2012, according to the report, which used the latest available data from the Department of Education. But figures were lower for minority students.


Seventy-six percent of Latino students and 68 percent of African-American students graduated, the report found.


“We have to be honest that this is a matter of equity and that we have to change the opportunity equation,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan said Monday. “All of America’s children are our children.”


Recent improvements in the nation’s high school graduation rate — which has risen 8 percentage points in six years — have been driven by the closure of so-called “dropout factories,” typically high-minority schools that graduate less than 60 percent of students. In 2002, those schools enrolled almost half of all African-American students but by 2012, that number dropped to only 23 percent.


The results underscore the need for more federal funding to ensure that all students are provided with the same opportunities, said Daniel J. Losen, the director of the Center for Civil Rights Remedies at UCLA.


“We still have many school districts where it looks like apartheid in America,” he said. “It’s going to require more than the contributions of the private sector and the competitive grants of the federal government.”


Several categories of students face persistently lower odds of graduating, including those with physical and mental disabilities, those from low-income families and those learning English as a second language.


The nation’s graduation rate began decreasing in the 1990s, but with rising awareness of the dropout crisis in certain school districts, states and districts began implementing reforms in the 2000s, which are now beginning to bear fruit.


“Schools were for a long time ignoring this facet,” said Losen. “They were focused for the longest time on test scores.”


Joanna Hornig Fox, the deputy director of the Everyone Graduates Center at Johns Hopkins University and one of the report’s authors, attributed the improved rates in part to recent federal education reform bills, including No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, which implemented nationwide standards and performance-based funding for public schools.


Fox said that thanks to efforts to ensure “students do a great more deal of writing and explain their thinking,” now students in poorer districts are “not just filling in the blank.”


In California, which enrolls 14 percent of the nation’s high school students and the largest number of Latino and low-income students, the graduation rate is encouraging but still uneven. The overall rate reached 79 percent in 2012, but was only 61 percent for students with disabilities and 62 percent for those not yet fluent in English.


If California does not succeed in delivering more high school diplomas to disadvantaged and minority students, the national graduation rate might stagnate, the report suggests.


“California has been doing better,” said John Gomperts, president of America’s Promise Alliance. But he added, “California is not where it needs to be.”


One troubling and unexplained factor is the disparity in how many students are disciplined or required to repeat a grade, experts say. Statistics released in March by the Department of Education revealed that black students were three times more likely to be suspended and expelled than white students, and were disciplined at a higher rate than their peers as early as kindergarten.


“There’s no champagne corks being popped, I don’t think,” Losen said. “We still have racial and socioeconomic isolation in our public schools.”



Seared to perfection

By James P. DeWan

Chicago Tribune



Stop me if you’ve heard this one: Culinary school. Day 1. Pound cake. I ask the instructor how long to leave it in the oven. “Until it’s done,” she says. “I know,” I say, “but how long do I leave it in the oven?” And she says, again, annoyed, “Until it’s done.”


Now, my memory’s a bit fuzzy on the details, but, as I recall, we went back and forth like this for several hours until, finally, after clonking me on the head with her rubber spatula, I understood her point: Cooking, like everything else in the known universe, follows the laws of the universe (I know I’ve said that before).


This means that, in order to predict an outcome, say, the time it takes a pound cake to get “done,” you need to understand all the variables: How hot is your oven, really? How thick is the batter? I could go on. What I learned that day was, I had a lot to learn and a lot to practice. Oh, and the value of a good clonking. Today, we’ll apply those principles to one of the most common kitchen methods: pan searing.


WHY LEARN THIS?


Pan searing is great for any relatively small piece of protein, like your steaks and your chops, your chicken breasts and fish fillets. All those meaty, meaty things we like so much.


STEPS to TAKE


We call this method “pan searing” because it produces a lipsmacking, golden brown crust surrounding a perfectly cooked inside. For chicken breasts, that’s an internal temperature of 165 degrees. For steaks and chops and fish fillets — well, what do you like? Medium rare? Well done? Obviously there’s no one “right” way. And that’s part of the challenge.


First, the good news: Pan searing is easy. Now the bad news: There’s a caveat.


Here’s what I mean: It’s easy in the sense that there’s not much to it: Drop a seasoned piece of protein in a hot, lightly oiled pan, then flip it halfway through. Done.


Here’s the caveat: There are a gajillion variables, and the only way to know those variables is to practice, practice, practice.


Sure, I can give some good advice that will increase your chances of success: Have a pan that’s just big enough to hold what you’re cooking and get it nice and hot first, then dry your protein thoroughly and season it. But, the sad truth is that, just like me with that pound cake, the main thing you want to know is, how long do we cook it? And the answer, always, is, “Until it’s done.”


You see, because of those aforementioned gajillion variables, there’s no way to predict exactly how long something will take to cook. Consider:


• Pan materials: Different metals conduct heat differently


• Pan shape: Straight-sided pans trap moisture, preventing meat from browning as quickly as it would in sloped-sided pans


• The protein: What is it and how thick?


• Burner temperature: What does “medium high heat” mean, anyway?


Yikes. Here’s my best advice: Accept the fact that cooking well is not easy and requires practice. You’ll cook some things imperfectly, and that’s OK. Approach every meal as practice. The more you practice, the quicker you’ll understand those variables. Plan on having chicken breasts or pork chops or salmon fillets three times this week or, better yet, invite some friends over and cook 10 pieces of whatever in quick succession. Pay attention. Take notes. Use an instant read thermometer to track the speed at which the meat cooks. And press on the top to feel it firm up as the meat cooks. Yes, it’s science. But, it’s not rocket science. You can do it.


Here are the basics:


1. Set a sloped-sided saute pan, just big enough to hold your protein comfortably, over medium-high heat.


2. When it’s hot, add just enough fat — oil, clarified butter — to coat the bottom of the pan.


3. Add your seasoned protein to the pan, presentation side down. (“Presentation side” is the most visually appealing side.) Don’t touch the meat until it has developed a nice crust and is about halfway done, then flip it and cook until done.


Once again, what’s “done”? Well, here’s where that practice comes in. A good indication of doneness is touch. Raw meat is spongy. The more it cooks, the more the proteins tighten up and the firmer it becomes. Make a point, whenever you cook protein, to poke it and poke it some more. Feel the changes as it cooks. Insert an instant read thermometer frequently to make the connection between internal temperature and firmness. Take notes. You’ll get it.


One last thing: It’s true that, instead of flipping proteins only once, flipping them every 30 to 60 seconds throughout cooking can result in more even doneness with reduced cooking time.


Personally, I find the constant flipping somewhat bothersome and the results are not better enough to warrant the annoyance. If you want to try it, though, feel free. And take lots of notes.


Pork chops with apple cream sauce


Prep: 15 minutes / Cook: 15 minutes / Makes: 2 servings


Ingredients:


• 2 pork chops


• Salt and freshly ground pepper


• Canola oil or clarified butter


• 1 apple, peeled, cored, cut into medium dice


• 1 shallot, minced


• 1/4 cup apple cider


• 1/2 cup chicken broth


• 1/4 cup heavy cream


Directions:


1. Season the pork chops with salt and pepper; pan sear them in fat over medium-high heat until done, 3 to 6 minutes per side, depending on thickness.


2. Remove chops to a warm plate; add apples and shallots to the skillet. Saute until lightly browned, 1 to 2 minutes.


3. Deglaze with cider, then add broth and reduce by two-thirds.


4. Stir in heavy cream, heat to a boil to reduce, then season with salt and pepper. Pour sauce over pork chops and serve.



Hoquiam back to the drawing board on water main bid process


Construction companies will have to resubmit bids for Hoquiam’s water transmission main replacement after the oringinal bidding process ended in a dispute between Quigg Bros. and Rognlin’s.


Quigg Bros. submitted the low bid for the project, at about $8.94 million. The Rognlin’s bid came in at about $9.12 million — but comapny officials argued that their competitors had been given an unfair advantage.


Wayne Hagen, of Hagen &Bates in Aberdeen, represented Rognlin’s before the Hoquiam City Council Monday. He argued that Quigg Bros. neglected to include the proper materials when submitting their bid. He argued that a company president or vice president must sign the bid paperwork, but the Quigg Bros. material was instead signed by the project manager.


“Suffice it to say that Quigg Bros. did not comply with the bid documents,” Hagen said.


By not complying with the bid protocol, Quigg Bros. would have been able to revoke their bid if they later deemed it too low.


John Denton, a Seattle-based lawyer, represented Quigg Bros. at the meeting.


He argued that the company had no intentions of revoking its bid.


“I just hope the city council doesn’t make a mistake and spend an extra $200,000 and go to the second low bidder,” Denton said.


The council voted to restart the bidding process.



Twin Valley Wolfpack: Two rival schools, one big team


A handful of Wishkah High School players and coaches were milling around their home baseball field earlier this month when two Lake Quinault School District vans rolled into the school’s parking lot.


That was a signal that a Twin Valley Wolfpack baseball practice was about to begin.


Only with the Lake Quinault-Wishkah combine is a 40-minute road trip necessary merely to conduct a pratice. It’s one of the few negatives in a unique program that, at least off the field, has gone smoother than expected.


This is the first season in which Wishkah and Quinault will join forces for boys sports, a byproduct of declining male enrollment at both Class 1B schools. Girls teams at the two schools will continue to operate independently.


After student and community input was sought, Twin Valley was selected as the team name and the Wolfpack as the mascot.


Although athletic combines in rural areas of Eastern Washington have been commonplace for years, such an arrangement is rare on the Harbor.


Aberdeen, Hoquiam and (briefly) Montesano formed the Grays Harbor Buccaneers boys swimming team for several years. Raymond, South Bend and Willapa Valley still operate as a combine in wrestling and golf, but the three Willapa Harbor schools are located in much closer proximity than Lake Quinault and Wishkah.


While it had been rumored for at least a year, the Wishkah-Quinault merger took many of the students by surprise.


“I didn’t think it would happen,” admitted Wishkah junior Jace Anderson, a shortstop and pitcher on the baseball team.


Lake Quinault senior outfielder Jorge Ochoa was even more incredulous.


“What?,” he remembered thinking.


Nor was the initial reaction from many of the players particularly positive.


“We just wanted to stay in our school,” said Quinault junior catcher Kobe Kalama.


“I wasn’t quite for it at first because I wanted to play for the Loggers in my senior season,” Wishkah senior pitcher-shortstop Gavin Baltzell noted. “But it’s turned out well so far.”


That’s partly because the players realized they would not have a baseball team had the merger not transpired.


Only four Wishkah students turned out for baseball this spring. While there are 13 Lake Quinault players on the roster, only eight were on hand for the preseason workouts.


“We’re growing as the season goes on,” said Twin Valley head coach Keith Samplawski, who is also Lake Quinault’s principal and athletic director. “We couldn’t have fielded a team at first. We would have had to cancel the season because of that.”


That would have been a particularly bitter pill for Quinault players to swallow. Operating as a separate entity, a senior-dominated Elks team captured the state 1B championship — Lake Quinault’s second state title in five years — last May. As it is, the merger pushed Twin Valley into the 2B classification for this season only.


Players and coaches agree that they’ve been able to put aside the rivalry that had existed between the schools in other sports.


“I think they really are one team,” Samplawski said.


“It wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be,” Anderson observed.


Ochoa, however, acknowledged an initial period of wariness in terms of interaction.


“At first, we were sort of in groups,” the Quinault senior said. “Now, we’re playing together as a team. You could say the Wolfpack is together as a pack.”


Samplawski has been able to largely avoid accusations of favoritism, due in part to the roster makeup. His starting lineup is usually composed of all four players from Wishkah and five from Quinault.


“I thought I’d hear about (possible bias), but nothing has come up that I’m aware of,” he recounted.


The biggest difficulty thus far, Samplawski said, is organizing practices.


Due to limited gym space at both schools, the players usually work out separately at their own facilities when it rains. Assistant coach Travis Warren supervises the Wishkah practices in those instances.


“We don’t want to have to drive to get there and have 17 players in one gym,” Samplawski said. “When we do get together, we practice a little longer and take advantage of that time.”


Separate practices will be all but impossible in football and basketball, two sports that rely more heavily on set plays and structured teamwork. Even in baseball, Samplawski said he devotes considerable time communicating his concepts to Warren.


“The kids from Wishkah have done a great job of buying into the system,” Samplawski said.


There have been a few logistical issues as well. Twin Valley uniforms didn’t arrive until mid-April, forcing the team to wear old Lake Quinault jerseys.


“We kind of looked like the Bad News Bears,” Samplawski acknowledged.


Twin Valley’s off-field harmony hasn’t translated thus far into on-field success. With many of last year’s Quinault standouts having graduated, the Wolpack possesses only a 2-7 season record.


Baltzell, for one, believes matters will improve.


“The talent for each team has combined and I think we have a pretty good chance to be successful,” the Wishkah senior said.


If nothing else, this baseball season will provide a template for future Twin Valley teams.


“It has brought the schools together,” Ochoa asserted. “Instead of being rivals, it makes us one community.”



Twin Valley Wolfpack: Two rival schools, one big team


A handful of Wishkah High School players and coaches were milling around their home baseball field earlier this month when two Lake Quinault School District vans rolled into the school’s parking lot.


That was a signal that a Twin Valley Wolfpack baseball practice was about to begin.


Only with the Lake Quinault-Wishkah combine is a 40-minute road trip necessary merely to conduct a pratice. It’s one of the few negatives in a unique program that, at least off the field, has gone smoother than expected.


This is the first season in which Wishkah and Quinault will join forces for boys sports, a byproduct of declining male enrollment at both Class 1B schools. Girls teams at the two schools will continue to operate independently.


After student and community input was sought, Twin Valley was selected as the team name and the Wolfpack as the mascot.


Although athletic combines in rural areas of Eastern Washington have been commonplace for years, such an arrangement is rare on the Harbor.


Aberdeen, Hoquiam and (briefly) Montesano formed the Grays Harbor Buccaneers boys swimming team for several years. Raymond, South Bend and Willapa Valley still operate as a combine in wrestling and golf, but the three Willapa Harbor schools are located in much closer proximity than Lake Quinault and Wishkah.


While it had been rumored for at least a year, the Wishkah-Quinault merger took many of the students by surprise.


“I didn’t think it would happen,” admitted Wishkah junior Jace Anderson, a shortstop and pitcher on the baseball team.


Lake Quinault senior outfielder Jorge Ochoa was even more incredulous.


“What?,” he remembered thinking.


Nor was the initial reaction from many of the players particularly positive.


“We just wanted to stay in our school,” said Quinault junior catcher Kobe Kalama.


“I wasn’t quite for it at first because I wanted to play for the Loggers in my senior season,” Wishkah senior pitcher-shortstop Gavin Baltzell noted. “But it’s turned out well so far.”


That’s partly because the players realized they would not have a baseball team had the merger not transpired.


Only four Wishkah students turned out for baseball this spring. While there are 13 Lake Quinault players on the roster, only eight were on hand for the preseason workouts.


“We’re growing as the season goes on,” said Twin Valley head coach Keith Samplawski, who is also Lake Quinault’s principal and athletic director. “We couldn’t have fielded a team at first. We would have had to cancel the season because of that.”


That would have been a particularly bitter pill for Quinault players to swallow. Operating as a separate entity, a senior-dominated Elks team captured the state 1B championship — Lake Quinault’s second state title in five years — last May. As it is, the merger pushed Twin Valley into the 2B classification for this season only.


Players and coaches agree that they’ve been able to put aside the rivalry that had existed between the schools in other sports.


“I think they really are one team,” Samplawski said.


“It wasn’t as hard as I thought it would be,” Anderson observed.


Ochoa, however, acknowledged an initial period of wariness in terms of interaction.


“At first, we were sort of in groups,” the Quinault senior said. “Now, we’re playing together as a team. You could say the Wolfpack is together as a pack.”


Samplawski has been able to largely avoid accusations of favoritism, due in part to the roster makeup. His starting lineup is usually composed of all four players from Wishkah and five from Quinault.


“I thought I’d hear about (possible bias), but nothing has come up that I’m aware of,” he recounted.


The biggest difficulty thus far, Samplawski said, is organizing practices.


Due to limited gym space at both schools, the players usually work out separately at their own facilities when it rains. Assistant coach Travis Warren supervises the Wishkah practices in those instances.


“We don’t want to have to drive to get there and have 17 players in one gym,” Samplawski said. “When we do get together, we practice a little longer and take advantage of that time.”


Separate practices will be all but impossible in football and basketball, two sports that rely more heavily on set plays and structured teamwork. Even in baseball, Samplawski said he devotes considerable time communicating his concepts to Warren.


“The kids from Wishkah have done a great job of buying into the system,” Samplawski said.


There have been a few logistical issues as well. Twin Valley uniforms didn’t arrive until mid-April, forcing the team to wear old Lake Quinault jerseys.


“We kind of looked like the Bad News Bears,” Samplawski acknowledged.


Twin Valley’s off-field harmony hasn’t translated thus far into on-field success. With many of last year’s Quinault standouts having graduated, the Wolpack possesses only a 2-7 season record.


Baltzell, for one, believes matters will improve.


“The talent for each team has combined and I think we have a pretty good chance to be successful,” the Wishkah senior said.


If nothing else, this baseball season will provide a template for future Twin Valley teams.


“It has brought the schools together,” Ochoa asserted. “Instead of being rivals, it makes us one community.”



Monday 28 April 2014

Comcast Cares volunteers spruce up Seaport Landing


About 80 volunteers from the Comcast office serving Grays Harbor and Pacific counties, as well as Grays Harbor Historical Seaport Authority volunteers and staff, marked the cable company’s national day of service Saturday by working at Seaport Landing in South Aberdeen.


The volunteers built picnic tables, a railing for the pier, cut waste lumber for disposal and cleaned up the site. Around the country, 80,000-plus Comcast volunteers participated in more than 700 projects, including more than a dozen in Washington State.



Murder victim, woman arrested identified


The victim of a murder early Saturday morning has been identified as Harold David Crabtree, 63, Aberdeen Police Capt. John Green said Monday. His name had been withheld over the weekend so family members could be identified.


Leah Dawn Thompson, 45, is being held on probable cause of second degree murder by the Aberdeen police pending an appearance Monday afternoon in Grays Harbor District Court, county Chief Criminal Deputy Katie Svoboda said.


Thompson is suspected of stabbing Crabtree to death and allegedly made incriminating statements, first to a Grays Harbor Communications dispatcher and then to Aberdeen Police when they arrived at the scene in the 1400 block of Cherry Street, Green said.


Crabtree had “multiple stab wounds,” Green said. An autopsy was scheduled for 10 a.m. Monday.


Neither the motive or their relationship has been ascertained, though both apparently resided at the house, Green said.


The county has 72 hours to file formal charges pending more investigation, Svoboda said. Charges will either be filed on a preliminary basis in District Court or directly in Superior Court, likely on Wednesday, Svoboda said.



Sunday 27 April 2014

Teens injured in crash east of Montesano


Two teens were injured after a passenger apparently grabbed the steering wheel of the car they were riding in on State Route 12 just east of Montesano, according to the Washington State Patrol.


Jessica A. Westcott, 18, of Chehalis, was driving the car eastbound when the front passenger grabbed the steering wheel, jerking the vehicle off the roadway to the right, where it struck a tree, according to the State Patrol memo.


Westcott and Brandon J. Lynch, 19, of Montesano, were injured in the crash and transported to Summit Pacific Medical Center and Grays Harbor Community Hospital, respectively.


Caleb L. Hall, 19, and a 17-year-old boy, both of Hoquiam, were also passengers but were not injured. Both were transported to Summit Pacific as a precaution, the memo stated.


No drugs or alcohol are suspected. Everyone was wearing seat belts. The cause and any charges are currently under investigation.



Saturday 26 April 2014

Aberdeen woman arrested for homicide


A 45-year-old Aberdeen woman has been arrested on suspicion of homicide, the Aberdeen Police Department reported.


Officers responded to the 1400 block of Cherry Street at about 4:50 a.m. Saturday, according to a press release, where they found a 63-year-old Aberdeen man dead.


The woman called police and was the only other person in the home when police arrived.


The name of the victim is being witheld pending notification of family by the Grays Harbor County Coroner’s Office. An autopsy will be scheduled in the near future.


The woman was arrested on suspicion of second-degree homicide and transported to the City of Aberdeen Jail.



Anti-oil message heard loud and clear at EIS scoping meeting


For a large segment of the Grays Harbor population, crude oil shipping facilities simply aren’t an option.


They said the facilities could kill migrating shorebirds, ruin the area’s fishing economy, decimate the local environment and even lead to loss of human life.


The protesters take nearly every available opportunity to voice their disapproval for the crude-by-rail facilities proposed by Westway Terminal Co., Imperium Renewables and U.S. Development, showing up at Hoquiam City Council meetings, Port of Grays Harbor meetings and even holding signs on street corners.


A Thursday night meeting hosted by the City of Hoquiam and the state Department of Ecology was no different. The dissenters showed up in force. About 70 concerned citizens from the Harbor and beyond packed into the Hoquiam High School cafeteria, and 44 of them took the microphone to voice their concerns — which took about three hours.


Several local elected officials — including Rep. Dean Takko of Longview, Grays Harbor County Commissioner Frank Gordon, Quinault Indian Nation President Fawn Sharp, Cosmopolis Mayor Vickie Raines, Ocean Shores Mayor Crystal Dingler — were also in the crowd. But only Gordon and Sharp took the opportunity to voice their opinions.


“Quinault opposes oil on Grays Harbor and is in this fight to win,” Sharp said. She left the meeting soon after making her comments.


The gathering was intended as a scoping meeting to help Hoquiam and Ecology compose a list of topics to study while creating an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Westway and Imperium projects.


Jerry Thielen, a consultant hired to facilitate the meeting, reminded the group several times that the purpose of the meeting wasn’t to voice opinions, but to help with scoping.


“It’s not so much about whether you like or dislike this project,” Thielan said. “This meeting is for people to make suggestions of things to look at.”


But nearly all of the people who took the microphone to make suggestions took the opportunity to voice their general disapproval for the projects.


“Build it and they will come. But we say don’t build it, deny the permit,” said Zoltan Grossman of Olympia.


Many of the commentors expressed safety concerns, and many referenced oil train explosions from the past year. Hoquiam resident Brian Sterling asked who would have the responsibility of fighting oil fires when they happen.


“I do not believe that our communities have the resources to fight large-scale oil fires,” Sterling said.


Another common worry: the state of the railroad tracks running between Centralia and Hoquiam. Many of the commentors speculated that the tracks can’t withstand increased rail traffic.


Wes Brosman said the tracks are in such a state of disrepair that they could easily be dismantled by vandals.


“This track could be sabotaged by a set of tools and a clever 12-year-old,” Brosman said.


Many of the concerned citizens said they would like to see a copy of a oil spill response plan from Puget Sound &Pacific Railroad, the company that runs the short-line railroad between Centralia and Hoquiam.


The projects have also spawned concern about shorebirds, which use Grays Harbor as a resting place during their yearly migration. Janet Strong of McCleary explained that the area needs to remain healthy in order for the bird migrations to continue.


The third project, by U.S. Development, which is just starting the permit process, would be near the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge at Bowerman Basin.


“It’s an important link in the Pacific flyway where millions of birds fly through each year,” Strong said.


Others worried that the oil storage facilities would make Grays Harbor a target for terrorism.


All parties agreed that the impact of the oil shipping projects on all communities — from Centralia to the beaches — needs to be carefully studied.


“It’s not just Hoquiam, it’s not just Aberdeen, it’s all the communities up and down the line,” said Ron Figlar-Barnes, who ran unsuccessfully in 2013 for a Port Commission seat on a platform opposing the oil projects.


The agencies are in early stages of performing the analysis, and the process could take as short as a few months or as long as several years.


“It’s hard to say how long it will take while we’re still making a list of what we’ll study,” said Diane Butorac, Southwest regional planner for Ecology.


Another scoping meeting will take place April 29 at Centralia High School, located at 813 Eshom Road, from 5 to 9 p.m.



Waiting for the guests of honor


The Grays Harbor Shorebird Festival runs through Sunday featuring lectures, field trips, a Nature Fun Fair and much more, with headquarters at Hoquiam High School. Shuttles run throughout the day to take birdwatchers to the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge at Bowerman Basin. Tonight features a banquet and live auction at the Hoquiam Elks. For more information, visit http://ift.tt/1qZEZ56 or call 360-289-5048.



Nearby lakes replenished with Steelhead


Workers at the Lake Aberdeen Fish Hatchery spent Thursday morning stocking nearby lakes, including Lake Sylvia, Lake Aberdeen and the Vance Creek ponds, with hundreds of “catchable” and “jumbo” sized steelhead trout. Lake Sylvia is already open for trout fishing but the Vance Creek ponds and Lake Aberdeen will be opening their seasons on Saturday.



Seaport’s $435K land sale will help develop Seaport Landing


The Grays Harbor Historical Seaport Authority has negotiated the sale 174 acres of wetland near Junction City to fund the planning and development of Seaport Landing.


The sale to Chehalis River Basin Land Trust, at $2,500 per acre, will bring in some $435,000, confirmed Authority Executive Director Les Bolton.


The Aberdeen City Council helped the sale proceed by approving a quit claim deed for a surplus parcel 60 feet wide bisecting the property. The strip was originally purchased in 1947 so an industrial water line to Cosmopolis could be built. The property was never used.


The surplus portion runs about 2,500 feet from the west bank of Elliot Slough through a 52-acre cattail marsh owned by the Seaport Authority up to property owned by Sierra Pacific Industries, city documents say.


The Seaport will use the proceeds from the city’s 3.44 acres to help fund design and develop a waterfront trail at the landing in South Aberdeen, the city’s transfer documents say.



Friday 25 April 2014

Montesano controls Elma in 3-0 shutout win


MONTESANO — Montesano’s run through the second half of the Evergreen 1A League has bred confidence and positive results, including Thursday night’s East County Derby match against Elma.


The Bulldogs converted a 12th-minute penalty kick for the early lead, then added to it with two goals in five minutes early in the second half to blank the league-leading Eagles, 3-0, at Rottle Field.


David Sawyer converted the spot kick, while Nolan Walker and Brandon Lovell scored in the second half for Montesano (5-3, 5-5), which is now tied with Hoquiam (5-3, 7-4) for second in the league standings.


Elma (6-2, 7-3) still holds the league lead by one game, thanks to Rochester’s 2-1 win over Hoquiam, and won the first game over Monte, 3-2, at home.


“Their confidence has been high and they beat the team to beat in the league — convincingly,” Montesano head coach Mike Malpass said. “We just need to keep winning. In some regards, the guys came away with belief after losing 3-2 to Elma. They were expecting to come away from that game in a totally different position. I think that things are starting to go our way and their belief has grown.”


“We played bad soccer,” Elma head coach Carson Seaberg said. “I told the guys at halftime, ‘If they were driving at 100 MPH, we were at 60 MPH.’ You can’t go out and play soccer like that. Montesano wanted to beat us and they gave us a butt kicking — 3-0. That’s bad soccer.”


A tense opening 10 minutes was shattered when a handball foul was called inside the penalty area on a Montesano corner kick. The ensuing penalty kick was taken by Sawyer, who beat Elma goalkeeper Tyler Davis to the right side of the goal, for a 1-0 lead.


With the lead, the Bulldogs settled into a midfield game, while holding off Eagle runs at goal. Elma’s Edgar Hermenegaldo and Steven Persell each had shots inside the penalty area on Montesano goalkeeper Jeff Varness, but no markers to show for them.


After halftime, Elma came out aggressively to find that tying goal early in the second half. However, it was a corner kick off Lovell’s foot in the 46th minute that began the separation on the scoreboard.


The Bulldogs counter-attacked after an Eagle wave and earned a corner kick from the right side of the field. Lovell sent a dangerous kick to the far left post, where Walker was all alone. The defender headed the ball into the upper left corner for the marker and the 2-0 lead.


“Nolan got away from his defender; he can head the ball, you usually see him doing that on defense, so we pushed him up to take advantage of the corner,” Malpass said. “He was in the perfect position. (Brandon’s run) just opened up for him. We have a game with the top-of-the-league (team) and we had three different guys score. We don’t want to rely upon one person when we have 3-4 naturally talented goal scorers.”


Elma produced three chances on goal that Varness had to deal with from Hermenegildo, Jake Bates and Juan Perez following Walker’s goal. Monte took advantage again, this time on a solo counter-attack run by Lovell.


The junior forward cut through the Elma defense and blistered a 20-yard shot off his left foot into the right side netting of the goal past Davis in the 51st minute.


“Hopefully, we can keep scoring and it is always good to get the clean sheet on defense,” Malpass added. “It is great, great for the confidence. It is a great feeling and long may it continue.”


“They beat us; they deserved it,” Seaberg added. “If you take the field like that, you’re going to lose. The speed … if there was a ball to be won, they won it. In the last 15-20 minutes, you’re down 3-0 and start winning 50-50 balls, that’s too late. We have to play better.”


The final 30 minutes of the match was controlled by Montesano’s defense, which withstood several Elma attacks in the end. Varness finished with six saves overall, while Davis came away with four saves in goal.


Malpass cited Donovan Wargo for stepping in on defense.


On Monday, Montesano stays home to gree Tenino, while Elma travels to Rochester.



Montesano controls Elma in 3-0 shutout win


MONTESANO — Montesano’s run through the second half of the Evergreen 1A League has bred confidence and positive results, including Thursday night’s East County Derby match against Elma.


The Bulldogs converted a 12th-minute penalty kick for the early lead, then added to it with two goals in five minutes early in the second half to blank the league-leading Eagles, 3-0, at Rottle Field.


David Sawyer converted the spot kick, while Nolan Walker and Brandon Lovell scored in the second half for Montesano (5-3, 5-5), which is now tied with Hoquiam (5-3, 7-4) for second in the league standings.


Elma (6-2, 7-3) still holds the league lead by one game, thanks to Rochester’s 2-1 win over Hoquiam, and won the first game over Monte, 3-2, at home.


“Their confidence has been high and they beat the team to beat in the league — convincingly,” Montesano head coach Mike Malpass said. “We just need to keep winning. In some regards, the guys came away with belief after losing 3-2 to Elma. They were expecting to come away from that game in a totally different position. I think that things are starting to go our way and their belief has grown.”


“We played bad soccer,” Elma head coach Carson Seaberg said. “I told the guys at halftime, ‘If they were driving at 100 MPH, we were at 60 MPH.’ You can’t go out and play soccer like that. Montesano wanted to beat us and they gave us a butt kicking — 3-0. That’s bad soccer.”


A tense opening 10 minutes was shattered when a handball foul was called inside the penalty area on a Montesano corner kick. The ensuing penalty kick was taken by Sawyer, who beat Elma goalkeeper Tyler Davis to the right side of the goal, for a 1-0 lead.


With the lead, the Bulldogs settled into a midfield game, while holding off Eagle runs at goal. Elma’s Edgar Hermenegaldo and Steven Persell each had shots inside the penalty area on Montesano goalkeeper Jeff Varness, but no markers to show for them.


After halftime, Elma came out aggressively to find that tying goal early in the second half. However, it was a corner kick off Lovell’s foot in the 46th minute that began the separation on the scoreboard.


The Bulldogs counter-attacked after an Eagle wave and earned a corner kick from the right side of the field. Lovell sent a dangerous kick to the far left post, where Walker was all alone. The defender headed the ball into the upper left corner for the marker and the 2-0 lead.


“Nolan got away from his defender; he can head the ball, you usually see him doing that on defense, so we pushed him up to take advantage of the corner,” Malpass said. “He was in the perfect position. (Brandon’s run) just opened up for him. We have a game with the top-of-the-league (team) and we had three different guys score. We don’t want to rely upon one person when we have 3-4 naturally talented goal scorers.”


Elma produced three chances on goal that Varness had to deal with from Hermenegildo, Jake Bates and Juan Perez following Walker’s goal. Monte took advantage again, this time on a solo counter-attack run by Lovell.


The junior forward cut through the Elma defense and blistered a 20-yard shot off his left foot into the right side netting of the goal past Davis in the 51st minute.


“Hopefully, we can keep scoring and it is always good to get the clean sheet on defense,” Malpass added. “It is great, great for the confidence. It is a great feeling and long may it continue.”


“They beat us; they deserved it,” Seaberg added. “If you take the field like that, you’re going to lose. The speed … if there was a ball to be won, they won it. In the last 15-20 minutes, you’re down 3-0 and start winning 50-50 balls, that’s too late. We have to play better.”


The final 30 minutes of the match was controlled by Montesano’s defense, which withstood several Elma attacks in the end. Varness finished with six saves overall, while Davis came away with four saves in goal.


Malpass cited Donovan Wargo for stepping in on defense.


On Monday, Montesano stays home to gree Tenino, while Elma travels to Rochester.



Citizens voice opposition to crude-by-rail at EIS scoping meeting


Nearly everyone who spoke at a Thursday night session to get input on a study of proposed crude oil shipping facilities in Hoquiam thought the whole proposal was a bad idea.


Increased rail traffic, oil spills, air pollution and safety were areas of concern as the City of Hoquiam and the state Department of Ecology consider the impacts of two crude oil shipping facilities proposed for Grays Harbor.


About 70 concerned citizens crowded into the Hoquiam High School cafeteria to share suggestions of what should be studied during as the city and Ecology create and Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the projects proposed by Imperium Renewables and Westway Terminal Company.


A third company, U.S. Development, has also proposed a local crude-by-rail facility, which won’t be studied as part of this EIS.


Citizens from Grays Harbor and beyond have been vocal regarding their feelings for the projects, but the purpose of the recent meeting wasn’t to voice opinions regarding crude-by-rail, said Jerry Thielan, a consultant hired to facilitate the meeting. “It’s not so much about whether you like or dislike this project,” Thielan said. “This meeting is for people to make suggestions of things to look at.”


But nearly all of the 44 people who took the microphone to make suggestions took the opportunity to voice their general disapproval for the projects.


“Build it and they will come. But we say don’t build it, deny the permit,” said Zoltan Grossman of Olympia.


Many of the commentors expressed safety concerns, and many noted oil train explosions from the past year. Hoquiam resident Brian Sterling asked who would have the responsibility of fighting oil fires when they happen.


“I do not believe that our communities have the resources to fight large-scale oil fires,” Sterling said.


Another common worry: the state of the railroad tracks running between Centralia and Hoquiam. Many of the commentors speculated that the tracks aren’t adequate to withstand increased rail traffic. Wes Brosman said the tracks are in such a state of disrepair that they could easily be dismantled by vandals.


“This track could be sabotaged by a set of tools and a clever 12-year-old,” Brosman said.


The projects have also spawned concern about shorebirds, which use Grays Harbor as a resting place during their yearly migration. Janet Strong of McCleary explained that the area needs to remain healthy in order for the bird migrations to continue. The third project, which is just getting started through the permit process and isn’t a part of the environmental impact statement that was the focus of Thursday’s meeting, would be very near the Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge at Bowerman Basin.


“It’s an important link in the Pacific flyway where millions of birds fly though each year,” Strong said.


Others worried that the oil storage facilities would make Grays Harbor a target for terrorism.


All parties agreed that the impact of the oil shipping projects on all communities — from Centralia to the beaches — needs to be carefully studied.


“It’s not just Hoquiam, it’s not just Aberdeen, it’s all the communities up and down the line,” said Ron Figlar-Barnes, who ran for a Port Commission seat on a platform opposing the oil projects.


The agencies are in early stages of performing the analysis, and the process could take as short as a few months or as long as a few years.


“It’s hard to say how long it will take while we’re still making a list of what we’ll study,” said Diane Butorac, Southwest regional planner for Ecology.


Another scoping meeting will take place April 29 at Centralia High School, located at 813 Eshom Road, from 5 to 9 p.m.



Mike Parker a finalist for superintendent’s job at Longview


Hoquiam School Superintendent Mike Parker is one of three finalists for the superintendent’s spot with the Longview School District, according to a story in the Longview Daily News.


Parker has been at the Hoquiam district since 2006, but the Hoquiam Board recently chose not to extend his contract when it expires. Before coming to Hoquiam he was superintendent of the Concrete School District.


The Longview board plans to name a new superintendent at its May 12 meeting. The new superintendent will officially begin work on July 1.



Thursday 24 April 2014

Washington first state to lose No Child Left Behind waiver


The U.S. Department of Education is yanking Washington state’s waiver from the federal No Child Left Behind Act, the department announced Thursday.


Loss of the waiver means that Washington will no longer be exempt from onerous parts of the federal education law, which set performance goals that schools in Washington have been unable to meet.


That means school districts throughout Washington will have to redirect roughly $38 million in federal funding toward private tutoring efforts, instead of using the Title I funds to pay for district programs for low-income students. Additionally, nearly every school in the state will be labeled as failing, since Washington schools have fallen short of the performance standards established under the federal law.


Hoquiam would have redirect 20 percent of the more than $700,000 in Title I funding it receives, while Aberdeen would have to set aside about $200,000 of its Title I funding, according to numbers gathered for a Daily World story in March.


Federal education officials told Washington education leaders in August that the Legislature must approve changes to the state’s teacher evaluation system to keep its waiver.


But lawmakers adjourned in March without requiring that student scores on state standardized tests be used as a factor in teacher evaluations. Current state law requires teacher and principal evaluations to consider student test scores, but lets districts choose which tests they will use — a status quo that the federal government has said is unacceptable.


Washington is now the first U.S. state to have its waiver revoked by the federal government.


U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan said in a letter Thursday that the Legislature’s lack of action on teacher evaluations is why he is revoking the state’s waiver from the federal law, which is also known as the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA).


“As you know, Washington’s request for ESEA flexibility was approved based on Washington’s commitments to carry out certain actions in support of key education reforms,” Duncan said in the letter addressed to Washington schools chief Randy Dorn.


“In return for those commitments, we granted your State and your local school districts significant flexibility. However, Washington has not been able to keep all of its commitments. Thus, although Washington has benefitted from ESEA flexibility, I regret that Washington’s flexibility will end with the 2013—2014 school year,” Duncan wrote.


Without the waiver, schools and districts throughout Washington will also be required to notify parents that their school or district is failing.


An OSPI official told The News Tribune in March that there isn’t a single district in the state that won’t have to send parents some letters telling them their child attends a failing school or is in a failing district.


Wash. Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement Thursday that news of Washington’s waiver is “disappointing, but not unexpected.” He said said districts will be hurt by their inability to freely spend nearly $40 million in federal funds.


“Loss of that funding means those districts now face potential impacts that could include laying off some of Washington’s tremendous teachers or cutting back on programs that serve at-risk students,” Inslee’s statment said. “I hope districts will work to mitigate impacts on students. I know that despite this setback Washington teachers remain fully committed to serving our students.”


Dorn, the state superintendent of public instruction, said in a statement Thursday that he agrees with Duncan that “student progress should be one of multiple elements in a teacher’s evaluation.” He said lobbying by the state teachers union was to blame for Washington lawmakers’ failure to act, and now the state’s loss of the federal waiver.


“Unfortunately the teacher’s union felt it was more important to protect their members than agree to that change and pressured the Legislature not to act,” Dorn said in his statement.


Rich Wood, a spokesman for the Washington Education Association, said the “Washington Legislature did the right thing this past session” by rejecting legislation aimed at keeping the state’s waiver.


Wood said making any changes to teacher and principal evaluations would be detrimental to the new evaluation system that school districts are just starting to use this year.


“We have a great new evaluation system we’re implementing,” Wood said. “What Secretary Duncan was trying to force on our state was going to derail that.”



Embracing the pioneering spirit


During his 91 years, Oscar Rosenkrantz has watched Grays Harbor go through a series of ups and downs. He remembers the tail end of the Roaring ’20s, the hardships of the 1930s, the heyday of the lumber industry and the area’s more recent economic decline.


Through those times — both good and bad — Rosenkrantz and the family business, Western Steel & Supply, have been staples of the Aberdeen community. And because of his perseverance, Rosenkrantz was named this year’s Polson Museum Pioneer of the Year.


“He really captures the pioneer spirit,” said Polson Museum Director John Larson. “They’ve been through a few hard times at Western Steel, but they’ve stuck around and I think that’s because of how Oscar runs the place. When you talk to him, you really understand his business philosophy. He sees his business relationships as friendships and you don’t see that anymore.”


Rosenkrantz will be honored at a reception hosted by the museum at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Grays Harbor PUD’s Nichols Building in Aberdeen.


Western Steel & Supply is nearly as old as Rosenkrantz — he was born in 1923, and the company was incorporated in 1924. Back then, the business was called Western Machinery Exchange and its main purpose was to salvage and refurbish old mill machinery.


Remnants of Western Steel & Supply’s history remain at the company’s warehouse: the old welding shop, the former machine shop and the train tracks that run through the building’s tall doors. Goods used to be delivered to the business by train, and the rail cars were parked inside for loading.


The building has undergone several changes, too. The roof was replaced after a 2008 storm, the warehouse is now filled with steel building materials instead of old mill machinery and the floors are made of concrete.


“The floors weren’t like this when I was 10 years old and was hired to sweep,” Rosenkrantz said. “They were made of wood — long, wooden boards.”


As a 13-year-old, he was given a promotion: he became the company’s crane operator. He remembers climbing a thin, wooden ladder into the rafters of the building and operating the 35-ton bridge crane from a crows nest.


“But it could lift more than (35 tons),” Rosenkrantz said. “We once lifted 50 tons with it because we thought it was a 50 ton crane. But I’m sure it could have lifted 75 tons.”


He worked at the company until he graduated from Weatherwax High School in 1941 and left for college. Soon after Pearl Harbor was attacked, Rosenkrantz enlisted in the Navy. He attended flying school and later served in the Pacific and the occupation of Tokyo Bay.


Rosenkrantz’s father, William Rosenkrantz, died suddenly in 1945 and left the business to Oscar Rosenkrantz and his siblings, Alex Rosenkrantz and Minnie Sternoff. Instead of returning to college, Rosenkrantz moved back to Aberdeen upon leaving the Navy in 1947.


He’s lived there ever since, working at Western Steel & Supply the entire time.


“I had a lot of help from the mill owners,” Rosenkrantz said. “We would have never made it otherwise.”


He and his wife, Jacqueline, were married in 1950 and the couple had four children: Jill, Jody, Julie and William. Rosenkrantz also has several grandchildren.


He has also attended Temple Beth Israel in Aberdeen for many years, and is especially proud of a large candelabra hanging near the door — which he designed and helped weld.


“Underneath it is a sign that reads, ‘let there be light,’” Rosenkrantz said. “And you can take that in more ways than one.”


Rosenkrantz said that overall, he’s lived a happy, lucky life — through the “glory days” and hard times.


“I’ve seen a lot of different days,” Rosenkrantz said. “But you learn that they’re all glory days when you get older.”



A mother tries to keep it together in “The Glass Menagerie”


The newest Driftwood Players of Aberdeen production, opening this Saturday, is very much a family affair, an examination of the complexities of one family and the first commercially successful play by one of America’s greatest playwrights.


“The Glass Menagerie,” by Tennessee Williams, follows the story of Amanda Wingfield, a mother pushing her grown children to pursue certain paths in their lives, such as her daughter finding a husband, and inadvertently creating chaos around her. The director, Debbie Scoones, said this all-ages play is a drama, but includes some laugh-out-loud comedic elements that come from the tension between mother and children.


“I’ve seen this show from many different vantage points and most focus on Amanda being a narcissist,” she said. “To me, it’s just a family who loves each other. Amanda has raised these children through the Great Depression. She is a scrapper and trying to do the best for her children.”


There are four characters in this play; Amanda, her children, Tom and Laura, and a gentleman caller named Jim O’Connor. The actors are being encouraged to convey more than anger in Scoones’ rendition of a beloved play.


“I think I’m blessed to have four very talented actors in this show. They each bring a unique quality to this stage and I love it,” she said.


Scoones wants Harborites to walk away from this production appreciating the talent Williams showcases in all of his plays, she said. In fact, this show was especially personal to Williams because it is semi-autobiographical. He was raised by a single mother who at times could be overbearing along with his sister Rose. After a botched lobotomy left the sister in their care, Williams used this play loosely based on his life to help pay her medical bills, Scoones said. Williams wrote much of himself in the introspective writer Tom, which shows in the artful way the play is introduced.


“I want people to experience his words. There is so much poetry in the way the prologue is written, alone,” she said. “This is going to be a great family show.”


Ticket Info:


Tickets are $15 and available online at:


Aberdeendriftwood.com


Tickets can also be purchased at these outlets:


Valu-Drug in Montesano


Top Foods and City Center Drug in Aberdeen


Harbor Drug in Hoquiam


Dolores’ and Fay’s in Ocean Shores


At the door, if available


Showtimes:


Saturday: April 26


Friday, Saturday: May 2, 3


Friday, Saturday: May 9, 10


Friday, Saturday, Sunday: May 16, 17, 18


Friday and Saturday shows curtain time: 7:30 p.m.


Sunday matinee show curtain time: 1:30 p.m.



Bobcats hold off T-Birds, 1-0


Aberdeen head coach Larry Fleming would like a new script for his boys soccer team, but he wouldn’t change the ending against Tumwater on Tuesday night.


Alex Barene scored what turned into the Bobcats’ lone goal in the 26th minute and the hosts dominated possession and play in the second half to cap a 1-0 Evergreen 2A win over the T-Birds at Stewart Field.


The T-Birds did get one or two chances in the final minutes, but for the most part, it was the Bobcats’ match.


“I hate to beat a dead horse over and over again after every game, but I love we create so many chances, pass so well in the midfield, but we choose to pass instead of shoot and not convert those chances,” AHS head coach Larry Fleming said. “We’re getting better with the chances and close plays. I was surprised by the amount of possession we had — and we’ve done that in a bunch of games only to see teams like Black Hills tie it in the last minute. I’d love to score more, but a 1-0 win still counts as a win.”


Inside the final two minutes of the match, Tumwater’s Jacob Bonner tried to snatch a tie in regulation with a 55-yard blast. The shot dipped at the last second and hit the crossbar over Aberdeen goalkeeper Andres Valdes, but stayed out.


The threat was the first of two in the last gasps of the match. The T-Birds’ Jacob Irwin had a run on the goal and had an open look from 25 yards out when the Bobcat defense parted away from him. However, the shot was shanked wide for a goal kick.


For the vast majority of the second half, Aberdeen (7-2, 9-2) pushed Tumwater (1-8, 2-10) into its defensive zone and pummeled it with shots, runs and pressure. T-Bird goalkeeper Dayton Newell benefited from a strong defensive game by his defenders and wayward attempts by the Bobcats.


In the 49th minute, Newell was beaten on a corner-kick header by Isaiah Contreras. Newell slipped as the shot went behind him, destined for the left side of the net. However, defender Blake Lesh cleared the ball off the line to clear the threat.


Mateus Duarte, Victor Corona, Seth Caba, Cesar Corona, Barene and Contreras each had chances against Newell in the second half. Caba nearly created a second AHS goal in the 61st minute when he gathered in a loose ball and sent it across the goal face to the far right side. Midfielder Robby Lewis was one step too slow to get a foot on the attempt.


“Our control wasn’t perfect, but it was really good today,” Fleming said. “This is usually the time of the year where freshmen don’t play like freshman. We rotated a lot of guys in the midfield, because there’s a lot of running in our system. It works with our depth. We just really played an overall team game.”


Barene made sure the second half was filled with Aberdeen possession when he knocked home the lone goal of the match. Off a feed from Victor Junco, Barene beat a sliding Newell to deposit the ball into the low right corner for the marker in the 26th minute.


Both teams traded chances and pressure before Barene’s goal and nearly pulled off long-range goals on shots near the end of the first half.


Tumwater’s Gavin Trotter blasted a midfield shot that Valdes had to push onto the crossbar in the 39th minute. In extra time, Caba had a 45-yard free kick that he sent toward Newell, who pushed it over the crossbar at the stroke of halftime.


Tumwater won the junior varsity match, 1-0.


On Thursday, Aberdeen stays home to greet Chehalis.



Sleeping driver injures passenger


A passenger was injured when a 21-year-old Lebam man fell asleep at the wheel south of Cosmopolis Wednesday, according to the Washington State Patrol.


Joseph M. Rediger was heading south on Highway 101 about nine miles south of Cosmopolis at 1:25 p.m., the State Patrol memo states. He fell asleep, then the car went off the roadway, down a steep embankment, rolling before coming to rest on its wheels in the shoulder of another road, facing west.


Crystal J. Seay, 19, of Raymond, was injured in the crash and transported to Grays Harbor Community Hospital. Philip Sheary, 21, also of Raymond, was a passenger but was not injured.


Rediger will be charged with second-degree negligent driving, according to the memo.



Elma oil forum tense, one-sided


More than 100 people came to the Elma Grange last night hoping to learn more about crude oil shipping proposals on Grays Harbor. Opponents were there in force, but the pro side was conspicuously absent.


Shannon Vandenbush of the League of Women Voters of Grays Harbor, organizers of the event, said none of the representatives of Westway Terminals, Imperium Renewables or U.S. Development agreed to attend.


After no response via emails to representatives involved in a previous forum in Ocean Shores, Vandenbush started making calls.


“I contacted a few of the local principals by phone and each declined to attend for different reasons,” she said. “It left me with the feeling that the public was being brushed off, particularly by elected officials,” though she declined to name anyone specifically.


“We did have good representation from city councils, mayors,” Vandenbush said. “Everyone out here who’s affected by this made an appearance. That says something.”


The frustration boiled over at times, with speakers venting general concerns about traffic, spills and explosions as a result of the proposals to ship and store crude oil at the Port of Grays Harbor.


Imperium and Westway are in the scoping process of their environmental impact statement, where Hoquiam and the state Department of Ecology seek input from the public on what the companies should have to account for in the study. The EIS itself is not a permit, though it will be used in making permitting decisions later.


U.S. Development, which formed the local company Grays Harbor Rail Terminal, has a lease option at the Port and recently began its permitting process.


Hoquiam City Administrator Brian Shay said the EIS will account for the combined impacts of the three projects, but the U.S. Development proposal is just starting its permitting process, and will have to go through the same steps as the other two companies. It has not yet been decided if U.S. Development will have to do an EIS itself.


Shay and several representatives from Ecology were available to answer questions. In his comments, Hoquiam City Councilman Richard Pennant thanked them for coming.


“Unlike the soulless businessmen and the dunderheads at the Port, they showed up tonight,” he said.


Pennant had sharp criticism for the Port. Moderator and Vidette editor Steven Friederich quickly read an email from Executive Director Gary Nelson saying Port staff was focused on tonight’s scoping meeting in Hoquiam, and didn’t find the forums an effective way to communicate. “I think they’re just assuming this is a done deal,” Pennant said. “They’ve got the money behind them.”


Former county commissioner Dan Wood also had strong words against the proposals.


“This proposal is absolutely crazy. I spent Christmas day 1988 and several days before and after helping with the cleanup on the beaches” after the Nestucca Barge oil spill in Grays Harbor, Wood said.


“I got my Nissan Sentra stuck on the beach, with a dead seal in the trunk and a car full of live birds,” he added, trying to clear the beach. “That was a small spill, and that was oil that did not explode.”


“In case there’s any question about it, the Quinaults are adamantly opposed to any oil trains,” spokesman Steve Robinson said.


The Quinault Indian Nation has been a leading opponent of the projects, filing court challenges and appeals of permits issued throughout the process.


“The tribe is interested in working with anyone and everyone who is interested in keeping big oil the hell out of here,” Robinson said, to cheers from the crowd. He asked those interested in joining in a coalition with the tribe to email protectourfuture@quinault.org.


Ecology Spill Preparedness Section Manager Linda Pilkey-Jarvis answered questions and brought some positive news.


“Out of this last legislative session, the Department of Ecology spill program has been directed to write a report, a study, that’s going to look at these large issues that you’ve been bringing up,” she said. “We’re doing a study that will look at rail safety and oil spill gaps and issues in moving crude by rail. This is a really big issue.”


When the geographic response plan for Grays Harbor was updated in January, Ecology made its first effort to plan for an upland spill, but Pilkey-Jarvis said at that time the department lacked information to plan effectively.


She said the department expects to have a website up Friday where people can follow their progress and provide comments. It will be available through the spill program site at http://ift.tt/1nJcTsX.


The lone speaker in favor of the projects was Ray Brown of Westport.


“Fracking has been going on 65 years, there’s nothing new about fracking,” Brown said. “It really comes down to this: You guys don’t want no crude, you don’t get no crude. That means everybody’s walking home tonight. No walking on the pavement because that’s asphalt. When you go to the grocery store, don’t even think about buying anything, because it’s all made with oil.”



Wednesday 23 April 2014

Bill Crawford resigning as Daily World publisher


Daily World Publisher Bill Crawford announced Wednesday that he will be resigning his position as the newspaper’s publisher.


Crawford, who also serves as publisher for the Montesano Vidette, South Beach Bulletin and North Coast News, came to this community in 2011 from Hilo, Hawaii, where he was circulation manager for the Hawaii Tribune-Herald, another Stephens Media newspaper.


Crawford and his family plan to return to Hawaii at the end of the school year.


“My time on the Harbor has been one that I will not soon forget.” Crawford said. “I say to all reading this that the people I have had the pleasure of working with, within the walls of State Street and Michigan are some of the best employees and managers that anyone could ever hope to walk side by side with.


“I said upon my arrival that I had never seen such resilience as was present on the Harbor. I leave saying the same. People here, from left to right, are as strong as I have ever seen. I only hope the very best in years to come for the many people that I and my family have come to know as friends and in some cases adopted family. The Harbor is something that all involved should continue to fight for. She is that special.”


Stephens Media will actively seek a replacement publisher, who should be announced in the weeks to come.



New addresses for Aberdeen sex offenders


Two sex offenders living in Aberdeen have registered new addresses, the Aberdeen Police Department reported.


Mathew J. Tardiff, 44, a Level 3 offender, has moved from the 2400 block of Aberdeen Avenue to the 400 block of North Park Street. He was convicted of first-degree rape of a child in Grays Harbor County Superior Court in 1991.


Marshal P. Evans, 27, a Level 2 offender, has changed his registration from transient to living in the 400 block of East Heron Street. He was convicted of indecent liberties in Grays Harbor County in 2002.


Law enforcement agencies are authorized under state law to inform the public when a convicted sex offender or kidnapping offender is released from custody or changes addresses. The offenders also are required to register their residence with the Sheriff’s Office in the county where they will be residing.


The police report noted there are more than 19,000 sex or kidnapping offenders currently living in Washington state. Approximately 400 of these are registered to Grays Harbor County addresses. About 150 are registered to addresses within the city limits of Aberdeen.



Hoquiamites have mixed feelings about proposed hospital district


About a year ago, Hoquiam resident Brian Sterling started to feel ill — loss of energy, loss of appetite and abdominal pain. But like so many patients, he waited a while to go to the doctor, hoping that he’d feel better on his own.


But he didn’t, and eventually he sought help.


He visited a local doctor who told him that the problem was serious. Sterling had a perforated colon and was rushed into emergency surgery at Grays Harbor Community Hospital. Sixteen days later, he emerged good as new.


“I wouldn’t have made it to a hospital in Olympia,” Sterling said. “That’s my fault for waiting so long, but I didn’t know. The staff at the hospital saved my life.”


Sterling told his story at a public forum at Hoquiam High School in an effort to convince other Harborites to vote “yes” on a measure that could save Grays Harbor Community Hospital from economic ruin. The measure creating Grays Harbor Public Hospital District No. 2 will appear on the August ballot.


And if it passes, the hospital would begin receiving more Medicaid reimbursement from the state — which could increase yearly revenue by about $2 million, according to Grays Harbor Community Hospital CEO Tom Jensen. About 75 percent of Community Hospital’s patients use some form of government insurance, which doesn’t always reimburse the hospital for the full cost of treatment, Jensen explained.


“Medicare pays for the cost of treatment or a little less,” Jensen said. “Medicaid pays even less.”


But not all of the meeting’s 30 attendees were as convinced as Sterling. Many wondered if Harborites can afford the property tax increase that would come with a new hospital district. Others, such as Quinault resident Keith Olson, wondered whether increased Medicaid reimbursement would actually solve the hospital’s budget woes.


“How do we get out of this mess without over-taxing?” Olson asked. “Is it really possible to get out of this debt?”


Jensen said yes, the increased Medicaid reimbursement would solve the problem. He estimated that if the district were to tax residents at 50 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value and began receiving the extra state assistance, the hospital would begin operating with a 2 to 3 percent profit margin within a couple of years.


Others had different concerns, such as whether the hospital would run differently as a public entity. Jensen said it could — that would be up to the new hospital commissioners, who will be elected on the August ballot. But patients likely wouldn’t have to pay more for their visits, he said.


“The only person that would have to pay us more is the government,” Jensen said.


Sharon Gaston of Hoquiam said she would rather see the hospital continue operating as a private, non-profit entity.


“I just hate to see the government get their fingers in everything and twist it around,” Gaston said. “So I’m saying how I’m voting, I guess.”


Jensen said that if the measure fails, Grays Harbor Community Hospital will cease to exist as it currently does. He estimate that in about a year, reserve funds would be so low that bondholders would force the hospital to restructure and cut programs that don’t turn a profit.


“This community has to have certain services whether they make money or not,” Jensen said.


More Meetings


Members of the public will be able to learn more about the proposed hospital district at the following meetings:


- Today from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Aberdeen High School Commons


- Friday from noon to 1 p.m. at Grays Harbor Community Hospital in conference room C


- Monday, April 28, from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at North Beach High School.


The county commissioners will also conduct formal public hearings on the matter to specifically decide the number of hospital district commissioners that will be on the ballot and the district’s proposed boundaries:


The hearings are at 2 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., Monday, May 5, and 9 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 7. All hearings take place at the County Administration Building in the first floor commission chambers in Montesano.



With surging oil traffic, Northwest at greater risk for spill


SEATTLE — Efforts to transform the Northwest into a fossil-fuel hub for North Dakota’s crude, Alberta’s oil sands and coal from the Rocky Mountains mean the risks of major spills and explosions in and around Washington state are rising and poised to skyrocket.


Millions of gallons of oil are suddenly transiting the region by train. Barges now haul petroleum across the treacherous mouth of the Columbia River and on to Puget Sound. Oil tanker traffic through tricky channels north of Puget Sound may well increase dramatically in coming years.


“People who are paying attention are rightfully nervous about all of this,” said Martha Kongsgaard, chairwoman of the leadership council for the Puget Sound Partnership, the state agency leading cleanup of the Sound. “It’s just scarier than heck. It makes you want to put your hands over your ears.”


The scale and pace of the change can be hard to comprehend.


In the 25 years since the Exxon Valdez dumped 11 million gallons of Alaskan crude, the risk of major oil spills in Prince William Sound has plummeted. Oil tankers are safer and now escorted by tugboats. Oil-laden vessels are closely tracked when traveling through bays near reefs and rocks. And the amount of petroleum hauled south from the Valdez oil port in Alaska is a mere fraction of what it once was.


But while a smaller number of tankers offload crude here from Alaska, the odds of a serious accident in this region just keep going up.


Consider:


—Companies are using new routes to bring in explosive and harder-to-clean-up petroleum by rail — with little of the advanced spill-prevention planning we’ve used for years to protect us from oil in tankers, and little clarity about what precisely is being transported or when.


—A proposed pipeline expansion in Vancouver, B.C., would bring nearly seven times more oil tankers through a narrow strait west of San Juan Island, just as new studies suggest Canada is less prepared for spills than Washington.


—Even plans to export coal through proposed Northwest ports contribute to oil spill risks, new research suggests. Proposed coal terminals would dramatically increase ship traffic in northern Puget Sound, boosting the odds that oil tankers and barges could collide with other vessels.


“These are really significant changes,” said Dale Jensen, with the state Department of Ecology’s spills program. “It requires a huge shift in our thinking.”


Certainly Washington has a strong oil spill record; even critics say the state is among the country’s most prepared for a major accident. Vessel-traffic monitoring and ship navigation have improved here, too, and tankers and most oil barges plying state waters now have protective double hulls.


But if several proposed export and pipeline-expansion projects are approved, so much more ship traffic and fuel would be moving about that the odds of a major spill would be substantially higher than they are today, according to a new study.


The odds of a very big spill in Haro Strait — an area heavily used by killer whales hunting for food — would rise even more dramatically.


“Not since the Alaska pipeline first came online in the 1970s has there been a greater increase in the risk of an oil spill in our waters,” said activist Fred Felleman, with Friends of the Earth, who has tracked tanker safety since before the Exxon Valdez spill.


———


When Exxon’s oil tanker veered off course and hit Bligh Reef 25 years ago last month, it carried 53 million gallons from Alaska’s North Slope.


With no extra hull to contain or slow the spread of oil, black goo gushed into the sea, smothering billions of salmon and herring eggs. It coated and killed a quarter-million seabirds, several thousand otters, hundreds of harbor seals and bald eagles and 22 or more killer whales. It matted 1,300 miles of shoreline.


In the decades since, risks of spills near Valdez declined as the state stepped up vigilance and crude sent through the Trans Alaska Pipeline dropped from 2 million barrels a day to just above 500,000.


“There used to be three or four tankers in Valdez a day,” said Steve Rothchild, spokesman for the Prince William Sound Regional Citizens’ Advisory Council. “Now we get maybe 20 a month.”


Washington state, too, made improvements, and the number of those tankers calling on Puget Sound’s five refineries dropped from 285 in 1992 (the earliest records readily available) to 123 in 2013.


But with planned expansion in production from Canada’s massive oil sands, and the proposed 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline through the American Midwest still in limbo, energy giant Kinder Morgan in December sought permission to expand its pipeline from Alberta to Vancouver.


That would increase the pipeline’s capacity by a third, to 890,000 barrels a day. In turn, that would increase oil tanker traffic from its pipeline in Burnaby, Canada, and out the Strait of Juan de Fuca from about 60 tanker trips a year to more than 400, essentially doubling the total tanker traffic through the Strait.


The presence of that much more oil puts the Strait at a “very high” risk of spills, according to one study by Canadian authorities. Another showed that in six of seven simulated spill-response drills by B.C. officials, more than half the oil during a major spill would have remained in the water five days after a hypothetical accident.


“We haven’t felt that in the past the standards and capability across the border were as strong as they are on the U.S. side,” said Jensen, with the Department of Ecology.


In addition, oil sands petroleum has in previous accidents proved more difficult to clean up than North Slope crude. A former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) chemist has argued that oil from Alberta could sink if left on the surface too long, making cleanup virtually impossible.


“We don’t really know how to clean a spill of that stuff up,” said Kongsgaard, of the Puget Sound Partnership. “You’re not going to hear from the cleanup people that we really understand how it behaves at all.”


Frank Holmes, with the Western States Petroleum Association, acknowledged that more traffic could add more risk. But he said the companies, the state and federal agencies on both sides of the border are coordinating right now to make sure spill responders would be thoroughly prepared before any pipeline expansion is completed.


He also pointed out that Canadian bitumen, some of which is piped currently to Puget Sound refineries, is often mixed with other petroleum products here, making it less likely to sink.


And Kinder Morgan has recommended “additional risk-reducing measures in its facilities application, including increasing the use of escort tugs to cover the entire tanker route and the implementation of moving exclusion zones to safeguard tankers from other traffic,” Bikramjit Kanjilal, who oversees the marine development side of the company’s expansion proposal, said in a statement.


But the fact that Haro Strait and Boundary Pass just to the northeast are the most likely place for any serious accident poses a special kind of concern for many officials.


The region’s endangered killer whales concentrate in those areas, and “we’ve seen that they don’t move around to avoid spilled oil,” said Brad Hanson, a marine mammal expert with NOAA.


———


Meanwhile, a dramatic increase in shipping by rail is boosting spill risks — and presenting more safety hazards as well.


As new technology made it easier to tap North Dakota’s buried light-shale oil, energy companies eager to reach markets began loading it on trains. About 17 million gallons of this petroleum already works its way by rail to refineries in Anacortes, Ferndale in Whatcom County, and Clatskanie, Ore., near the mouth of the Columbia. That number is expected to more than triple by the end of 2014 — and that doesn’t take into account projects yet to be approved.


HOQUIAM


The city of Hoquiam and the Department of Ecology approved two more oil train projects in Grays Harbor County. While the Shoreline Hearings Board revoked both approvals last fall, arguing the state’s review was too insubstantial, more rigorous reviews are now in the works and a third company there also is expected to seek oil train permits.


Meanwhile, the state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council is considering another proposal along the Columbia in Vancouver, Wash., for a 360,000-barrel-per-day crude-by-rail project, and at least one more oil train facility is proposed to deliver to a Puget Sound refinery.


“It’s a big-deal change,” said Guy Caruso, an energy adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C., and a former head of the federal Energy Information Agency. “When I left government in 2008, North Dakota was producing 150,000 barrels a day. Now it’s almost 1 million.”


In that time, the amount of oil moved by rail nationwide has jumped from less than 10,000 train carloads a year in 2008 to a projected 400,000 carloads last year.


And this lighter fuel is so much more combustible than others that the growth has sparked significant accidents and close calls.


Last summer, an unattended oil train in Quebec rolled free and derailed, sparking fires that killed 47 people. Another oil train spilled 21 carloads of oil in fragile wetlands in Alabama, sparking fires. Another oil train exploded in North Dakota in December.


“I think we’re taking bombs through our cities,” Ben Stuckert, the Spokane City Council president, told another legislative panel in Olympia after expressing his worry about elevated tracks bringing dangerous oil trains through his community.


Similar trains already transit populated areas of Seattle susceptible to landslides and earthquakes.


Tesoro, which has trains coming to its Anacortes refineries and wants to build the proposed facility in Vancouver, said last month that it would replace its outdated oil cars with newer, safer models this year.


Still, accidents just since January have prompted congressional hearings, emergency-safety orders from the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, and a call by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) for tougher standards and an overhaul of rules governing oil train design.


For the moment, officials concede the change has come so fast that they and the industry remain ill-equipped to deal with some types of oil train-related accidents or spills.


“The safety regime did not prepare in advance, nor have they responded quickly enough to address the risks,” NTSB chair Deborah Hersman told a U.S. Senate panel last week.


The state often has not evaluated spill risks where oil trains are traveling. While Puget Sound has been a focus for decades, the state has not conducted years of spill drills in areas around Grays Harbor and near the churning waters of the Columbia River’s mouth, where oil barges only recently started ferrying oil.


“We’re looking at changing risks to the environment and to communities and first-responders,” said David Byers, with Ecology, told legislators last fall.


Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx told members of Congress that the oil industry has been slow to cooperate with his agency’s attempts to better understand how explosive the fuel is. And he and Hersman agreed the rail industry isn’t required to have nearly the rigorous spill training and spill-response preparedness expected of oil tankers and pipelines.


“It makes absolutely no sense that we don’t have a similar expectation when we have, in essence, a moving pipeline,” Hersman said.


———


Certainly, many applaud the arrival of these new North American oil resources.


“This is a really good thing — it’s true energy independence,” said state Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, who authored one of several failed state legislative bills this year to tackle oil spill issues. “We’re creating some unique safety challenges with the new modes of transportation, but I think it’s (the overall change in the energy picture) great.”


Oil industry officials say government and industry are moving to adjust to the challenges.


“The re-emphasis on more crude oil has definitely raised some concerns, and we need to take care of those,” said Holmes, with the Western States Petroleum group. “But I think there’s a lot of effort, not only on our part but across the nation, to address those concerns.”


Others object to the transition, in part because this fossil fuel explosion could help boost climate-changing carbon dioxide emissions.


“It’s a legitimate concern,” said Caruso, the energy adviser. “These developments — the resurgence of U.S. and Canadian oil and gas — clearly are pushing the fossil fuel era out decades longer. There’s no question.”


Environmental activists in the U.S. have joined with tribal leaders and Canadian First Nation’s groups to try and halt the spread of fossil fuel projects in the Northwest, though some analysts think the tide is too strong to be stopped.


Few dispute that the change comes with risks. The Port of Portland this month announced it would not consider any oil-by-rail proposals until more is known about spill and accident safety. The Seattle City Council asked for a moratorium on new oil-by-rail projects and urged rail companies to restrict oil train traffic in highly populated areas.


And lawmakers of both parties this year attempted to pass competing bills giving the state a better handle on marine and rail oil-spill risks.


The efforts collapsed over partisan differences about precisely how much information energy companies should have to disclose about operations.


For now, a task force of state and federal emergency managers is trying to evaluate and prepare for the risks.


“We’ve got to get a handle on this,” Kongsgaard said. “What we need to ask is, ‘What’s good for Washington?’ “


———


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