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I came home, yesterday, around noonish. I live on the waterfront of
the Ashley River in Charleston, SC, about 9.5 miles up from the harbor. The Ashley River, combined with the Cooper River, join together in downtown Charleston to form the Atlantic Ocean. I noticed a strong smell of diesel fuel in the air, so proceeded to check out my diesel cars and truck for a leak. I found nothing. A neighbor came over to see what I was doing and said he knew where the smell was coming from, the river. I went down to the waterfront to find a fairly big oil slick covered the water out front. I called 911 to report it, expecting a hazmat response team to find the leak and stop it from polluting the river. I was wrong, not for reporting it, but for expecting some government bureaucrats to DO something to stop it. The 911 operator triggered a fire truck pumper from our local city fire station with three firemen whos lunch was interrupted. Two of them were all dressed up to fight a fire, so was the truck. They agreed there was an oil spill in the water and told their dispatcher so. They called the Coast Guard and SC Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC). Our fire department has no boat or, it seems, hazmat team equipped for oil spills. They seemed very reluctant to trespass on anyone's property for fear of the lawyers, so the local chief arrived. One neighbor has a fuel oil tank on a small hill overlooking the river, but that seemed secure when the chief walked over to take a look. A neighbor, hearing the fire truck ruckus, walked out on his dock and also noticed the oil so got in his boat to ride around an look upriver as the tide was going out. He offered the firemen a ride with him, but they declined as they are not allowed to ride with mere mortals in private boats, again for fear of being sued, I suppose. I expected the Coast Guard to send a hazmat team in one of their fast motor lifeboats or rib boats to be haulin' ass upriver. This was another hope dashed, when two sailors, a politically-correct team of one male and one asian female, arrived by car from downtown. These were the investigators for the legal team, whos job it is to place blame and see how big a fine they can impose on any violators dumping oil into the waterways. They didn't have any hazmat materials to stop the oil leak if we found it, only a little plastic sieve in a plastic ring and a plastic oil collection bottle to gather evidence to use at the poor *******s trial before sentencing. It's now over an hour since my report. Noone, on scene, is capable of stopping an oil leak or soaking up oil leaking from even a canoe, much less an oil tanker. Not a single oil soaking pad has been exposed to the hazard. A DHEC guy arrived who talked to the sailors and firemen. A decision was made that the sailors were going to handle the investigation to get the others off the hook. Hands were shaken and the State of South Carolina's DHEC left without getting his hands oily. The male sailor took a water sample and sealed the jar while the female sailor took pictures on her top-of-the-line Sony Mavica SLR still camera to show her boss the sailor got his shoes muddy taking the sample. His shoes were the only oil casualty, other than the river and its inhabitants, in this sordid affair. Downriver from here, there is only one diesel-powered boat within 5 miles of waterfront. It's an aging sport fisherman, that has been perched over the river on its electric lift for as long as any of us can remember. Its owner has long since abandoned deep sea fishing, or even cruising it up and down the river, because he's quite old and goes out of state a lot, leaving the once-nice boat to sit and rot in the hot SC sunshine, abandoned. The male sailor knows the boat. He has investigated other complaints of oil leakage from it many months past from other neighbors on the downriver side of it. He said CG had inspected its overboard discharge ports and found diesel fuel leaking out of it, long ago. The owner's son was notified because the owner was out-of-town making another million, I suppose, and the son and a mechanic were supposed to "take a look" for oil leaks in the fiberglass hull's interior. Of course, it seems no follow-up inspection was done to insure the problem was actually found and corrected.....only that all the required paperwork and reports were neatly typed without errors and filed away with the millions of other reports in some haze grey cabinets for future court actions. The on-scene sailors, Second Class Petty Officers, USCG, were going to go look, again, at the boat to see if that was the source of the oil slick. Noone was in a hurry to stop it. The North Charleston Fire Chief, alerted to the ruckus on the waterfront, showed up to confer with the on-scene local chief to make sure the department was following the book. Firemen who had turned the truck around to go finish lunch decided to back the truck back down our dead-end street for the Chief. Lunch was gonna be later then planned. Some firemen started in on the now-cold greasy fried chicken. I hoped none of it got into the river to make the oil slick bigger. The "chief's conference" was short as government-sponsored conferences go and both chief's determined they were off the hook for any cleanup, leaving all responsibilities to the politically-correct sailors to handle. The firemen all left as they had come, ready to fight that dumpster fire at a moment's notice. God bless 'em. We should buy 'em a boat and show 'em how to use it....maybe some oil pads and a little pump or at least some plastic sheets. The party broke up soon after the sailors headed over towards Lamb's Road to look at the diesel boat.....No hurry. They didn't have the equipment to stop the boat from leaking, anyway, in their nice car. You'd have to have a BOAT to go under the boat on the lift to put some plastic under it to catch any diesel oil leaking out of it. Well, Duhhhh...... I suppose, by now, the son has been notified, the reports are being neatly typed by the hazmat typing team and all is well, again, on the Ashley River.....still coated with diesel fuel. The tide'll have to take care of the cleanup. If you live downriver, keep a sharp eye out and jack up the boat on your lift another foot. Thanks. |
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