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Larry W4CSC wrote:
I noticed a strong smell of diesel fuel in the air, Deja vu all over again! A version of the same thing has happened at my marina three times in the past year. I say a version because the organizations that consume my taxes for their own amusement were even less interested than your local defenders. The crew of a nearby fishing boat (a Bering Sea crabber) were shifting gear on deck and blew out a hydraulic line. It dumped around 20 gallons of oil over the side through a scupper before they shut down the system. They saw the oil on the water, and hydraulic oil on water is a real mess, worse than diesel in my opinion, and what did they do? They simply hauled ass, left the boat and the dock and never looked back! This was in broad daylight! Tried to call the Coast Guard spill response number and got routed instead to some "Fatherland Sekurity" hotline ... I don't want the Gestapo, I wanted a spill response team to spend some of my tax money and clean the stuff up. Called the water cops, they directed me from one number to another until I was disconnected. Screw it. The same thing, another crabber with a broken hydraulic line, someone else managed to get the teenage Coasties to show up and even showed them the slick on the side of the crabber but that wasn't enough evidence for the defenders to board the thing and get samples of the "suspected' source. Nothing happened, no cleanup, no followup. Last week I came home to the smell of fresh diesel permeating the marina. Pools of red diesel were backed up against the opposite side of the dock and a sheen was all around my boat. This was an exact repeat of an event the week before which I did nothing about but this time I was annoyed that it occurred again and decided to report it (after making sure it wasn't from MY boat.) I didn't even bother to call the federal Gestapo, I called the water cops and surprisingly enough they said they would notify the Coast Guard and then transferred me to the fire department for some reason. The fire department asked a few relevant questions and then said they would be down to look at it. A few minutes later a fire truck showed up with the guys in turnout gear and three of them came on the dock and looked around. They asked a few questions and made small talk about boats and boating. They said there was nothing they could do (no kidding) but that the Coast Guard had been notified and would probably be down soon. They were very cheerful, made their farewells and then drove away. The Coasties never showed up or called. The diesel finally drifted down toward the locks and the Sound and so far as I know no one was the least bit inconvenienced but the fish and clams. This spill was either an overfueling or someone has a bilge full of diesel and it gets pumped over automatically every week or so. I guess despite all the dire threats and enormous public funding of enforcement agencies and cleanup contractors none of the alphabet agencies really want to go as far as the Carolina Coasty and get their shoes dirty and find the source. Makes it kind of hard to take any of them seriously doesn't it? Rick |
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