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Larry W4CSC wrote:
I would have thought the proper response to the leaking boat the FIRST time it was discovered to pollute the river, several times ago, would have been to simply put a big sheet of plastic UNDER the boat suspended on its lift that would catch any oil dripping or drizzling from it and order the owner to get a mechanic to fix it. Kind of tough with a 130 foot crabber. Silly me. I thought someone cared about the environment. It does seem to be a variable ethic. I have seen the oil spill nazis go berserk at the Valdez oil terminal when, literally, a single drop of hydraulic oil from an assist tug created a tiny circle of sheen on mirror calm water alongside the dock. At the same time the water at the city dock across the way was literally rainbowed with bilge oil and runoff from hydraulic leaks on the recreational and fishing boats. Not a soul was bothered by the sheen on the water in that area. I am not a tree hugging anti oil, anti boating, luddite environmentalist by any means but I would like to see some balance in how the pollution nazis respond. On ships we are getting gray hair worrying about losing our licenses or getting jailed over putting a half ounce in the water due to an accident or mechanical failure while thousands of little one-gallon spills that are not newsworthy enough to attract politicians and ecofascists are simply ignored as were the spills you and I described. Part of the problem is the insane position taken by the enforcers. They say "spill a drop and die - fail to report a spill and rot in jail - report a spill and lose your job or go bankrupt - all the while they will not provide places to easily dispose of oil waste, do not respond to small spills at all, or when they do show up, automatically assume a cop/criminal relationship no matter what the circumstance of the spill. It has made for an adversarial relationship between those who might however innocently put oil in the water and those in a position to quickly and economically remove that oil. People are afraid to call for help for fear of financial disaster ... who wants to lose their house or be fined tens of thousands of dollars for a single stupid mistake? No one does and that translates into thousands of small spills that go unreported and untreated. I believe those spills are cumulatively more dangerous and do more damage to the environment than most of the spills that are large enough to attract news cameras and politicians. Rick |
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