Showing posts with label Oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oil. Show all posts

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Power Run Oil Company in Torrance Has a Dismal History of Compliance, Noise & Oil Spill

Map of Power Run Oil Company Wells in Torrance
Slide Presentation from Neighbors Appealing to City Council to Enforce Rules


These wells are still active less than 1 mile from Hermosa Beach and just another example of why you don't want an oil company as your neighbor.  Keep in mind these wells have been in operation since 1978 so the people moving here chose to live near these areas.  

Power Run Oil had a spill in 2002 that took 3 years to mitigate the odor.  See the full presentation from the Torrance, Granicus.  I find it also interesting that if you look on Zillow the homes near the oil sites worth 20% less than others in the neighborhood.  How much is the City of Torrance and the schools benefiting from this oil operation?  


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Hermosa Beach Oil Drilling Hazardous Chemical Warning Signs

E&B Oil Drilling Must Post These Warning Signs



Michael Collins of Hermosa Beach requests details on what signs E&B Natural Resources will be posting near the oil drilling site.

Michael Collins following up on his request 2 weeks prior.
When will we get information on oil drilling warning signs?

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

How Much Oil Money Might Hermosa Beach Get From Oil Drilling?

Is It Worth Risking Our Health & Safety for $500?

Sunday, February 24, 2013

George Schmeltzer Easy Reader Letter: "Its Not Hermosa's Oil"

Daily Breeze front page, December 4, 1957. Easy Reader archives, scrapbook


Twenty years ago the issue of oil drilling in Hermosa Beach was put to bed by a vote of the people, or so we thought. Now, it’s back with a vengeance and the residents of this “best little beach city” must do battle once again with a very well-funded and determined oil company.
When I heard about the settlement agreement between E&B and the city my first thought was to weigh its possible financial benefits against the known risks and blight of oil drilling.
After several meetings with E&B’s president, I learned that calculating oil revenues is much, much more difficult than I had supposed. “Where’s the money?” is simple to ask. The answer is anything but. The promise of “several hundreds of millions” much trumpeted in recent E&B ads and letters to the editor is pure speculation.
In a settlement agreement some characterize as “a $30 million dollar loan with the health, safety, and property values of Hermosa’s residents used as collateral,” the City Council decided to give, without bid or review, to a small, independent oil drilling company, the exclusive right to stuff 35 wells, permanent storage tanks, oil production facilities, toxic and highly flammable chemicals, and a large trucking operation right smack down in the middle of the 20,000 residents who make up California’s most densely populated coastal city, and the 11th most densely populated city in the state. Fortunately, they must first obtain the voters’ permission.
“Let’s leave it up to the voters” is a phrase we will hear a lot in the coming months, as if the city and E&B decided that was a good thing to do. They didn’t. Oil drilling in Hermosa Beach is banned. They cannot proceed without a vote to lift the ban.
How can we expect an informed vote when it’s impossible to provide an answer to “where’s the money?” The money presumably being the only benefit the people of Hermosa Beach could ever hope for.
The three most important variables in calculating oil revenues are price, quantity, and location (on-shore of off-shore).
You can go to the newspaper to determine the price of oil, although what you’ll read today is that “crude and gasoline prices will drop through 2014, EIA projects,” (Energy Information Administration.) Quantity and location are a lot harder to get a handle on. If you’re an oil company that means your company takes a risk, but if you’re a small beach side community that means the people take the risk.
Macpherson estimated that anywhere from two million to nine million barrels of oil were available, all of it off-shore. This estimate was made by consultants hired by Macpherson to press his claim that the city owed him $400 million in lost revenues. The more recoverable oil the more money Macpherson could seek. Keep in mind that the City always thought Macpherson’s estimates were inflated, which is supported by his decision to settle.  If he really thought he could have made $400 million, why would he settle for $17 million?
Along comes E&B with studies not available to the public claiming estimates of anywhere from six million to 43 million barrels of oil, according to E&B. Two of the studies were conducted by Entera for Shell Oil, and there are other studies. Not only do these estimates disagree with Macpherson’s by a factor of five, they don’t even agree with each other. It’s unlikely that dueling estimates will be cleared up in the coming year. Why? Because it’s in oil’s interest to keep the higher numbers out there and because until five wells are drilled no one will know how much oil there is, if any. But they don’t want the voter to know that. They want permission to drill. Then they can spend the next five years trying to find oil.
The studies don’t even agree on where the oil is. That’s important because Macpherson’s estimate say there’s no oil on-shore. Revenues received by the city from on-shore oil can go into the city’s general fund to meet the everyday expenses of running a city. Revenue from oil recovered off-shore is governed by the Tide Lands Trust, which lays out a very limited number of uses for the money because the oil itself is held in trust for all of the people of California. In other words, it isn’t Hermosa’s oil.
Some of the revenues from off-shore or tide lands oil may be used for things like harbors, fisheries, lighthouses, and piers. But, as far as I know, Hermosa has no plans to build a harbor, a fishery, or a lighthouse, and you can only rebuild the pier so many times every century. We cannot use this off-shore oil money to mend streets, pay police and fire personnel, or spruce up city hall, nor can it be used to help our schools.
The City Council tells us that the settlement agreement “puts the Macpherson matter behind us,” which sounds harmless enough. But the same elected officials weren’t nearly so blasé in their city-wide “Dear Neighbor” letter of September 7, 2010. They wrote about “30 oil wells” and “permanent storage tanks and production facilities” at 6th and Valley Drive “next to the Greenbelt, homes and businesses.” Back then, the City Council warned us about the risks of oil drilling. They concluded, there was a risk of “31 leaks, 2 major releases and 1 rupture over the 35-year life of the project,” and “risk of a methane gas cloud that could cause an explosion.” An they pointed out that “disastrous oil spill[s] . . . can and do happen.” They go on to say that “oil and gas operations in other urban areas have harmed people and property, and other California cities are now taking action to halt further drilling.” In 2010 this City Council wanted to “protect the residents and visitors from a potential disaster [which] was supported by substantial evidence.” Oil drilling, they declared, was “. . . too dangerous to proceed.”
Nothing about this project has changed since the City Council wrote that letter in 2010, but today the council has adopted a veneer of complacent neutrality.
When the subject of oil drilling comes up we’re urged to wait until the EIR is complete, wait until the data is in. But this doesn’t stop the council and E&B from advancing their arguments.
When it comes to costs ask yourself the following:
Who is calculating the cost of real estate transactions already being canceled or postponed because of oil?
Who is calculating the cost of sleepless nights wondering and worrying about the effects of oil on yours and your children’s health in what is supposed to be the “best little beach community?”
Who is calculating the cost of new and refinanced real estate loans denied because of the “environmental threats” to the area?
Who is calculating the environmental cost of hundreds of oil tanker truck trips?
Who is calculating the cost of visual blight? The drilling rig will be 80-feet high, visible from half of Hermosa residences.
Who is calculating the loss of peaceable enjoyment of property when vibrations impact the surrounding area 24 hours a day, seven days a week?
Who is calculating the ‘slippery slope” on the entire SouthBay of a drilling project going forward in Hermosa?
Who is calculating the multiplier effect of a new AES plant joining 30 oil wells to spew tons of pollutants into the atmosphere every year?
If you don’t have the time to study the thousands of pages of data that will be generated by the EIR process just remind yourself of the following: it doesn’t take a PhD, a degree in environmental studies, or a costly report to know that with oil drilling:
Air quality will not improve.
Noise will not decrease.
Particulate matter in the air we breathe, so damaging to our lungs, will not decrease.
Noxious fumes spewed into the air by increased traffic will not decrease.
Dangerous pollutants seeping into the air from stationary equipment, chemicals, etc. will not decrease.
Risk of a seismic event triggered by drilling will not lessen.
Risk of oil spills both great and small in the ocean and on the land will not lessen.
Threats to the health of our children and seniors will not diminish.
Risk of catastrophic fire and explosions will not decrease.
Risks of terrorist attacks will not decrease.
Need for increased police and fire protection will not decrease.
A City Council that cannot enforce the simple provisions of single page-long conditional use permits (CUPs) on bars and restaurants will suddenly be required to enforce a book-length set of complicated regulations on an industry that has shown itself capable of fighting the federal government to a standstill.
It is unrealistic to suppose that a small beach community’s City Council has the expertise to enforce a CUP covering hours of operation, truck routes, safety provisions, health protection, toxic chemical storage, fire control, security, noise levels, etc. on an organization having greater financial clout than the City itself, along with a boatload of attorneys well-trained in the art of evading the very provisions that public safety demands and requires.
If recent history is any indication the City is plainly not up to the task. A City Council that cannot get bar owners to honor their health and safety commitments cannot be relied on to enforce the far more serious regulations imposed on a large oil drilling, production tank farm, and trucking operation.
Let’s also recognize that E&B is “drilling for oil.” All of the fine words, all of the mitigation in the world by E&B will not produce a cleaner, safer environment than we have today. In this case “doing nothing” is the best alternative. E&B is not “recovering petroleum,” or “providing an energy mix,” or whatever the latest green-sounding euphemism is. They’re drilling for oil, one of the globe’s most dangerous, dirty, and risky industrial processes. The next thing you know E&B will be joining the Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council, and Heal the Bay, just before introducing a picture of mating sea turtles into their corporate logo.
If your readers have any questions I can be reached at g.j.schmeltzer@att.net
Thanks for the opportunity to address this very important topic.
George Schmeltzer is a former Hermosa Beach mayor and city councilman and retired Information Technology executive. g.j.schmeltzer@att.net

Friday, January 25, 2013

Kit Bobko Admits "Taking Heat" Over Oil Settlement



Kit Bobko and Michael Divirgilio finally admitted to the public they are "taking heat" for the settlement that THEY put together themselves without a public forum. A back room deal, without conflicts of interest disclosed and only 1 oil company participated in this process. Watch Kit admit his guilt here.  Why are they acting like victims?  The lack of insincerity is appalling.     

If you want the details of why they are taking heat read why the oil settlement is not legal.  

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Capped Oil Wells Beneath Homes & Ocean Can Blowout

Capped Oil Wells That Could Blowout in Redondo Beach & Hermosa Beach
Capped oil wells are a real danger in the South Bay.  Pat Aust the Redondo Beach City Councilman and former firefighter knows first hand of the dangers.  Hermosa Beach has a handful of capped wells and some are out in the Ocean as you can see.  However, Redondo Beach has hundreds of them underneath homes and Manhattan Beach has plugged oil wells at Mira Costa High School.  Here is an explanation to help you understand the potential threat to our community if slant hydraulic pressurized oil drilling is permitted underground.

Oil drilling blowout preventers (BOPs) can be used on the drilling site itself on the surface to mitigate risk.  However, blowout preventers CANNOT be used on capped wells or adjacent wells underground & in the Ocean.   If an adjacent capped oil well were to blow on the ocean seabed it would cause a massive oil spill and mess on up and down the coast.  The ocena seabed well could be capped but would required significant emergency effort (like the BP Spill in the Gulf) and would change the integrity of life in the South Bay as we know it.  If an adjacent capped oil were to blow underground beneath homes.  Lives and homes could be lost because an explosion is highly likely.  Residents in Hermosa Beach and Redondo Beach who own homes over a capped underground well would never know about the problem until it is too late.  Do we really want to trust the that the integrity of the well was capped properly 30 or 40 years ago?

Crude oil is a flammable liquid consisting of a complex mixture of hydrocarbons of various molecular weights that are found in geologic formations beneath the Earth's surface. Because hydrocarbons and gas are lighter than rock or water, they often migrate upward through adjacent rock layers until either reaching the surface or becoming trapped within porous rocks (known as reservoirs) by impermeable rocks above. However, the process is influenced by underground water flows, causing oil to migrate hundreds of kilometres horizontally or even short distances downward before becoming trapped in a reservoir. When hydrocarbons are concentrated in a trap, an oil field forms, from which the liquid can be extracted by drilling and pumping at high pressure. The down hole pressures experienced at the rock structures change depending upon the depth and the characteristic of the source rock.  The deeper the well the more risky the operation.  E&B is proposing deep wells.

Blowouts happen all the time and are daily occurrence in the oil industry.  Don't convince yourself it can't happen here because Steve Layton knows too well from his Blowout in Louisiana which bankrupted Equinox Oil.

Here is another conclusion that supports this argument from the Coastal Commission.



Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Oil & Gas Drilling Time Lapse Video

Does Oil & Gas Drilling Belong In Hermosa Beach, California?

<a href="https://www.sodahead.com/united-states/does-oil-drilling-belong-in-hermosa-beach-california/question-3460643/" title="Does Oil Drilling Belong in Hermosa Beach, California">Does Oil Drilling Belong in Hermosa Beach, California</a>

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Hermosa Beach Oil Settlement Agreement is Not Legal


Why has no one on the City Council read the Macpherson mock jury trial documents or transcript?  The threat of bankruptcy was the basis for was for a $17.5M settlement and extortion vote and no one has read the documents?

Before you read this you should review the contract agreement commentsIn a properly negotiated & compromised settlement agreement, "neither party should be happy"with the outcome.  In this settlement agreement Hermosa Beach tax paying residents lost while the lawyers, City Council and oil won regardless of the outcome of the vote.  Here are some very important questions for our proud elected officials: Council Member Patrick (Kit) Bobko, Hermosa Beach City Attorney Michael Jenkins and Michael Divirgilio.

Drilling Down Article 
1)  If there was such a real likelihood that Macpherson Oil would win a court award for HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOLLARS ($750 million,), then why did Macpherson Oil settle for a mere $30 Million or 4% of his asking price  Did Macpherson believe that, even if they won the jury trial, they would likely receive substantially less than $30M, or probably even NOTHING (see below)?  

2)  Was the 1995 “STOP OIL” ELECTION FLAWED because the “City Attorney (Jenkins) Impartial Analysisin the election pamphlet failed to advise/warn voters of the real possibility of a Breach of Contract lawsuit to recover POTENTIAL LOST PROFITS? Were Hermosa Beach voters properly informed about the potential consequences, including tremendous financial liability, of the Proposition E vote in 1995? What law firm was providing City Attorney services to Hermosa Beach during this decade/period of time? Weren’t Bobko and Jenkins both employees of this same law firm - Bobko's current employer RWG Municipal Law Firm (of which he is now a Partner)?

3) Until 2001, Hermosa Beach City Attorney services were being provided by (Bobko’s & Jenkin’s) RWG Municipal Law Firm, represented by RWG Employee Michael Jenkins. From 2001 and onward, Michael Jenkins law firm began providing City attorney services to the City, including providing oversight services on the law firms defending the City from the MacPhersson lawsuit.  After the MacPherson lawsuit was filed, why didn’t RWG admit there had been and omission/error, and advise the City to hold a new election? (The 1995 measure passed by a mere 565 votes). Why didn’t Jenkins (after he/his law firm began providing City Attorney services to Hermosa)? Why didn’t Bobko (after being elected to the City Council)? 

4)  Could damages even be awarded to MacPherson by a jury (under directions provided by the presiding judge) due to failure of Macpherson Oil to make reasonable efforts to “mitigate damages” over the past 15+ years, as required under California law, by insisting on a new vote with a new proper City Attorney Impartial Analysis?  Did Macpherson sue because he could NEVER meet the TERMS & CONDITIONS of the LEASE imposed by the Coastal & State Lands Commission?  Did Hermosa Beach trial lawyers including Michael Jenkins purposely ignore evidence that could have won or minimized damages?  

5) Because of Bobko's associations with RWG Municipal Law Firm and Michael Jenkins, did Councilmen Bobko have a “CONFLICT OF INTEREST” in negotiating and voting on the settlement agreement? Shouldn’t Bobko have RECUSED himself, as required under California law from all such activities.  Has Bobko violated the Brown Act?  

6)  Are these the reasons the Settlement Agreement was negotiated by Bobko in secret, and voted upon behind closed doors without public participation? Was Bobko just protecting the reputation of this law firm, and his friend Jenkins, to the detriment of the City? Why was the settlement agreement not discussed in public BEFORE City Officials signed the contract with a new 3rd party E&B before the scheduled jury trial in April of 2012? Don't neighbors heavily impacted deserve "a say" in that their property and lives could be heavily impacted? - That seems to be normal business practice with Tattoo parlors or new bars, etc

7) Is this the reason that this behind the closed doors settlement includes a requirement that the 1995 "Stop Oil  election be held again"?  By wiping out all City reserve funds if not passed. Are there also other implications with regard to attorney "errors and omissions"insurance and possible reimbursement to the City for its approximately $4M in legal defense costs?

Monday, November 5, 2012

Carpinteria Oil Drilling Initiative Defeated


A Carpinteria Oil Drilling Initiative was on the June 8, 2010 ballot in the City of Carpinteria in Santa Barbara County, where it was defeated. The primary effect of Measure J would have been to approve a slant oil and gas drilling project proposed by Venoco Inc. along Carpinteria’s coastline.  Real estate values were projected to decrease 10-15%.  Please read the Carpenteria Environmental Impact Report (EIR) which reveals some scary facts. 

Posing as a so-called "people's" initiative, Measure J was an attempt by Venoco to bypass local city government review and oversight. As the only donor to the pro side of the ballot measure, Venoco spent well over $600,000 – compared to $80,000 spent by Citizens CAP (Committee Against Paredon Initiative) that was raised from hundreds of individuals – trying to convince the voters of our small town as to the benefits and safety of their proposed massive oil drilling Paredon Project and why Venoco should be allowed to bypass all the local rules and regulations everybody else in Carpinteria needs to follow. Read more details here.

MEASURE J: Shall the General Plan/Local Coastal Land Use Plan of the City of Carpinteria be amended and a Specific Plan adopted to authorize development of the Paredon Project, a private development project to explore, develop, produce and gather offshore and onshore oil and natural gas resources and transmit them to the Carpinteria Oil and Gas Processing Facility operated by Venoco, Inc.?

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Redondo Beach Considers Oil Drilling To Protect Reserves

Former Tritton Oil Drilling Site (Dirt Lot) Harbor Dr & Portofino Way in Redondo Beach
Former Oil Drilling Site 190th and Prospect in Redondo Beach

The Redondo Beach City Council took a the first step toward exploring oil drilling within city limits to boost city revenues on Tuesday. Read the RB Patch Article.

In a referral to staff, Councilman Steve Diels, who represents District No. 4 in North Redondo Beach, asked City Manager Bill Workman if city staff could examine whether Redondo Beach could tap into the "hundreds of millions of dollars" sitting beneath the city.

Additionally, Diels asked if city staff could look into the effects of possible oil drilling in Hermosa Beach on Redondo's reserves. Both cities sit on top of the Torrance Oil Field.

The councilman noted that money from potential projects could be used for various capital projects, and even implied that revenues from oil drilling could be used to pay for a park at the AES Powerplant site on Harbor Drive.

Bill Brand, who represents District No. 2. "In general, though, I don't support that kind of industrial activity going on in our town."

If the city does eventually decide to allow oil drilling, it would not be the first time oil wells were dug in Redondo Beach. According to the Redondo Beach Historical Society, wells dotted the city during the 1920s.

Lets not forget Tritton Oil & Gas Corporation abandoned the site in 1990 at 101 Portofino Way, Redondo Beach 90277.

Related Articles: 
Pat Aust recalls oil fire in Redondo Beach.
Tritton Oil & Gas Corporation oil well abandonment in 1990 
Hermosa pursuing legal action against Oil Operator Roy Stinnett in 1991 (LA Times)
Map of regional oil wells in the South Bay.
Is the AES Redondo Beach Powerplant Related to Hermosa Beach Oil Drilling

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Hermosa Beach Neighborhood Watch Newsletter

JUNE NEWSLETTER FROM NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH

Are SOME Hermosa Beach City Council members trying to lull our community members into a false sense of security? Current objectives to reduce the salaries and benefits of our current and future Police and Fire personnel might change the course of our public safety forever!

HBPD

Hermosa Beach Neighborhood Watch (HBNW) has expanded the advancement in public safety. We have made a difference in community awareness by partnering with the HB Police and Fire Departments. The information that is delivered through email to our citywide-connected, interested residents has proven success in the past six years. People are more aware of their surroundings and take part in crime prevention of their home and auto because they have access to daily crime logs. HBNW has worked closely with the Fire Department to bring disaster preparedness to the forefront of our lives. Through this association we have shared knowledge of the daily happenings on calls for service. This snapshot view makes visible to the public that the majority of calls are for medical emergencies and mutual aid to our neighboring cities.

We all have common aspirations when it comes to our safety. To HBNW coordinators, it is to maintain the growing beach community while keeping our sense of public safety top notch. We all want an environment to enjoy, relax in and be responsive to changing times.

The City and local economy is recovering from the recession that began in 2008. Revenues are up, a new business license fee was instituted and the City has settled the long on-going lawsuit with the oil company. The future is bright for the City. So why then, is the City Council intent on additional cuts and layoffs? Its arrogance and politics!
  • They will say we have to pay the Oil Company; that bill doesn't come due for several years as it must await the outcome of the city-wide vote to approve oil drilling. We could also enter into a payment plan. What they don't say, is the million dollar a year payments to the attorney representing the City can now be saved to make the payment to the oil company (if necessary).
  • They will say the retirement system is costing too much; costs of retirement for existing employees are rising, yet this is like a mortgage payment, we can't pay the whole amount, but the City can afford the payments. It is a tough concept for those on council who don't have a mortgage to understand this. They moved here for the sole purpose of becoming a politician in a small town with hopes it will lead to another political opportunity. These are the very same council members who want to tear down this once well run City. They also won't tell you that a few years before the recession the retirement system was "super-funded" and the City was not required to make payments. Did they run out and give employees raises? Nope, they spent the money on other things. Now that the payments are due, they want the employees to pay.
  • They will say the cost of employee benefits are skyrocketing; True for some, but not for new employees because the tiered system. What they want to do is chase away (by threatening huge pay cuts, some as high as 30 percent) good long-standing, solid employees who are dedicated to providing service to the City. This will become a transitional City, where some will come for the experience and then move on to greener pastures when they discover how other Cities are working to support their employees, not cut them off at the knees. What they won't tell you is the employees of this City have not sought raises in five years in in an effort to help the City to balance the budget, oh and by the way, the City has had a balanced budget every year and revenues never went below the level in 2008. Money is tight, but there is no fiscal crisis, however, there is a crisis of leadership on the council.
  • They will say there is too much "unfunded liability" due to employee pensions, medical benefits; They won't tell you that these costs were agreed upon by this City Council and previous Councils who negotiated in good faith when deciding how the benefits should be paid. They won't tell you the employee share, currently being paid by the City, was in lieu of raises to the employees and was a financial advantage to the City to pay the employee share, and still is. Oh and again they won't tell you that each of the employee union agreed during the negotiations process to the 'tiering' of the benefits, again in an effort to help the City. Now they want to take it away from the existing.
  • Your Police Department was recently awarded accreditation from a national organization that audit and reviews the work done. This was because of the leadership of Chief Savelli, yet it was the officers and other employees of the department that made it happen. To thank them for becoming a leader in law enforcement, they want the employees to suffer more cuts. They won't tell you that because of the professionalism of its members, the City is saving thousands upon thousands dollars on lawsuits and attorney's fees. They also won't tell you they are spending your money on a high-priced labor lawyer to negotiate against their own employees. They love giving money to attorneys, perhaps they want to be attorneys some day.
  • Hermosa Beach Fire has specially trained men to provide out-of-hospital care in medical emergencies. There are many different types of emergency medical responders, each with different levels of training, ranging from first aid and basic life support to advanced life support. Paramedics provide advanced levels of care for medical emergencies and trauma. ALL of our Hermosa Beach Fire personnel are trained fire fighters and paramedics. This is quite comforting when you find yourself in a position that you need to call 911 for help. In my humble opinion, knowing that individuals are on their way that can provide advance care is reason enough to fight for this service to stay in Hermosa Beach.
  • The City has cut several positions, including two police officers and 20 percent (one assistant Fire Chief and three firefighter/paramedic positions) of the Fire Department. HB Fire is the busiest department for 'Call of Service' per firefighter/paramedic in the Los Angeles County. Compton Fire is number 2.
  • The City also has "tiered" the retirement system for future employees and encouraged experienced employees and leaders to leave by offering a "golden handshake" and have not given employees raises over the past five years.
Please let them hear your voice, stop the dismantling of the City by this City Council. Tell them to support the City and the services provided by the employees. Remember, this is a great City with low crime and we want to keep it that way! Your Police and Fire Departments are never more than a mile away when you call, and their response time and service levels are unmatched.

The future of Hermosa Beach Neighborhood Watch program is DEPENDING ON YOU, individually and as a community, to speak up NOW to express your outrage that our voted representatives will keep in mind that it is a "convenient delusion" to think that relying on low wages and outsourcing in place of innovation and opportunity will make Hermosa Beach prosper economically or ethically. What is your families continued safekeeping worth to you? Our hope is that you will step up by calling, writing or sending an email to our five council members to voice your opinion before it is too late and a choice has been made for you! It is OUR collective responsibility to voice our wishes to keep the police department and fire department together.

We trust that you are as outraged at we are and put a stop to this "convenient delusion" that City Council has that by relying on low wages and outsourcing in place of innovation and opportunity will make Hermosa Beach prosper economically or ethically. What is our families continued safekeeping worth to you? Our hope is that you will step up by calling, writing or sending an email to our five council members to voice your opinion before it is too late and a choice has been made for you! It is OUR collective responsibility to voice our wishes to keep the police department and fire department together. We need to send the message that we do not put politics above people.

Email All Council Members

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Beverly Hills Bans Oil Drilling


The City of Beverly Hills recently passed a ban on drilling. Read the story in the Beverly Hills Patch, January 26th, 2011.

The amendment to the municipal code bans oil, gas and hydrocarbon extraction from surface rigs, but not wells located beneath Beverly Hills that are connected to sites outside the city. The law also prevents the leasing and construction of new hydrocarbon sites effective immediately.

“The Beverly Hills City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved an interim ordinance banning oil and gas drilling. Council members used the legislative action as an opportunity to reaffirm a united, long-held stance that Beverly Hills is no place for surface oil rigs. Councilwoman, Krasne chose to potentially "err on the side of caution" to protect children when she voted "happily, yes" on the ordinance.

"I'm going to say, right now, as I sit at home with a child who has lymphoma, that if there is just a small instance of cancer caused by an oil well on the school campus, then I'm going to err on the side of caution and put this ordinance in place," Krasne said. "If it can be proved to me that this is not the case, then at that time I will gladly lift the ordinance and have no problem."

Friday, April 20, 2012

Steve Layton's Oil Spill in 1998 as CEO of Equinox Oil

Oil Blowout Covered 2 Square Miles
In 1983, Mr. Steve Layton co-founded Alma Energy and Equinox Oil with his father and Mike Galesi. He served as President of Alma and Equinox from 1997 to 2000. In November 2000, Francesco Galesi purchased the Alma and Equinox assets out of bankruptcy after an Equinox oil spill and formed E&B Natural Resource Management Corporation. Mr. Layton was retained as President of E&B.

Steve Layton was CEO of Equinox Oil when on September 22, 1998, oil blowout occurred from a well owned by Equinox into the waters of Lake Grande Ecaille, in Plaquemines Parish, coastal Louisiana. A blowout is the uncontrolled release of crude oil and/or natural gas from an oil well or gas well after pressure control systems have failed.  This management failure should not be ignored by Hermosa Beach residents because it is not too dissimilar to lack of management oversight in the BP Gulf Oil Spill.   

The exact volume of oil discharged is unknown, but estimates range from less than 450 bbl to 1,500 bbl.  The oil was discharged in a jet that shot straight up approximately 200-300 feet into the air along with natural gas, produced water, and sand.  The blowout continued for approximately 11 hours, at which point the discharge was stopped.  Several thousand acres of surface water in Lake Grande Ecaille, as well as the Gulf of Mexico, were covered by slicks or sheens from the incident, and approximately 1,233 acres (2 square miles) of wetlands (Hermosa Beach is 1.3 square miles) were exposed to oil.  Soon after the massive Hurricane Georges passed near the area four days later on September 26, 1998, causing the response efforts to be suspended effectively letting the company off the "cleanup hook".  However, 33.8 discount acre years of marsh was lost.  Read about the environmental damage from Steve Layton's oil spill.

Mr. Steve Layton received a warning letter on August 13, 1997 from the Department of Public of Health & Human Services of safety violations.  Was this related to the lack of management oversight?

Chapter 11 bankruptcy of Equinox Oil Company Den norske Bank, ASA, individually and as agent for BNP Paribas and Comerica Bank - Texas (the Bank Group) loaned over $106 million to Equinox and Alma.  

Equinox Oil Company Oil Spill Damage Assessment, Restoration Plan & Environmental Assessment Prepared by:
Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office/Office of the Governor
Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality
Louisiana Department of Natural Resources
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
United States Fish and Wildlife Service

LIST OF PREPARERS
Chris Piehler Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality
John de Mond Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality
Derek Hamilton Louisiana Department of Natural Resources
Dick Stanek  Louisiana Department of Natural Resources
Heather Finley Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
Jim Hanifen Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
Terry Romaire  Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries
Gina Muhs Saizan Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office, Office of the Governor
Chuck Armbruster Louisiana Oil Spill Coordinator’s Office, Office of the Governor
Cheryl Brodnax National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Linda Burlington National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
John Iliff National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
John Kern National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Tony Penn National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Christy Poulos National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Buddy Goatcher United States Fish and Wildlife Service
Warren Lorentz United States Fish and Wildlife Service

Thursday, April 19, 2012

How is Fracking Different from Oil Drilling?




How is hydraulic fracturing different from drilling for oil? And why is it called 'fracking'? CNN explains it to you.  CNN Explains.

The Environmental Protection Agency's new air pollution rules for the oil and gas industry may seem like odd timing, as President Obama has been trying to deflect Republican criticism that he overregulates energy industries. But the rules weren't the Obama administration's idea.  How a 'Western Problem' Led to New Drilling Rules.

Listen to this when you consider that E&B Oil wants to drill 30 wells in Hermosa Beach.  30 wells getting well completion in our neighborhood would horrendous.  The EPA has proposed new rules to control the problem but does this apply to slant oil drilling?

The fact that the EPA has acknowledged drilling is making people sick is a strong argument against doing so in the midst of a residential neighborhood, like Hermosa Beach. "The EPA says all of that drilling sends significant amounts of pollution into the air, contributing to smog and making people sick."

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

E&B Natural Resources Warning Signs

How Would You Like to Have This E&B Oil Sign Next To Your House?


Prop 65 signage is posted at oil drilling sites, and other places any of the chemical on Prop 65 list are used. The oil industry managed to keep “crude oil” off the Calif. toxics list but oil and gasoline have two cancer-causing agents in them: benzene and toluene.

Signs Found at E&B Facility in Long Beach, California

Friday, March 9, 2012

Hermosa Beach Slant Oil Drilling Maps

These maps are speculative drawings based in information we have gathered from the Macpherson proposals.  E&B oil has not submitted their drilling proposal yet.  



Map of the proposed Hermosa Beach slant oil drilling site will reach out into the ocean.  What is slant oil drilling?  The drilling will also go underground into Redondo Beach likely.  The California Coastal Commission has full authority of this drilling and has thus tidelands restrictions on where money from oil can be spent.  The oil site will also be less than 100 feet from homes when Colorado requires a 350 foot setback and California recommend 300 feet.

Do we really know what is underground nor want to disturb the environment with oil drilling pipes possibly poking through the ocean floor?  Do want want to risk the dangers of the ocean floor and our beaches sinking (subsiding)?


The proposed drilling site effects more than 50% of residents of Hermosa Beach.  Noise, air pollution, explosions or dangerous gases are all a potential consequence.  Not to mention the drilling site will be within a few hundred yards of your kids playing in the park.  If you run on the greenbelt in Manhattan Beach or Hermosa Beach there could be an oil pipeline to under it to Chevron Refinery in Torrance and/or a natural gas pipeline AES Power Plant in Redondo Beach.



Lets not forget about the fault line that runs across the Santa Monica Bay and the South Bay.  We have had several earthquakes offshore in Hermosa Beach and Santa Moncia bay in the past few years. 
 27 oil wells and 3 water injection wells for Fracking and Natural Gas

Horrible Air Quality
I am told by oil experts in the business that the odor from gases and drilling will be "awful" around the site.  There is no way to contain the odor or poisonous gases that come up our of the ground.  This map depicts 3 different wind scenarios we get in the area.  An onshore, offshore and no wind where the smell and gases get trapped in the valley.

Emissions generated during the drilling/development phase include vehicle emissions; diesel emissions from large construction equipment and generators, storage/dispensing of fuels, and, if installed at this stage, flare stacks; small amounts of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, and particulates from blasting activities; and dust from many sources, such as disturbing and moving soils (clearing, grading, excavating, trenching, backfilling, dumping, and truck and equipment traffic), mixing concrete, and drilling. During windless conditions (especially in areas of thermal inversion), project-related odors may be detectable at more than a mile from the source.  Excess increases in dust could decrease forage palatability for wildlife and livestock and increase the potential for dust pneumonia.  See source.


250 Yard Heavy Impact Zone from Noise, Odor, Dangerous Gases and Explosions.   There are two parks, hundreds of homes and a jogging trail in the vicinity which I think is disgraceful.   There are probably 10+ kids under the age of 10 years old that live in the red boxed area.  Its just sad that no one thought through the ramifications.  
Projected Ripple Affect of Real Estate Losses
This is a Scenario of What Could Happen

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Thursday, March 8, 2012

Macpherson Settlement Agreement

Is it rather suspicious that the city of Hermosa Beach posted the full 45 page agreement over the weekend and suddenly takes it down this week?   Many people are looking for it and its ridiculous that the city would take it down.   Is it because they need to amend the agreement or are they becoming embarrassed.  Again, more transparency is needed.  We have a lot of smart people in this town and its very important that every dissects every aspect of this agreement.  If you want to know why the agreement may not be legal or want to hear comments from residents on the Macpherson see the previous two links.

See Also:
Macpherson Lawsuit Issues

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Huntington Beach Residents Want Oil Facility Shut Down


The Angus Petroleum production facility on Delaware St. in Huntington Beach from which odors and noise have been emanating.  Huntington Beach residents say fumes, noise from Angus Petroleum are unbearable. Officials say the company is following regulations. This Huntington Beach oil facility has also been connected with oil spills in the area which cost the city $1.5M to clean up.
Residents in the neighborhood near Springfield Avenue and Delaware Street continue to complain to the city and the Southern California Air Quality Management District but say they have yet to see results. City officials and the AQMD say they have been fielding complaints on the facility but so far Angus has been cooperative and complied with regulations.  Last summer residents appealed to the city for help, saying the fumes were causing health issues including headaches and burning eyes. The Fire Department sent a violation notice to Angus Petroleum and said company officials were responsive to residents' concerns.

The Angus Petroleum facility on California Street had been inactive for nearly 11 years but started work again last summer. Oil production began on the site in 1992 but was shut down in 1998.

Oiled Seabirds Rescued in San Pedro


The oil-crusted seabird was swaddled in a sweatshirt inside a gym bag, carried by a woman looking for help at the International Bird Rescue center in San Pedro. Nearly 100 Murres, a diving bird that spends most of its life at sea, have been brought to the International Bird Rescue center in San Pedro to have oil removed from their feathers. The oil came from natural seeps in the Santa Barbara Channel and gets stirred-up by winter weather and currents.  See Daily Breeze article

Redondo AES Power Plant Rebuild is Related

E&B Oil drilling is related to AES plans to rebuild Redondo's Power Plant.  E&B will be required to build a pipeline underneath the Hermosa Beach greenbelt down to Redondo Beach for trucks to transport and/or service the low grade oil.  Do you want big oil trucks driving into the community or a PowerPlant that could use the oil to run operations?  Who knows AES might have plans to process the oil on site.  We don't know but the timing of the the AES Redondo Power Plant remodel could be related!

The oil pipeline and the power plant are separate but do share the same nuisance factors. The oil will be piped down the greenbelt to a SCE tunnel (tube) that houses other piplines and utility type uses including fiber optics that land on our beach. Some is above ground (wires) with otherstuff below ground. The power plant AES used to run on oil and had several pipelines installed over the years. SCE controls this access under utility agreements.

We need to fight this one and see the big picture of what is going on.  Big business energy is attacking a community and its our job to protect our livelihood.  Join the fight on Facebook to Tear Down Redondo's Power Plant.  Also, read the the blog similar to ours AES Power Plant Must Go
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