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Thad Allen Under Fire For Oil Spill Response

Thad Allen

First Posted: 06/11/10 09:35 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:45 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The oil spoiling the teeming marshes and white-sand beaches of the Gulf Coast is also threatening the pristine image of the burly, take-charge leader who has become the federal government's go-to guy in a disaster.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, one of the few federal officials whose reputation survived Hurricane Katrina intact, is facing growing criticism that he and his agency are overwhelmed by the catastrophe. It's unfamiliar territory for a former Coast Guard Academy football captain who has managed responses to crises that include the earthquake in Haiti, Katrina and the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

"It's very discombobulated and disorganized," Orange Beach, Ala., Mayor Tony Kennon said of the federal response after tar balls stained the beach and entered Perdido Bay this week, without protection from booms. "They had five weeks to get ready for this, and it still happened."

Back in 2005, most leaders in the Gulf had kinder words for Allen's operations after then-President George W. Bush tapped him to take over the widely panned Hurricane Katrina response initially led by former FEMA Director Michael Brown.

Allen was credited with turning the effort around. And when the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded on April 20, the White House was so confident it had the right man to lead the response that it persuaded Allen to delay his planned May retirement.

Allen, 61, who relinquished his role as head of the Coast Guard but is staying on as the spill's national incident commander, has since become the public face of the government's efforts. The Obama administration is increasingly relying on him in White House press briefings and elsewhere to try to assure the public that the government is in charge. Briefing reporters this week, Allen came off cool, calm and confident.

But just as Katrina brought unforeseen challenges, the oil spill has proved unprecedented and unwieldy. Allen is taking his lumps.

Early on, the Coast Guard was widely viewed as giving BP too much control on the scene, effectively looking the other way when the company offered misleadingly rosy assessments. Allen, for example, went along for weeks with BP's insistence that measuring the amount of oil spewing from the well was unimportant, only later pressing for accurate figures after scientists complained that it could help officials plan for containing the mess and account for liability.

There's also the Katrina-like gap between what federal officials say is happening and what local leaders say they are seeing. Since the beginning, Allen has insisted the government and BP deployed more resources than needed. That is consistently disputed by local and state officials who complain of poor coordination, shortages of boom and skimmers, agonizing delays in getting responses to requests and a general reluctance to try new or experimental cleanup strategies.

While BP has taken the brunt of it, much of the criticism also is falling on Allen, the son of a Coast Guard man who rose through the ranks to become the 23rd commandant of the agency in 2006.

"I have spent more time fighting the officials of BP and the Coast Guard than fighting the oil," Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said. "We've got to find someone to put in charge who has the guts and the will to make some decisions."

Nungesser's parish includes the Louisiana marshes first hit by oil a month ago where recently pelicans were found coated with thick oil.

David Camardelle, mayor of Grand Isle, La., said he meets daily with state and federal officials but that when he brings up a problem or offers a solution he's told "BP or EPA, or the Coast Guard is going to have to approve this before we can do anything."

"How can we accept that when our lives depend on their action," Camardelle asked, testifying Thursday before a Senate Homeland Security subcommittee.

During briefings with reporters, Allen has noted the frustration of dealing with a spill across the Gulf. He frequently points to the number of fishermen and shrimpers who have been enlisted into the response - the "vessels of opportunity" as he has dubbed the private armada.

But this strategy too has come under fire.

Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said many of the fishermen in her state "don't think it's working."

And Camardelle complained that shrimpers in his community who sign up for the program "are being sent off on ships where they find no oil (and) ... they want to return and help protect their communities." At other times they were "ready to go but just waited at the docks for the call," he told lawmakers.

Unfailingly polite in public, Allen takes criticism in stride.

Though born in the desert - in Tucson, Ariz. - he's been around the water all his life, moving from post to post as a Coast Guard brat and, later, for his own career. He worked on his first oil spill 20 years ago as a lieutenant when a barge ran aground near Atlantic City, N.J. He says responding is like fighting a battle: The trick is moving resources quickly to where they're needed.

Within the Coast Guard - which itself captures the public's imagination with its rescue swimmers, drug busts on the high seas and missions to save stranded fishermen - Allen is widely admired. On the Gulf, there's little doubt who's in charge when Allen's around.

He has broad authority from the White House to make decisions and can pick up the phone and call BP CEO Tony Hayward when he needs answers. Like the president, Allen in recent days has shown more impatience with BP, writing Hayward a terse letter this week demanding more information about how the company is settling claims.

Last week, preparing for a potentially contentious meeting with Alabama Gov. Bob Riley, Allen sat at a conference table with Coast Guard officers and picked apart a planned presentation addressing Riley's complaints about protective boom being moved from Alabama to other states.

"Guys, we have to be exact with this," Allen said, gesturing with one hand as he drank coffee with the other. "One misstatement and the meeting goes south. We have to be transparent. Transparency! Clarity!"

When inventory numbers on the amount of boom available in Alabama didn't add up, Allen had had enough. He got up, grabbed an easel and a marker and began writing. The numbers got straightened out to his satisfaction just before Riley walked into the room.

The problem appears to have been resolved, but Riley made clear his lingering frustration with Allen in a statement this week in which he credited the president for fixing it.

"I want to thank the president for his personal intervention with the Coast Guard," the governor said. "Boom that was deployed here in Alabama should never have been taken from us in the first place."

Briefing reporters before meeting with President Barack Obama on Monday, Allen acknowledged that the Coast Guard never anticipated something like the BP gusher.

Even though the agency ran a Gulf Coast response drill in 2002 simulating a blown wellhead - with Allen playing the role of incident commander - Allen said the expectation is for a single oil slick contained in a specific area. The Deepwater Horizon spill, he said, is taxing resources because the oil is breaking up and being pushed by winds and currents in all different directions. He acknowledged that the disaster will likely change the way the country plans for spills.

"We're trying to adapt and learn from a spill that's never happened before in this country," he said.

While early reviews have been mixed at best, the final verdict on Allen's performance is still out.

"We've lost some battles (but) we can win this war," Nungesser said. "But it's got to happen quickly."

Allen doesn't have much time to turn the tide. He still plans to retire July 1, although he acknowledges he might not be able to take off the uniform that quickly.

"I didn't anticipate this would happen to end my career, but I'm honored to have been asked to do this," he told reporters Monday. "It's not a very easy job ... It's one of the hardest things I've ever had to deal with."

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- The oil spoiling the teeming marshes and white-sand beaches of the Gulf Coast is also threatening the pristine image of the burly, take-charge leader who has become the federal gov...
WASHINGTON (AP) -- The oil spoiling the teeming marshes and white-sand beaches of the Gulf Coast is also threatening the pristine image of the burly, take-charge leader who has become the federal gov...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
01:45 PM on 06/14/2010
I compared the expressions on Thad Allen, Tony Hayward and Barack Obama's faced in today's Huffington Post. It looks to me like they believe this is beyond hope. I am saying a picture is worth a thousand words. These guys know this is a cataclysm, a catastrophe, and they are not going to be able to close the well in August. The underground structure of the well is collapsing, the seafloor is collapsing, and there is a reservoir down there of 2.3 billion barrels of crude oil which cannot be stopped from pouring into the Gulf of Mexico. BP can build all the workers temporary lodgings they want, but the only solution now is to remove the wildlife onto a big Ark, and bring in supertankers with huge suction vacuums to work for the next 9 months. The integrity of the ocean floor is being undermined.

Check out this site for more details if you prefer words to the pictures of the leaders who have given up on this hopeless disaster:

http://standupforournation.blogspot.com/
01:07 AM on 06/13/2010
Obama spent trillions to save the banks,
Yet he cannot mobilize govt to take charge
to minimize the damaging effects of this catastrophe

Get all the clean up equipment from around the world,
Gather all the experts in industry, navy, deep sea diving companies,
Invite volunteers, biologists to save as much wild life as possible,
The situation needs all hand-on-the deck action, not posturing.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:04 AM on 06/12/2010
Officials from community after community continue to bang the same drum.

"I still don't know who is in charge," Nungesser told the Subcommittee on State, Local and Private Sector Preparedness and Integration. Nungesser said President Barack Obama should appoint someone with "the authority and guts to a make decisions." He said that currently it takes five days for questions to make their way up the chain of command to

Admiral Thad Allen, the national incident commander, which Nungesser said was "much too slow."

http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2010/06/nungesser_wants_to_know_who_is.html

Why does the White House continue to drag their feet in appointing someone with real authority, and not a puppet whose strings are pulled from inside the Beltway?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
01:50 PM on 06/14/2010
I share your frustration. Fanned. I believe the Gulf will be destroyed. For all intents and purposes, it will be dead to wild life for ours and our grandchildren's lifetimes.
12:44 AM on 06/12/2010
Thank you Admiral Allen for all you do!
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:37 AM on 06/12/2010
What does he do?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:43 AM on 06/12/2010
Ask the other coastal states, according to them, no one is in charge.

http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2010/06/nungesser_wants_to_know_who_is.html
08:15 PM on 06/11/2010
It's way past time for this but President Obama needs to bring EVERY Oil Compnay in ASAP to help with this mess. All the resources and equipment available should be utilized right now at all costs to stop the leak, and prevent the oil from reaching shore.

The undrwater plumes should be pumped out to get most of it out of the water columns. Think of all the tankers and skimmers that would be available if the entire Oil industry came in to help.
Needs to be done now. I worte the President a letter about this (and he got it) on June 1st. Sent it to CNN too. Chris Matthews is the only one I've heard so far echoing my letter and that was two days ago!!

What the hell is taking everyone so long to at least try and bring the Oil Industry in to help with resources and equipment. Skimmers should be out there in force skimming the surface oil as fast as possible!!
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:40 AM on 06/12/2010
Exactly correct. However, BP doesn't want help, according to the BP Crisis Center coordinator Neil Crammond to CNN's Brian Todd, they don't need any stinkin' help.

http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/06/08/inside-bps-command-center/
06:03 PM on 06/11/2010
http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/06/admiral-allen-on-tony-hayward-official-response-to-oil-spill-would-not-have-been-different.html

TAPPER: I talked to a guy who runs a company in Maine that offers boom, and he has – he says – the ability to make 90,000 feet of boom a day. High quality. BP came there 2 weeks ago, looked at it, they are doing another audit today. He is very frustrated, he says he has a lot of high quality boom to go and it is taking a long time for BP to get its act together. Don’t you need this boom right now?

ALLEN: Oh we need all the boom wherever we can get it. If you give me the information off camera I’ll be glad to follow up.
06:18 PM on 06/11/2010
They need all the boom they can get but don't have a list of boom manufacturers? The companies have to go and seek them out?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:42 AM on 06/12/2010
Allen is clearly not in charge, and the White House doesn't want to be either.
05:07 PM on 06/11/2010
We can play hot potato with blame. We can fire people. We can create a never-ending line of scapegoats (what happened to, "The buck stops with me?!") We can send teams of lawyers down to the coast. We can threathen lawsuits. We can force payments. We can shame others. We can do lots of environmental impact studies to determine what MIGHT happen.

OR, we can deal with the certainty/reality that more and more oil is being pumped into our waters and marshes while politicians jockey for the positions mentioned above; and unless something is done - it will continue to do JUST THAT.

I love the environmental impact studies (end sarcasm)...we can work with manipulations of data to estimate possible scenarios, OR we can simply turn our heads and look out the window and see what our inaction has cost us. Theory vs reality is very sobering when time matters.
05:01 PM on 06/11/2010
Oilbama is really worse than dubaya. Could you imagine oilbama trying to handle katrina or the terrorists?
05:07 PM on 06/11/2010
There is so much a*% out there. It seems the only one capable of kicking any is on a ranch down in Texas smoking a Cuban.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fredisfred
05:27 PM on 06/11/2010
It's bad, but having Bush in charge of this mess would be 100 times worse. The man IS Big Oil.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
04:55 PM on 06/11/2010
Now there's a guy whose job I wouldn't want.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whitewater
04:51 PM on 06/11/2010
What ever happened to FEMA, the agency with thousands of employees and billions of dollars specifically chartered for exactly these kinds of emergencies. Did someone not turn on their alarms? Were their televisions taken away, their cell phones turned off, their computers infected? No one seems to have heard a peep from our protecters of disasters.
04:53 PM on 06/11/2010
FEMA was rolled into the Department of Homeland Security which responded within hours of news of the blow out.
04:59 PM on 06/11/2010
...and SO effectively, I might add.

Government provides examples over and over and over again that it doesn't matter who's in power - the results are the same. Sorta makes a person wonder why on earth we continue to expect government to be the entity that delivers us from these thing, huh?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
01:57 PM on 06/14/2010
Whitewater, I am fanning you both for your post and your handle.
They are headed by the inimitable Ms. Napolitano. After Bill Clinton, FEMA fell apart and it has yet
to be rebuilt. Napolitano is no emergency response executive. Neither is Thad Allen, and apparently neither is the head of EPA, NOAA nor Ken Salazar. We have a bunch of dingbats sitting around with their eyes wide and glazed over. Maybe some of them know how bad this is.
Maybe some geologists and petroleum engineers also know. The rest will be in the history books.

This is a cataclysm that dwarfs Katrina, 9/11 and Kraktowa. Really. It is that bad. Nobody wants to say get out a thousand arks and lets save whatever animals we can, but that is about all we can do. The Gulf coastline way of life is done.
04:48 PM on 06/11/2010
Well we need more people to blame... Like I need a hole in my head. This is not a tanker spill. We could handle a tanker spill since it is a finite quantity. This is a oil geyser a mile underwater that is spewing an enormous amount of oil contninuously. Sure, lets blame the coast guard for not being able to fix it. Sure lets blame Obama for not being able to fix it. We need to face up to the fact that this type of spill (deepwater) is unprecedented. The only people who know how to fix it are the same people who caused it. I wish the government could wave a magic wand and plug the hole. They cant.

So I guess the next best thing for disaffected progressives and the GOP is to find scapegoats in the government to blame. The only justified blame is on BP/Transocean/haliburton. Blaming the coast guard is akin to blaming the department of transportation for not stopping all drunk driving accidents.

I don't think anyone in the government knew how serious this spill was when it first happend. I don't think anyone but a few people working on the deepwater horizon had any idea. Blame them for a slow response... Sure, but it is the government, nothing happens quickly and most of the time that is a good thing.
04:51 PM on 06/11/2010
Excellent and the kind of thinking we really need to be doing. Hysteria helps no one.
05:01 PM on 06/11/2010
Well said, PhobiaPhobia...well said indeed!!!! Kudos!
04:48 PM on 06/11/2010
Obama said he would fire BP's Hayward if he worked for him.

Allen is Obama's man.

Obama COULD fire him.

Therefore "In Allen...Obama trusts."

And if Allen trusts BP, so must Big O...who was the top recipient of their campaign cash.

End of story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
opprobrious
More speech. Less Flagging.
04:57 PM on 06/11/2010
And "In the Press You Trust". Give it a rest.
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05:03 PM on 06/11/2010
The pathetic lack of leadership shines through all press screens. Some things just show.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:45 PM on 06/11/2010
Considering that there are towns under unofficial martial law all along Louisiana (try to find information on Grand Isle specifically), the government is beginning to scare me. Amateur reports and media are under complete lockdown over there and the mainstream media is refusing to report on any of the actual damage. Anyone with a camera is being turned away or arrested.

Earlier I posted that Google supplanted updated 2010 imagery from the Gulf area with 2009 pictures (as evidenced by the translucent logos in each of the blocks). This is easy to investigate yourself - go to Google maps and use the satellite to scan the area. If you want to see something really interesting, look up Timbalier Bay, LA - it looks like a square chunk cut out of Louisiana that's somehow pristine in the middle of dark oily waters. It's very disturbing.

We are not being told the true extent of the damage in the Gulf and this administration is doing everything it can to be complicit in this cover-up. If we cannot trust our government to be honest with us, especially about something of this magnitude, how can we trust them with anything?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
02:04 PM on 06/14/2010
It is in lockdown because the oil being relentlessly spewed a mile under the seabed contains high concentrations of toxic gas, and the gusher is growing and cannot be stopped. The formation or seabed cannot withstand the weight of the BOP and its supporting column, which is
450 tons of machiner, and is collapsing under the combined weight of the machinery, the undermining of the cement in the well casing, and the depletion of pressure in the underground formation. It is like a bubble is being popped on the ocean floor with the thing getting ready to collapse. They are scared as heck and they don't want the public to know there is nothing they can do to stop it. It could go up at any time as they drill the relief wells. This is a mother load of crude of all motherloads, and it is going to empty into the Gulf. No ifs, ands or buts.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dr Juan
Ron Paul -More Liberty, Less Government, No Fed
04:31 PM on 06/11/2010
This guy is just a typical example of a government do-nothing! Stayed out of trouble long enough to make it to the top. Staying out of trouble means showing no initiative, making no waves and keeping head down - just like he is doing now.

A man in command would be gathering independent oil clean up experts on site to give their recommendations. He would be facilitating small controlled tests of all the available cleaning and oil control possibilities. He would be conducting small bio-organism tests with all of the top suppliers and preparing ships for more wide spread seeding. And he would be working through the president to shake money lose from BP to cover the expense.

Instead he and the whole Coast Guard functions merely as harbor master of the Gulf. He is a would be - has been.
04:35 PM on 06/11/2010
Admiral Allen should pull his Coasr Guard boats out of the Gulf and let the boat owners who don't like what he is doing take over the clean up.
04:38 PM on 06/11/2010
I agree, when I hear people critisize this I say then you do it..
04:38 PM on 06/11/2010
Gee, I guess Obama should have put you in charge. You're obviously an expert on all of this.
04:29 PM on 06/11/2010
Oh yeah it will really help if Admiral Allen just does exactly what every mayor, county commissioner and representative in a state says to do when ever they say it.

In the meantime a lot of the tar balls landing on beaches have been hitting the beaches for years and are not even from the blow out.

This kind of mass hysteria on the left worries me as much as it does coming from the right.

How about a little refresher course. The Exxon Valdez spilled all at once and more than 1300 miles of beaches were covered with the oil slick.

Maybe a little trip down memory lane would help.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exxon_Valdez_oil_spill
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hollybork
02:06 PM on 06/14/2010
This could be 50 times as big as the Exxon Valdez. How many supertankers would it take to hold 2.5 billion barrels of crude, Homer? That is within the estimated range of size of the oil pocket that is pouring out now at the Deepwell Horizon.