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Natural Gas Pipeline Crisis Plans Kept From Public

SHARON THEIMER   10/ 6/10 03:23 PM ET   AP

Natural Gas Pipeline Crisis Plan
A law enforcement official runs towards a massive fire in a residential neighborhood September 9, 2010 in San Bruno, California. A massive explosion rocked a neighborhood near San Francisco International Airport. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON — Federal investigators are examining whether the California utility whose natural gas pipeline explosion killed at least eight people had an adequate emergency response plan, a government spokesman said Wednesday amid disclosures that such plans are effectively withheld from the public and industry watchdogs.

City and county officials said the company didn't share its plan with them before the disaster.

The National Transportation Safety Board's investigation into the September pipeline blast in San Bruno, Calif., includes examining Pacific Gas & Electric Co.'s emergency response plan and whether it was followed, NTSB spokesman Peter Knudson said.

The Associated Press reported earlier Wednesday that emergency plans for natural gas pipelines are effectively withheld from the public and industry watchdogs because the U.S. government's pipeline safety agency itself doesn't have copies. Because the government doesn't have the plans, the public can't use the nation's open records law to request them.

State, city and county officials in California told the AP they do not have copies of the San Bruno pipeline disaster plan, either.

The federal pipeline safety agency doesn't ask natural gas pipeline operators for the plans because it isn't required to do so, agency spokesman Julia P. Valentine said.

"Congress requires PHMSA to inspect the emergency response plans," Valentine said. "There is no regulation requiring operators to submit these plans to PHMSA and for the agency to retain them."

Rather than obtaining copies of the plans, inspectors view them while visiting natural gas operators' facilities and leave them there.

The AP discovered that federal regulators didn't have natural gas pipelines' emergency plans when it filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act for copies of every emergency plan for every natural gas and oil transmission pipeline in the U.S.

PG&E declined to provide a copy of its emergency plan to the AP, saying it contained confidential customer and employee information.

The federal pipeline safety administration has long been criticized for a cozy relationship with the companies it is supposed to regulate. Its on-site-only review of natural gas pipeline emergency plans puts it at odds with other federal agencies such as the Interior Department, which publicly disclosed copies of BP's plan for the Gulf of Mexico and the Deepwater Horizon rig after the Gulf oil spill in April. Those plans, approved by the government last year before BP drilled its doomed well, contained errors and showed that BP was unprepared to handle quickly a spill of the Gulf disaster's magnitude.

PHMSA's policy for natural gas pipelines is also at odds with its handling of spill plans prepared by oil pipeline operators. Federal law requires PHMSA to periodically obtain and keep copies of those plans. Agency Administrator Cynthia Quarterman told Congress last month that her agency would make the oil spill response plans public.

Officials in San Bruno and San Mateo County said PG&E didn't share its emergency plan for the pipeline with their emergency response agencies prior to the disaster. They said it is information they'd like to have.

"The city of San Bruno and I think many other cities are more acutely interested now in what are the locations and configurations of the lines and how are they operated and how can they be quickly shut off," San Bruno City Manager Connie Jackson said. Jackson said PG&E cooperated immediately with emergency crews responding to the pipeline explosion.

The environmental health director for San Mateo County, Dean Peterson, said the county's hazardous materials team examined surrounding facilities such as gas stations and radio towers after the blast.

"Any information we have of hazards in our county would be beneficial," Peterson said.

PG&E spokeswoman Katie Romans said the California Public Utilities Commission asked to see the plan early this year as part of an annual audit, but the utility didn't give the plan to local emergency crews.

It has shared elements of it with local public safety agencies during joint exercises; the most recent joint exercise with San Bruno area emergency responders was in 2006, Romans said.

"We did not widely distribute the plan because it contains confidential operating information," Romans said.

California Public Utilities Commission spokeswoman Susan Carothers said her agency reviews the plans while auditing utilities but doesn't have copies. That effectively puts it out of reach of citizens who otherwise could request copies under California's open records law.

A new Senate pipeline safety bill would require PHMSA to collect emergency response plans from natural gas and other hazardous liquid pipeline operators and, after removing sensitive details such as proprietary or security information, post them online. The bill is sponsored by Sen. Frank Lautenberg, chairman of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Subcommittee on Surface Transportation, and Senate Commerce Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va.

"Making emergency plans available to the public would add another level of accountability for the companies that run gas pipelines through our communities," Lautenberg, D-N.J., said Wednesday in a written statement.

A pipeline safety advocate said federal regulators should get copies of the natural gas pipeline disaster plans so they can review them in detail, and the public should get to see them.

"Most of these plans are pretty big documents. I don't think an inspector who's going to be visiting for a day or two can get up to speed on a significant document like that and then ask specific questions about what they're doing," said Carl Weimer, executive director of the nonprofit Pipeline Safety Trust in Bellingham, Wash. "They're being developed by industry and get a nod from PHMSA and the public never gets to see or comment on them."

Weimer and Christina Sames, vice president of operations and engineering for the American Gas Association, an industry lobbying group, said they were unaware of any states that collect natural gas pipeline operators' emergency response plans and make them public.

Sames said it makes sense for federal officials to collect oil spill plans because, unlike natural gas pipeline leaks, oil spills can spread for miles and cause a lot of environmental damage.

Operators share natural gas pipeline emergency plans with PHMSA, states and local emergency responders, Sames said. By reviewing plans while visiting facilities, state and federal inspectors can have questions answered instantly, she said, adding that it was unclear how the public would benefit from seeing the plans. Utilities are supposed to let people know if they live near a pipeline, and that's the most important information for homeowners to have, Sames said.

Timothy Butters, chairman of the International Association of Fire Chiefs' Hazardous Materials Committee, said emergency responders feel utilities' top priority should be sharing the plans with them. Operators do a good job in general, but it isn't happening everywhere, said Butters, an assistant chief in the Fairfax, Va., city fire department.

"That's one of the biggest concerns at the local levels, is sometimes these emergency plans that are produced by operators are often just sort of a paper tiger, and they sit on a shelf and they're not really shared effectively with the emergency response community and they're not maintained," Butters said.

___

Associated Press writers Joan Lowy in Washington and Jason Dearen in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Federal investigators are examining whether the California utility whose natural gas pipeline explosion killed at least eight people had an adequate emergency response plan, a gover...
WASHINGTON — Federal investigators are examining whether the California utility whose natural gas pipeline explosion killed at least eight people had an adequate emergency response plan, a gover...
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SamEllison
I feel so clean!
10:00 PM on 10/06/2010
It's called self-policing and business thinks that Obama is too tough on them.
The GOPers want to apologize to the businesses that don't even self-police themselves.
06:23 PM on 10/06/2010
As you can see from the advertisements all over this site, the gas companies are pushing full force on fracking all over the nation. This is the last play of scarcity by the bankers and money suppliers before nuclear crushes them. India, China, Japan, Italy, Uk, Russia and now South American countries with Russian assistance realize that the only way to keep the oil and gas in the ground and secure real, clean energy independence is with nuclear fission and fusion. India is making huge gains, and so is China, they are showing us how cheap nuclear can be with economies of scale.

France has been reprocessing waste and using it for more power and they hold all waste in a giant pool of water as solids.

Chernobyl was a RBMK that we don't even build, we build negative coefficient of reactivity plants. When they get hot they shut down with the laws of physics.Chernobyl was a positive coefficent plant, totally different. Three mile island was a release of radiation and it is responsible for between one to 2 deaths per year.

When you compare nuclear power to oil and gas, it is amazingly clean and fears of radiation and contamination are always due to lack of people educating themselves and a failure to realize how much better relative it is to gas and oil. The whole nation will be a fracked gas play if we don't get nuclear. We have 104 plants that supply 20% of power.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
01:43 PM on 10/06/2010
PG&E declined to provide a copy of its emergency plan to the AP, saying it contained confidential customer (READ: how many will die) and employee ( READ: who we will scapegoat ) information.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rockyroad
01:22 PM on 10/06/2010
Together with news that the administration kept its worst case scenario analysis of the Gulf Oil Spill secret . . . this is just aweful. Reeks of corruption . . . of captive agencies and a captive administration.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
01:25 PM on 10/06/2010
The administration is as 'captive' as it wants to be. They designed the laws and situations that allow this 'secrecy' to exist, allow 'plausible deniability' when things go wrong and to let markets regulate themselves when it's multi million dollar corps engaging in commerce. The only REAL rules apply to the little guy trying to eek out a buck.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
01:05 PM on 10/06/2010
"The federal pipeline safety administration has long been criticized for a cozy relationship with the companies it is supposed to regulate."

"We did not widely distribute the plan because it contains confidential operating information," Romans said."

Ain't that how it works in EVERY 'cozy' relationship our Gov't has with the private sector? The 'pre-market rules' having been established by Gov't to secure the privacy and total authority of the corp du jour, we the people have no say, no clue, no rights, no recourse. It's neo-liberalism at its finest.
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zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
01:48 PM on 10/06/2010
PG&E declined to provide a copy of its emergency plan to the AP, saying it contained confidential customer (READ: how many will die) and employee ( READ: who we will scapegoat ) information.
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Mr MOTO
VMFA 112 MAG 41 4th MAW
12:26 PM on 10/06/2010
I guess campaigns such as this are going to be more common now.

http://media.hotair.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/act-chld-noose-lg.jpg
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edejan
12:25 PM on 10/06/2010
We need to get more liberals and progressives into office so they can repair the damage the Reagan to Bush years have done to our country. The Senate filibuster/cloture requriements MUST BE CHANGED or the American people will never get the Change we need. The Dems we have are mostly too lazy, corrupt or are Dinos. We need more Weiners, Sanders, Frankens, and Graysons in Congress. Vote in November for Dems.
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11:55 AM on 10/06/2010
The real issue of course is liability. And then again, they don't want the public to know how totally useless their plans are. Like the Gulf plans from all the companies, all copies of each others, discussing impact to animals not even found in the Gulf for 20 million years and giving as emergency contacts people that have been dead 5 years.

Heck, if these plans were forced to be made public, they would have to actually make plans in the first place.
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MadameChaillot
11:30 AM on 10/06/2010
I'd say that this situation is akin to the red mud flood in Hungary - allowing the industry to self-regulate. That's kind of like self-medicating: Dangerous and unrealistic.
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Chubbster
Partisanship is a mental illness
11:28 AM on 10/06/2010
Everything is kept from the public.
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zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
01:45 PM on 10/06/2010
except the giant fireball that kills them
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babyboomerorig
Finally, it's spring!
11:15 AM on 10/06/2010
This is ridiculous. I've had to keep the records from my motel and restaurant businesses for 7 years before destroying any of them.....just in case....but natural gas lines have no records that are required to be kept?

Ludicrous!
11:13 AM on 10/06/2010
Those dam teabaggers are at it again! Now look at what they have done, "absolutely nothing" but divide the masses by using our safety measure against us!
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zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
01:47 PM on 10/06/2010
PG&E declined to provide a copy of its emergency plan to the AP, saying it contained confidential customer (READ: how many will die) and employee ( READ: who we will scapegoat ) information.
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guveqzero
Inventor and Innovator
11:02 AM on 10/06/2010
Regulators are like police, they catch less than 10% of violators and prosecute only a fraction of them. This is why regulation doesn't work. Therefore, the penalty needs to be so high that they wont do it again, like jail time. In the US, our businesses usually get just a handslap. In fact, no banking executive in the US has gone to jail over the financial crises, that one that brought the world to its knees.
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BBinMT
Is this a 5 minute argument or the full half hour?
10:58 AM on 10/06/2010
Oh, look, more infrastructure problems and those who are supposed to regulate safety and maintenance. Conservatives don't care about these things, they never have. With their ongoing rhetoric about "small government", "lower taxes", and privatization of everything, it seems they aren't going to look to the future, either.
10:57 AM on 10/06/2010
This looks like a purposeful omission, knowing full well the ambit and limitations of the law. I do hope this furore will help in getting the material in the public domain.