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spanone

(135,830 posts)
12. Austerity, Deregulation and the Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion
Sat Apr 27, 2013, 01:43 PM
Apr 2013

Last evening, a fertilizer plant owned by Adair Grain Inc. in West, Texas caught fire, then exploded, killing several people and wounding at least one hundred. The blast, caught on video from afar, destroyed nearby homes, businesses and a nursing home for seniors. There are still lingering questions about how this happened, but documents suggest the plant faced little regulatory scrutiny.

The Dallas Morning News reported that the plant filed papers with state and federal environmental regulators in 2006 claiming that there were “no” fire or explosive risks at the plant. "The worst possible scenario, the report said, would be a ten-minute release of ammonia gas that would kill or injure no one," noted reporter Randy Lee Loftis. Residents complained about the smell of ammonia as they "went to bed" that year, according to a filing.

As I pointed out on Twitter last night, in the last five years, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has only inspected five fertilizer plants in the entire state of Texas—and the plant in West, Texas was not one of them. OSHA is severely understaffed and operates with a tiny federal budget. With the agency's current resources, that means "OSHA can inspect a workplace on average once every 129 years and state OSHA inspectors could inspect one every 67 years."

There are specialized inspectors for chemical plants that, in theory, should have covered where OSHA or environmental regulators left off. The US Chemical Safety Board, which came into operation in 1998, is the commission tasked with investigating safety violations. Like similar boards, the Chemical Safety Board has virtually no resources: only a $10 million budget to cover every violation in the country. The Center for Public Integrity has a new, incredibly damning report, showing that the agency has failed to investigate several recent disasters, including the death of a worker at refinery in Memphis last December.

http://www.thenation.com/blog/173931/austerity-deregulation-and-texas-fertilizer-plant-explosion#

Just of the week? He's working on of the decade. hobbit709 Apr 2013 #1
I hadn't fully grasped the irony before. Yikes. Gov Goodhair's got balls of steel. Gidney N Cloyd Apr 2013 #2
If it wasn't for Gomer, he would own the title hands down. russspeakeasy Apr 2013 #3
not fair to sacks of shit. spanone Apr 2013 #4
True, fertilizer at least makes crops grow. nt riqster Apr 2013 #9
I wouldn't shed a tear of Texas either became a republic unto itself again, or vanished from the Nika Apr 2013 #5
I beg to differ Cirque du So-What Apr 2013 #7
I can appreciate that. Mine was a gut wrenching first reaction anyway. Nika Apr 2013 #10
Rick Perry: the man so dense that light bends around him! backscatter712 Apr 2013 #6
Physics and politics! Awesome. riqster Apr 2013 #8
DU is a shameless echo chamber where it's assumed everyone always swallows the bullshit. Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #11
Austerity, Deregulation and the Texas Fertilizer Plant Explosion spanone Apr 2013 #12
Point 1. West Fertilizer Company is not a "chemical plant" by any definition. Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #13
texas also has regulatory agencies..... spanone Apr 2013 #14
All of this is quite well known. All of it. Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #16
obviously the DEPARTMENT OF STATE HEALTH SERVICES in texas dropped the ball. spanone Apr 2013 #17
Correct. Likewise, if West Fertilizer Co. had informed DHS directly, as they are required to do! nt Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #18
complicity all around.... spanone Apr 2013 #19
That is an excellent question, and it could get back to Texas bristling at the Feds. Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #20
Maybe you are aware that state employees enforce federal regulations tabasco Apr 2013 #22
In some cases. So, how is that relevant? Buzz Clik Apr 2013 #23
Tax and regulation and,...wasn't there a third thing? Spitfire of ATJ Apr 2013 #15
Juanita Jean has some good comments about Goodhair Gothmog Apr 2013 #21
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