Archive for the ‘Current Events’ Category

bp oil spill – dealing with the aftermath

Friday, June 4th, 2010

It’s been awhile since I stood atop my soapbox, so, well, here you go. You have been warned.

The aftermath of BP’s oil spill will likely span decades of financial hardship for folks in the region along with the obvious damage to the environment. My first reaction, out of anger, is to boycott BP.

However, I don’t believe that boycotting BP will do any good. And here’s why.

If BP had any sort of conscience, it would set up an annuity right now for any and all claimants who can demonstrate a financial loss due to the oil spill. BP would initially fund the annuity in an amount mandated by the government to address both punitive and compensatory damages, and would contribute a percentage of its earnings for as long as BP is in business. Claimants would receive periodic payments from this annuity for as long as it exists.

I think this model addresses something that is lacking under capitalism: that a corporation’s profits do not reflect the cost to society of its environmental impact.

Under this model, BP would be forced to recognize the impact that its operations have on the region in which it operates, and it gives the regional population an incentive to ensure that BP does well financially in the future.

You know, instead of boycotting.

It’s a win-win argument, if you ask me.

Fire status

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

Wildfire season is upon us and the losses appear to be much greater than those suffered in 2003. Everyone has been personally affected or knows someone who has. My brother, his family and his mother-in-law were evacuated from their houses.

Fortunately, we have not been given evacuation orders, but we packed our minivan and sat tight yesterday. Hope for the best, prepare for the worst, as the saying goes. It’s easy to feel that the worst won’t happen to me, but I think it would be only under the most catastrophic circumstances that our house would burn, such as those of the Oakland Hills fires where emergency services simply didn’t have the resources to protect structures. Which is, of course, a possibility, but we’re not on the edge of a canyon and fire would have to consume hundreds of houses before it would reach us.

Last year I went on an air purifier bender. I think my wife was a bit dubious about whether they are worth the somewhat considerable expense, but I think we are both thankful to have them now. The air outside is thick with ash and smoke and while we are all getting a bit of cabin fever inside, the air is considerably cleaner inside than out.

San Diego’s emergency services have done an extraordinary job. The fires in 2003 seemed to take everyone by surprise. We are far more prepared this time around and I think we are seeing fewer deaths and injuries.

Evacuation Logistics

Tuesday, October 4th, 2005

In the wake of all the criticism of public officials and their responses to hurricane Katrina, I have been nagged by the logistical problem of moving the population of an entire city on short notice.

Here in the United States, we lack adequate public transportation, so the population must be evacuated mainly via private vehicles travelling on freeways. Under that assumption, how long will it take to evacuate a major metropolitan population of 3 million people?

Follow this link and you will find some quick numbers I crunched using some basic assumptions. There you’ll also find a link to an Excel spreadsheet that you can download and play with the numbers yourself. According to my calculations, it will take at least 25 hours to evacuate 3 million people, assuming perfect conditions (i.e. no traffic collisions and everyone goes at 60 mph). My calculations are based on passenger vehicles only, so I believe that 25 hours is extremely optimistic, as there will likely be a good number of trailers, trucks, and RVs that will consume more freeway space. According to this article, 2000 cars per hour each lane is an acceptable number of cars, which is slightly less optimistic than my 2263 cars per hour at 60 mph.

Getting back to the subject of Katrina, I would like to address the criticism aimed at the mayor of New Orleans for not busing the population out using the city’s large fleet of school buses. In light of the freeway capacity statistics, I don’t believe it would have been possible to move everyone out using school buses. Aside from the logistical problems of fuel, food, restrooms, and health care, it simply isn’t possible to move that many people away from a hurricane in a timely fashion. Had supplies been trucked into New Orleans immediately following the hurricane, the Superdome would have been a prudent place to shelter residents who had no means to leave the city.

Might have to revise my opinion re: Anderson Cooper

Friday, September 2nd, 2005

I can’t stand watching Anderson Cooper. But he apparently gave a tongue lashing to Senator Mary Landrieu about the federal government’s criminal lack of response to the refugee crisis in the South while patting each others’ backs for their great jobs handling the crisis. Kudos, Mr. Cooper.

Read about it here.

Fascinating blog re: Katrina

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

I posted a link to this guy’s blog yesterday and I have been caught in its grips ever since. I still don’t understand how the guy maintains an internet connection, though one commenter mentioned that fiber only needs power at its access points, so if the fiber isn’t cut then as long as there is power (and the guy has a generator) then connectivity is unbroken.

The violence and anarchy is extremely disheartening. This is the kind of stuff that kills my faith in humanity. This is the time to rise above the catastrophe and help your fellow man, yet the New Orleans refugees have in large part reverted to savagery.

The world needs more people like the man writing the blog. It is absolutely heroic that he would maintain his position to keep his company online, knowing how his clients count on him. As well, I am counting on his perspective on the “real story” inside New Orleans. While not a journalist, for whatever reason his story has conveyed far more to me than all the sensationalized headlines and rumor-mongering that cnn has spewed.

Don’t get me started on Anderson Cooper. What a melodramatic turd that guy is.

Send in the military… now

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

I don’t want to launch into any unconstructive diatribes about Bush’s policy in Iraq weakening the National Guard’s ability to handle domestic emergencies. I’ll save that for later.

At any rate, Bush needs to send the military into New Orleans right now. He should have done so immediately after the hurricane hit, or at least once the major flooding began and we realized the impending humanitarian crisis at the Superdome. He needs to stop with his “zero tolerance of people breaking the law during an emergency such as this” platitudes and take decisive action to restore order to the city. NOW.

Order needs to be restored. Bodies need to be picked up and given due respect. The levees need to be fixed. The city needs to be cleaned and infrastructure fixed. It can be done. The Army Corps of Engineers is well trained and ready to tackle the challenge.

blogging from the inside

Wednesday, August 31st, 2005

This is a trip: directNIC, an internet hosting services provider, is based in New Orleans, and with the help of a dedicated staff and a generator, has kept its servers online for its customers despite being located in an office building in the Central Business District of New Orleans.

A very interesting blog about it can be found here.

Hurricane Katrina

Wednesday, August 31st, 2005

Thoughts and prayers to all affected by hurricane Katrina.

Watching the video of New Orleans, I can’t see a future for the city. New Orleans will be under water until the levee between the city and Lake Pontchartrain is fixed, and it doesn’t look like that will happen anytime soon. Until then, what will residents do? Will there be anything to come back to?

I hope that New Orleans is rebuilt, and that it is done in such a way as to be able to weather hurricanes in the future. It would be a shame to lose one of America’s cultural and historical treasures.

While the media focus continues to be on New Orleans, I don’t want to overlook the devastation in Mississippi and Alabama. Gulfport (news link; news link; Damage report; Google news) , where I visited a couple of years ago, took a horrendous beating and I heard that several of the buildings that I remember are simply gone. There was a casino built on the water to escape zoning regulations (basically a six-or-so story floating building) and I heard it had washed ashore and was somewhere near highway 90.