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Facebook faces anger over delayed project in Oregon

- By Andrew Selsky

TIERRA DEL MAR, Ore. — Facebook’s effort to build a landing site in a village on the Oregon coast for a fiber optic cable linking Asia and North America has run into serious trouble.

First, a drill pipe snapped under the seabed. Workers left 1,100 feet of pipe, 6,500 gallons of drilling fluid, a drill tip and other materials under the seabed as they closed down the site, aiming to try again next year.

Then the Facebook subsidiary waited seven weeks before telling state officials about the abandoned equipment, according to the Oregon Department of State Lands.

Homeowners in Tierra del Mar — located about 65 miles from Portland and which has around 200 houses, no stoplights or cellphone service — had opposed the project from the start, pointing out that it’s zoned residentia­l and that having a cable landing site threatened the character of their community and could invite similar projects.

Now they are furious, and political leaders are too.

Tierra del Mar is home to a mix of profession­als and retirees who share a love of the unspoiled beach that is fringed with coastal fir trees and the deer, eagles and other birds that inhabit the area.

Facebook representa­tives had said Tierra del Mar was one of the few places on the West Coast suitable for the ultra-highspeed cable. It is to link multiple U.S. locations, including Facebook’s huge data center in the central Oregon town of Prineville, with Japan and the Philippine­s, and help meet an increasing demand for internet services worldwide, the company says.

Constructi­on of the cable landing site was supposed to have been done in just a few weeks and completed by the end of April. Instead, the drilling will resume in January — as long as the state doesn’t revoke the permit.

Meanwhile, a lot the size of 10 tennis courts has been stripped of its trees, grasses and other vegetation and is covered with gravel and concrete.

“It’s basically a parking lot,” Jeff Bryner, whose house is next door, said as he looked at the property.

The wide, sandy beach seems undisturbe­d. But under the seabed close to shore sits the drilling equipment, abandoned by a Facebook subsidiary, Edge Cable Holdings.

Lynnae Ruttledge, a retiree with a vacation home in Tierra del Mar, was one of the community organizers opposing the cable landing site.

“They left and didn’t disclose to anyone that they left drilling equipment that is now underneath our seabed. And there is no determinat­ion that that’s wrong, that that’s environmen­tally unsound,“Ruttledge said.

Ruttledge and her husband, Ed, said they believe state agencies also share the blame, for being lax in vetting the project and in following up on the drilling accident.

The Department of State Lands has left it up to Edge Cable Holdings to provide an analysis of potential health, safety, and environmen­tal impacts because of the presence of the abandoned equipment.

“It’s a travesty to me that they are allowing the perpetrato­r of the crime to tell people, ‘Oh, this is what the impact is going to be,’ ” Ruttledge said.

Department of State Lands spokeswoma­n Ali Hansen said the analysis will be reviewed by department staff and independen­t experts as necessary.

Political leaders say Facebook is wearing out its welcome.

State Rep. David Gomberg, a Democrat whose district includes Tierra del Mar, said he was initially neutral on the project and just wanted to ensure that, as it was going through the approval process, locals could pose questions to Facebook. Now he is critical of how the project has dragged on and of the delay in notifying state authoritie­s that equipment was abandoned after the April 28 drilling mishap.

“Facebook has not proven themselves to be a friendly or cooperativ­e neighbor,” Gomberg said last week.

 ?? ANDREW SELSKY/AP ??
ANDREW SELSKY/AP

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