Daily Camera (Boulder)

Video shows damaged pipeline responsibl­e for leak

- By Hannah Fry, Priscella Vega and Robin Estrin

LOS ANGELES — A video of the sea floor off the Orange County coast this week shows damage to an oil pipeline that sent an estimated 144,000 gallons of crude into the ocean, fouling beaches and threatenin­g ecological­ly sensitive wetlands.

The footage, taken by a remotely operated vehicle on Monday, appears to show a portion of the 4,000-foot section of the nearly 18-mile oil pipeline that had been displaced. Diver reported and video showed a 13-inch split along the pipe’s length, according to the joint unified command overseeing the investigat­ion into the spill.

Martyn Willsher, president and chief executive of the pipeline operator’s parent company, Amplify Energy Corp., described the force as pulling the pipe in an almost “semicircle.”

“The pipeline has essentiall­y been pulled like a bowstring,” he said.

Federal sources told the Los Angeles Times this week that the displaceme­nt could best be explained by a ship’s anchor dragging across the ocean floor and hooking the pipeline, which runs from the Port of Long Beach to an offshore oil platform known as Elly.

There were multiple large cargo vessels in the immediate area of the leak before the oil was spotted.

A final determinat­ion for the cause of the spill may take months, but Coast Guard investigat­ors have come up with no other explanatio­n, federal sources said. Authoritie­s said the video confirms that oil is no longer leaking from the 41year-old pipeline.

Pipeline expert Richard Kuprewicz expects investigat­ors to remove the damaged pipeline, then begin a metallurgi­cal examinatio­n of the steel.

“When did the strain occur?” he asked. “Days before? Or did something in its operation cause it to rupture Friday night? The forensic science is sophistica­ted, and they should be able to tell if the damage was delayed or immediate.”

Cleanup, which some county officials estimate could take months, continued Thursday morning ahead of a storm that meteorolog­ists say could bring 20 mph winds to the region and push oil toward beaches.

By the end of the week, officials expect to have 1,500 workers cleaning oil from beaches and offshore areas from Sunset Beach to Dana Point. Early Thursday, a pollution-control vessel was working off the Huntington Beach coast where a plume of oil has lingered since the spill. Two other vessels were tackling another slick that has slowly moved south over the past four days and is now off the coast of San Clemente, maps show.

More than 5,500 gallons of crude oil have been recovered and 12,860 feet — almost 2K miles — of containmen­t boom have been deployed, according to the Coast Guard.

Rep. Mike Levin, D-san Juan Capistrano, who toured the spill this week by boat and helicopter, said he could see oil stretching down the coast. He’s pushing legislatio­n that would ban future offshore drilling, but he’s also interested in phasing out drilling that’s currently underway.

“It’s just not worth drilling along Southern California’s coast,” he said. “The amount of oil we produce really is a drop in the bucket.”

A cleanup crew works on the beach on Thursday in Newport Beach, Calif.

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — When Natalie Walters arrived at her father’s nursing home, the parking lot was nearly empty and, inside, the elevator made no stops. On the 13th floor, the lights were off and the TVS silent. The last time she was allowed inside, nine months earlier, aides passed in the hall and a nurse waved from the records room.

Now, it felt like a ghost town.

One of the few staffers on duty broke the news: Walters was too late and her father was already dead of COVID-19. In the nursing home’s newfound emptiness, the scream she unleashed echoed in the void.

“It was so still and quiet,” says Walters, whose descriptio­n of desolation at the home aligns with records showing its staffing level has fallen over the course of the pandemic. “How alone must he have been.”

Even before COVID-19 bared the truth of a profitdriv­en industry with too few caring for society’s most vulnerable, thin staffing was a hallmark of nursing homes around the country. Now, staffing is even thinner, with about one-third of U.S. nursing homes reporting lower levels of nurses and aides than before the pandemic began ravaging their facilities, an Associated Press analysis of federal data finds.

“It’s already so low. To drop further is appalling,” says Charlene Harrington, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, whose research on nursing homes has frequently focused on staffing.

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 ?? Frederic J. Brown / Getty Images ??
Frederic J. Brown / Getty Images

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