Los Angeles Times

L.A. residents ask pope to intervene in oil field fight

- By Louis Sahagun

Residents of a low-income South Los Angeles community are asking Pope Francis to intervene with the Los Angeles Archdioces­e to prevent an oil operation from reopening two years after its noxious emissions sickened neighbors.

Residents are sending the pope a videotape urging him to help stop AllenCo Energy Inc. from resuming operations on two acres it leases from the Roman Catholic Archdioces­e. Francis issued an encyclical a month ago calling on policymake­rs to take urgent action to pursue alternativ­es to fossil fuels.

On the tape, residents tell stories about foul odors that led to nosebleeds and respirator­y ailments, affliction­s that ceased after AllenCo closed down its operation in the University Park neighborho­od, about half a mile north of USC, to fix leaks and improve its equipment.

Their complaints, reported by The Times in 2013, led to city, state and federal investigat­ions, including an on-site inspection that sickened U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency officials and resulted in more than $99,000 in fines.

AllenCo says it has since made improvemen­ts that are designed to eliminate the harmful emissions and comply with state and federal regulation­s.

After an EPA investigat­ion, AllenCo agreed to spend about $700,000 on up-

grades, including certificat­ion that all flame and combustibl­e gas detectors, firesuppre­ssion systems, atmospheri­c tanks, pressure vessels and piping were up to code. It also agreed to fully enclose a 30-foot-long open trench to prevent noxious mixtures, mostly of oil and water, from being exposed to the atmosphere.

“We’re super close to reopening,” said Tim Parker, vice president of operations at AllenCo.

Before resuming operations, however, AllenCo’s improvemen­ts must be tested or approved by federal, state and local agencies — and those hurdles have not been cleared. Seven of 11 idle wells at the facility, which was up for sale in 2012, have yet to yield a satisfacto­ry demonstrat­ion of their mechanical integrity, state officials said.

Neighbors say they don’t believe the improvemen­ts will stop the harmful emissions, and they don’t believe the company because it denied for years that its emissions were dangerous.

In the video, residents read from a prepared letter asserting that AllenCo “has made a mockery of the regulatory system and was allowed to operate despite their gross negligence, while our community suffered the consequenc­es.”

Among the eight people narrating the video, shot mostly outside the facility’s entrance in the 800 block of West 23rd Street, was Gabriela Garcia, 33, who has lived less than a block away for 14 years.

“My 12-year-old daughter hasn’t had a nosebleed or dizzy spell since AllenCo closed down,” said Garcia, a community organizer with the nonprofit group Strategic Action for a Just Economy.

“Our goal is to persuade the pope to call the Los Angeles archbishop and say, ‘Hey, this is an opportunit­y to put my encyclical into action at the ground level,’ ” she said.

Others on the video include Monic Uriarte, 50, and her 14-year-old daughter, Nalleli Cobo, who was among neighborho­od children who had been suffering from frequent nosebleeds.

“Until AllenCo shut down, our family calendars were filled with my daughter’s appointmen­ts with cardiologi­sts, neurologis­ts and gastroente­rologists who never could agree on the source of her symptoms,” Uriarte said.

Los Angeles Archbishop Jose H. Gomez was unavailabl­e for comment. In a prepared statement, the archdioces­e said that although it “cannot unilateral­ly change the leases to stop oil drilling and has no control of the site, the health and well-being of the entire community is always a priority; that is why we support public safety and air quality regulation­s.”

The site was donated to the archdioces­e in the 1950s by descendant­s of Edward L. Doheny, one of Los Angeles’ early oil barons.

AllenCo bought the oil production facility on the site in 2009 and within a year increased production more than 400%, from 4,178 barrels to 21,239 barrels in 2010.

The neighborho­od complaints began that same year.

Over the next three years, the South Coast Air Quality Management District logged 251 complaints. The agency responded by issuing 15 citations against AllenCo for foul odors and equipment problems.

AllenCo voluntaril­y suspended oil production in 2013 at the request of U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (DCalif.), pending completion of investigat­ions by the EPA, the air quality district, the state Division of Oil, Gas and Geothermal Resources, the city attorney’s office and the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Since then, residents have lodged only a handful of complaints with the air quality district about headaches, itchy throats, nausea and nosebleeds.

AllenCo is trying to negotiate a settlement of the lawsuit filed against it by Los Angeles City Atty. Mike Feuer.

The lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court accuses the company of ignoring years of evidence that it exposed neighbors to harmful noxious fumes and odors.

In May, the AQMD issued a permit allowing AllenCo to restart operations. However, the company still has to comply with the requiremen­ts of the EPA, the state Conservati­on Department and the city Fire Department.

The company must notify the EPA that it has completed all the improvemen­ts at least 15 days before restarting operations.

 ?? Francine Orr
Los Angeles Times ?? SANDY NAVARRO takes video of Gabriela Garcia in front of the AllenCo oil field. Garcia says her daughter hasn’t had a nosebleed or dizzy spell since it closed.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times SANDY NAVARRO takes video of Gabriela Garcia in front of the AllenCo oil field. Garcia says her daughter hasn’t had a nosebleed or dizzy spell since it closed.
 ?? Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ?? ALLENCO ENERGY agreed to spend $700,000 on upgrades to its facility after an EPA investigat­ion.
Mark Boster Los Angeles Times ALLENCO ENERGY agreed to spend $700,000 on upgrades to its facility after an EPA investigat­ion.

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