Notices served against BP, Transocean and Halliburton by US government over Deepwater Horizon disaster BP and its partners on the doomed Deepwater Horizon oil rig face fines of up to $45m after receiving formal notice of a series of safety violations leading up to the Gulf of Mexico disaster. In a first step of a long legal battle, the interior department said BP, rig operator Transocean and contractor Halliburton between them broke 15 rules governing offshore drilling ahead of the 20 April 2010 explosion. Eleven workers were killed and 4.9m barrels of oil were pumped into the Gulf of Mexico before the well was capped. Wednesday’s notices mark the first time the US government has gone after contractors – in this case Transocean and Halliburton – in addition to oil companies. The tactic could influence lawsuits between BP and its partners over their responsiblility. BP still faces separate penalties of up to $21bn for environmental violations. The notices have come a day before executives from all three companies are due to testify before Congress on the findings from the latest investigation. A coast guard finding last month said cost-cutting by BP and its partners were “contributing causes” of the fatal blowout. Michael Bromwich, director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, said in a statement that the notices of non-compliance were a first step in addressing the violations detailed in that investigation. “Companies that violate federal regulations must be held accountable,” he said. “The joint investigation clearly revealed the violation of numerous federal regulations designed to protect the integrity of offshore operations.” BP received seven of the notices, including failure to maintain control over the well, failure to prevent pollutants from leaking into the Gulf and health and safety violations. Transocean was cited four times, for failing to control the well and the blowout preventer, the last line of defence against a disaster. Halliburton was cited four times, for failure to cement the well properly and for health and safety violations. The relevant fines are capped at $35,000 a day per incident – an amount that Bromwich has in the past described as too low to be an effective deterrent. It would cap the fines on BP and the other companies at about $45m if they were held to be in violation for the duration of the 87-day spill. BP faces far stiffer penalties under the US Clean Water Act, which is assessed on the amount of oil spilled and could cost the companies up to $21bn. The companies have 60 days to appeal against the sanctions. Transocean said it would appeal. All three companies are pursuing lawsuits against one another and BP said in a statement that the notices showed its partners were partly to blame. “We continue to encourage other parties, including Transocean and Halliburton, to acknowledge their responsibilities in the accident.” BP Oil spills BP oil spill United States Suzanne Goldenberg guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …The Wall Street protesters are finally getting the attention they have been seeking, it seems. Eric Cantor, the No. 2 Republican in the House, denounced the Occupy Wall Street protests Friday as “mobs,” and Michael Bloomberg, the mayor of New York, charged demonstrators with “trying to take away the jobs of people working in this
Continue reading …The Obama administration is appealing a federal judge’s decision to let much of Alabama’s immigration law to go into effect last week by asking the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to hear the case to block its enforcement. The Justice Department says the law will “expose persons lawfully in the United States, including school
Continue reading …Think you could survive a month in poverty without winding up broke? An innovative online game, Spent, lets you find out. The project of a North Carolina ministry and an ad agency, Spent asks users to make the kind of choices that low-income people routinely face: whether to pay the electric bill or the phone
Continue reading …Young illegal immigrants in California can now compete for state-funded scholarships and grants in order to attend the state’s prestigious universities and community colleges. Gov. Jerry Brown signed the measure into law this Saturday. Illegal immigrants who graduated from the state’s high schools could already attend college at in-state rates and compete for privately funded
Continue reading …Another critically injured after gunman opens fire in Salon Meritage in coastal town of Seal Beach Eight people have been killed and another critically injured in a shooting at a California hair salon. The shooting happened at 1.21pm local time at the Salon Meritage on Pacific Coast Highway in the coastal town of Seal Beach, an Orange County fire official said. Six victims died at the scene and another two of the three critically injured victims died later in Long Beach Memorial hospital, said Seal Beach police sergeant Steve Bowles . Police officers arrested the suspected gunman half a mile from the scene after fleeing in a car and he was taken into custody. “We feel very confident at this point that we do have the single and only suspect in custody,” Bowles said. “He appeared cooperative and did not resist our officers at all when he was detained.” The officer also told local KCAL-TV that multiple weapons were seized. Bowles said detectives were trying to establish a motive for the violence but believed there was some kind of relationship between the gunman and someone inside the salon, which was filled with customers at the time. He did not know how many of the victims were employees or how many were clients. All eight of the dead were believed to have been shot inside the salon, and one man who was wounded was found outside, but it was not clear where he was struck, the officer said. “There are survivors from inside the salon that escaped without harm,” he added. The coastal town of about 25,000 inhabitants is about 30 miles south-east of Los Angeles. California Gun crime United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fighters celebrate ‘capture’ of Gaddafi’s son Mutassim and tighten grip on troops loyal to former leader The Libyan coastal city of Sirte was on the brink of falling to government forces as fighters loyal to the former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi were trapped in a tightening pocket 500 metres wide and twice as long. The latest gains for the forces of the National Transitional Council (NTC) came as its officials said Gaddafi’s son Mutassim, who had been commanding the city’s defences, had been captured in a car trying to flee with his family on Tuesday evening and taken to Benghazi for questioning. News of the capture, which was announced by Colonel Abdullah Naker of the NTC, spread quickly around jubilant government fighters in the area who fired tracer and anti-aircraft rounds into the air to celebrate. The reported arrest of Mutassim – referred to as “Number 1″ on pro-Gaddafi forces radio traffic – underlined the depth of the collapse of Sirte’s loyalist defenders in the past week. Mutassim is the first major figure in Gaddafi’s inner circle to have been captured by the NTC. “More than 80% of Sirte is now under our control. Gaddafi’s men are still in parts of neighbourhood No 2 and the ‘Dollar’ neighbourhood,” said NTC field commander, Mustah Hamza, early in the day. By afternoon, it appeared that barely 5% of the city remained under the control of those fighting for Gaddafi, who is still on the run after ruling Libya for 42 years. As government forces completed the clearing of the city’s east, rumours began to circulate that it had finally capitulated. “Sirte is free!” said one man heading to join the fighting in the city centre. Behind him, about 30 heavily armed pickup trucks had gathered in Green Square, firing weapons in the air near a group of prisoners. As loyalist fighters cleared houses, posters depicting Gaddafi were doused in petrol and set on fire while green flags – the symbol of Gaddafi’s rule – were torn down or shot through. “We have to clear these streets and houses one by one,” said Lofti al-Amin, a fighter wearing a peaked airline pilot’s hat. “We have found 10 guns so far and taken seven prisoners. We go into the houses and, if there are people there, we ask if they have guns. If they don’t, we try to help them leave.” In one street, surrounded by the sound of conflict, a family tried to pack straw under the wheels of their bogged-down car so they could escape the fighting. There was widespread looting and a steady procession of expensive cars – many damaged by gunfire – were being towed out of the city. Libya’s de facto leader, Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, said he was optimistic that the ex-rebels would declare total victory in less than a week, opening the way for a new transitional government to be formed within a month. “I hope that liberation will be declared in less than a week, after we free Sirte, and within less than a month we will form a transitional government and the youth and women will have a role in that,” he said. Libya’s new rulers have promised to declare victory after the capture of Sirte and to name a new government that will guide the oil-rich north African nation to elections within eight months. Gaddafi’s supporters hold the desert enclave of Bani Walid, but the new leaders say Sirte’s capture will give them full control of the country’s ports and harbours, allowing them to move forward with efforts to establish a democracy. With nowhere to escape and hemmed in from three sides, a hardcore of the defenders of Gaddafi’s home town – perhaps fearful of the treatment they believed they would receive if captured – continued to fight it out against hopeless odds. At times, government fighters were forced to try to advance through thigh-deep water and sewage flooding large parts of the streets of District 2, the western neighbourhood and last location where Gaddafi forces are still holding out. Shots from the high buildings ahead of them threw up small spouts of water. Occasionally a pro-Gaddafi fighter could be seen on a rooftop. According to government fighters, the area had been deliberately flooded to slow them as they cleared the last streets under Gaddafi control. Despite the inevitability of defeat in Sirte, machine gunners on the rooftops continued to target the government forces while others fired RPGs and mortars. In one frontline area where fighters were gathering, one building was repeatedly hit, bullets ripping across its top floors. The government forces replied with volleys of rockets and anti-aircraft fire that left the buildings being targeted blackened and shattered. The already angry mood towards the loyalists hardened with the discovery, in three locations in the city, of 30 captured men who had been cuffed and executed. According to government commanders, the men had been killed on Tuesday. International Medical Corps, a non-profit organisation, said it visited the Ibn Sina hospital in Sirte on Tuesday and said it was “functioning at the bare minimum”. The organisation is providing staffing and support to the field hospital, 30 miles outside Sirte. It says more than 600 patients have been seen at the field hospital, 359 seen in the first week of October and 226 on 7 October alone, when forces loyal to the interim government launched their major offensive on Sirte. The IMC director for Libya, Hakan Bilgin, said: “We have got people who are being injured directly related to the conflict, we’ve got people having respiratory problems owing to stress, people not having proper medication, people suffering from fatigue. We’ve been to the Ibn Sina hospital. It is in very bad shape, almost destroyed. It is unusable.” Libya Muammar Gaddafi Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East Peter Beaumont guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Last week, we wrote about young people who have been forced by the sour economy to put major life steps on hold. Now, via the Wall Street Journal, here’s a statistic that reinforces that bleak picture. In 2000, according to Census Bureau data, the median annual earnings of a college grad (without a graduate degree)
Continue reading …A majority of state governments have cut funding to K-12 schools this year as they struggle to balance their budgets without the $100 billion infusion from the federal stimulus that has now dried up. Illinois, Kansas, Texas and Wisconsin have cut overall funding by more than 10 percent since the last fiscal year, according to
Continue reading …About 200 Americans are living in a decommissioned Marine training base in the middle of the California desert called “Slab City.” Evelyn Nieves profiles some of the squatters–most of them victims of the recession–here. (Via Gawker)
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