Elizabeth May said it like it is very well. Where are the other opposition leaders?
I just heard the regional head of the Coast Guard excuse the six hours it took to get the boom in place 'because it was dark and they couldn't determine exactly what they were dealing with'. Well golly, who ever would have thought oil spills could occur at night. Is there a possibility they also didn't think of hurricane force winds and rip tides pushing tankers onto the rocks while conceiving the capabilities for the 'world class spill response' ?
What experience do you have with responding to, organizing and implementing a plan to deal with these types of spills? It's a fair question to ask you given your criticism here. As for responding to hypothetical scenarios of oil spills during dangerous water conditions I guess one would have to weigh the risk of putting people in potentially life threatening situations to install a boom vs. the risk of having ship potentially being pushed up on rocks and leaking oil. If you were in charge of the health and safety of many CCG employees, what would be your call? What would be your justification for putting CCG individuals in harms way to install a boom that may or may not be successfully installed given the conditions you hypothetically suggest?
May said it very well? I completely disagree. May is yet another politician that is climbing on the bandwagon ready to bash the CCG yet she has no experience with what is going on. I don’t necessarily disagree with her comments about budget cuts, but she is speculating at best how these particular cuts impacted the response and cleanup of this spill. I would rather take the opinion of a member of the CCG than a politician. At the end of the day she is a politician like the rest of them in Ottawa (not a scientist, not a biologist, not a member of the CCG) that is at opposite ends of Harper and wants to show it, so I take her opinions on the response and cleanup of this spill with a grain of salt.
Where are the other opposition leaders? Perhaps they aren’t as ignorant as May to jump to conclusions before knowing all the facts. That’s a good thing thank God. I have more respect for a political leader (that is saying a lot) that isn’t so quick to react and act so sympathetic to the public concerns without taking the time to take in all the information first. It is not a coincidence that Clark and Robertson have toned down their rhetoric now since their initial news conferences condemning the CCG response. I believe those that were finger pointing have some fingers pointing back at them. They were too quick to jump at initial reports in the media frenzy and rushed to judgement without hearing what the CCG had to say. At the end of the day, these provincial and civic politicians are not really taking shots at Harper (who doesn’t give a crap about what people in BC say about him now because is too busy solidifying his party’s support in Ontario and Quebec), but at the men and women of the CCG who are doing their best.
Considering that most of the oil on the surface has already been contained I do not see where the massive condemnation is coming from. If most of the oil still remained then I can see some of the criticism. I believe some folks have such a hate for Kinder Morgan that they are so willing to lose objectivity and throw the CCG under the bus so readily. Remember, these are the same people that go and risk their own lives to rescue boaters in distress. They are not just some puppets, but folks that take pride in their jobs. I am glad their leadership is standing up for them in the media – it’s about time. These CCG employees likely didn’t care much for repeated budget cuts from their king back east, but it still does not diminish their dedication to their jobs or specifically their concern about this oil spill.
The province and the feds work on multi-jurisdictional matters so it is not in any government’s interests to create a bunch of animosity. The focus should be working together to get this cleaned up – not premature comments 48 hours after the spill saying that an agency should be relieved of its duties based on initial media reports. Clark should have just stayed at home that day and thought about how her ministries are doing as they scramble for every last cent. I found it hilarious when she was acting like some saviour that was going to swoop in, relieve the CCG and save the day. In my opinion, CCG Assistant Commissioner Roger Girouard knows that the communication breakdown was not limited to the CCG alone, but has decided to not rock the boat with other governments, stop the finger pointing and look at the bigger picture. It was a wise move on his part because if both levels of government (including the municipalities) can’t work together than that is bad news for everyone ultimately.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/vancouver-oil-spill-coast-guard-defends-cleanup-response-time-1.3029785http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/vancouver-oil-spill-coast-guard-fires-back-at-criticism-of-response-1.3030722