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by Charles Carreon
6:36pm, September 16, 2005
Cheney pulled Mississippi power workers away from their
work restoring electricity to hospitals that had been dark for several
days, delaying the return of power to those facitilities for 24 hours.
The workers weren't told until after they'd worked
sixteen straight hours that they were making the world safe for Big Oil
and risking their lives to help out Cheney's cronies at Colonial Pipeline
Company. Everything about the work was dangerous, their foreman said,
likening the job to chainsawing wood in the dark with a flashlight. Given
that the job was decorated with broken power lines, flaming tree branches,
and floodwaters, it's a tribute to their skill they succeeded.
I can understand Cheney's alarm, and why he felt it was
a national emergency. He is very identified with the flow of oil. Having
had a quadruple bypass, he knows that continuous, uninterrupted fluid flow
is the way to health and survival. He personally identifies with the oil
infrastructure almost as if the pipelines were his own veins, and the flow
of oil his blood. See illustration below.
Power crews
diverted -- Restoring pipeline came first
By Nikki Davis
Maute
Shortly after
Hurricane Katrina roared through South Mississippi knocking out
electricity and communication systems, the White House ordered power
restored to a pipeline that sends fuel to the Northeast. That order - to
restart two power substations in Collins that serve Colonial Pipeline Co.
- delayed efforts by at least 24 hours to restore power to two rural
hospitals and a number of water systems in the Pine Belt.
At the time,
gasoline was in short supply across the country because of Katrina. Prices
increased dramatically and lines formed at pumps across the South.
"I considered
it a presidential directive to get those pipelines operating," said Jim
Compton, general manager of the South Mississippi Electric Power
Association - which distributes power that rural electric cooperatives
sell to consumers and businesses.
"I reluctantly
agreed to pull half our transmission line crews off other projects and
made getting the transmission lines to the Collins substations a
priority," Compton said. "Our people were told to work until it was done.
"They did it
in 16 hours, and I consider the effort unprecedented."
Katrina
slammed into South Mississippi and Southeast Louisiana on Aug. 29, causing
widespread devastation and plunging most of the area - including regional
medical centers and rural hospitals - into darkness.
The storm also
knocked out two power substations in Collins, just north of Hattiesburg.
The substations were crucial to Atlanta-based Colonial Pipeline, which
moves gasoline and diesel fuel from Texas, through Louisiana and
Mississippi and up to the Northeast.
"We were led
to believe a national emergency was created when the pipelines were shut
down," Compton said.
White House
Call
Dan Jordan,
manager of Southern Pines Electric Power Association, said Vice President
Dick Cheney's office called and left voice mails twice shortly after the
storm struck, saying the Collins substations needed power restored
immediately.
Jordan dated
the first call the night of Aug. 30 and the second call the morning of
Aug. 31. Southern Pines supplies electricity to the substation that powers
the Colonial pipeline.
Mississippi
Public Service Commissioner Mike Callahan said the U.S. Department of
Energy called him on Aug. 31. Callahan said department officials said
opening the fuel line was a national priority.
Cheney's
office referred calls about the pipeline to the Department of Homeland
Security. Calls there were referred to Kirk Whitworth, who would not take
a telephone message and required questions in the form of an e-mail.
Susan
Castiglione, senior manager of corporate and public affairs with Colonial
Pipeline, did not return phone calls.
Compton said
workers who were trying to restore substations that power two rural
hospitals - Stone County Hospital in Wiggins and George County Hospital in
Lucedale - worked instead on the Colonial Pipeline project.
The move
caused power to be restored at least 24 hours later than planned.
Mindy Osborn,
emergency room coordinator at Stone County Hospital, said the power was
not restored until six days after the storm on Sept. 4. She didn't have
the number of patients who were hospitalized during the week after the
storm.
"Oh, yes, 24
hours earlier would have been a help," Osborn said.
Compton said
workers who were trying to restore power to some rural water systems also
were taken off their jobs and placed on the Colonial Pipeline project.
Compton did not name specific water systems affected.
Callahan's
Visit
Callahan is
one of three elected public service commissioners who oversee most public
utilities in the state. Commissioners, however, have no authority over
rural electric power cooperatives.
Nevertheless,
Callahan said he drove to Compton's office on U.S. 49 North in Hattiesburg
to tell him about the call from the Department of Energy. Callahan said he
would support whatever decision Compton made.
Callahan said
energy officials told him gasoline and diesel fuel needed to flow through
the pipeline to avert a national crisis from the inability to meet fuel
needs in the Northeast.
Callahan said
the process of getting the pipelines flowing would be difficult and that
there was a chance the voltage required to do so would knock out the
system - including power to Wesley Medical Center in Hattiesburg.
With Forrest
General Hospital operating on generators, Wesley was the only hospital
operating with full electric power in the Pine Belt in the days following
Katrina.
"Our concern
was that if Wesley went down, it would be a national crisis for
Mississippi," Callahan said. "We knew it would take three to four days to
get Forrest General Hospital's power restored and we did not want to lose
Wesley."
Compton,
though, followed the White House's directive.
Nathan Brown,
manager of power supply for the electric association, was responsible for
overseeing the delicate operation of starting the 5,000-horsepower pumps
at the pipeline.
Engineers with
Southern Co., the parent company of Mississippi Power Co., did a dual
analysis of what it would take to restore power and Brown worked with
Southern Co. engineers on the best and quickest way to restore power.
Work began at
10 a.m. Sept. 1 and power was restored at 2 a.m. Sept. 2 - a 16-hour job.
Night Work
A good bit of
the work took place at night.
Line
foreman Matt Ready was in charge of one of the teams that worked to power
the substations and the pipeline. Ready's shift started at 6 a.m. Sept. 1;
he received word about the job four hours later and saw it to completion.
"We were told
to stay with it until we got power restored," Ready said. "We had real
safety issues because there were fires in the trees on the lines and
broken power poles."
Ready
described working on the lines in the dark like attempting to clear fallen
trees out of a yard with a flashlight and a chain saw.
"Everything
was dangerous," he said.
Ready said the
crew members did not learn they were restoring power to pipelines until
after the job was done.
How did they
feel about that?
"Is this on
the record?" Ready asked. "Well, then, we are all glad we were able to
help out."
Compton said
he was happy to support the national effort. But he said it was a
difficult decision to make because of the potential impact in the region
had the plan not worked and the area's power restoration was set back
days.
"It was my
decision to balance what was most important to people in South Mississippi
with this all-of-a-sudden national crisis of not enough gas or diesel
fuel," Compton said.
"In the
future, the federal government needs to give us guidelines if this is such
a national emergency so that I can work that in my plans."

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