Lawmakers Give Salazar Grilling Over Oil Drilling

May 18, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Interior Secretary Ken Salazar caught sharp criticism from lawmakers Tuesday over the government's failures in overseeing offshore oil drilling, and he acknowledged his department had been lax in holding industry accountable.

Salazar, in his first appearance before Congress since the April 20 accident that unleashed a massive Gulf oil spill, promised an overhaul of the agency that regulates offshore oil drilling to give it "more tools, more resources, more independence and greater authority."

Even as legislators in Washington debated what went wrong, evidence of the dimensions of the problem only grew. Federal regulators nearly tripled the federal waters in the Gulf of Mexico where fishing is shut down because of the spill. And government scientists were studying aerial photos to see if oil from the spill had entered a powerful current that could take it to Florida.

Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M., in opening a congressional hearing into the spill, said Congress wanted to explore "the role of regulatory failure" in the accident and what President Barack Obama has acknowledged for years has been a "cozy relationship" between government regulators and the oil and gas industry.

While the cause of the accident at the BP PLC well and spill has yet to be pinpointed, information uncovered so far raises the question of where the Minerals Management Service, the Interior agency that oversees offshore drilling, was in ensuring that wells are drilled safely, said Bingaman.

Salazar promised an overhaul of federal regulations and said blame for the BP spill rests with both industry and the government.

"There will be tremendous lessons to be learned here," he told legislators, adding that changes in federal law were surely needed.

But Salazar cautioned against overreaction, noting that the Gulf waters produce nearly a third of the nation's oil.

How the government — including Congress — responds to the offshore disaster is crucial, said Salazar, noting that the Challenger space shuttle disaster shut down the space program for 2 1/2 years and the Three Mile Island nuclear accident "shut down the nuclear industry for 30 years."

Salazar said the "blame game" should be set aside until the problem is fixed and the flow of oil is shut off from the BP well 40 miles off the Louisiana coast. He said he expects a report to the president on the spill, due in 30 days, will produce recommendations to improve safety oversight.

That didn't satisfy some of the senators.

"It is long past time to drain the safety and environmental swamp that is MMS," declared Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. "This agency has been in denial about safety problems for years."

Wyden said it was time for the government to "play catch-up ball in a hurry."

Salazar acknowledged problems at the agency.

"We need to clean up that house," he said

Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., noted there had not been a major oil well blowout and spill in the Gulf for decades and asked whether both government and industry had become lax. "I would say, yes," replied Salazar.

Salazar denied reports that MMS had approved a number of new oil drilling applications in deep waters of the Gulf since the Deepwater Horizon explosion and spill.

"We have hit the pause button," Salazar said. He said no new deep water drilling has begun since April 20, and no wells will be drilled until a safety report is completed on the BP spill later this month.

Deputy Interior Secretary David Hayes told the committee that about a dozen applications were approved after April 20, but were suspended on May 6 before work began. No new deepwater wells will be drilled until Salazar submits a 30-day safety report requested by President Barack Obama on May 28, Hayes said.

The 2 1/2-hour hearing by the Senate energy panel was one of three on Tuesday into the oil spill.

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Jim Bunning,
Jeff Bingaman,
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Ron Wyden

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The Clueless One Dear Leader Barack Hussein Obama,needs to Fire

this whole totally incompetent Team Obama or a the folks down on

the Gulf Coast call them "Team Tarabama" and Obama needs to take

full responsibilty for his own incompetent actions and for Obama

dithering for Nine Days before taking any action on this biggest

Oil Spill in US history and be held accountable by Impeachment,

right along with Total Incompetent Sec of Interior Kenny Boy Salazar the Obama answer to Kenny Boy Lay of Enron Fame!....

And,next Dear Comrade AWOL Leader Barack Hussein Obama must

Fire his disaterous dismal serial failure inept and totally

incompetent Sec of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano and also

Fire his affirmative action wimp US Attorney General Eric Holder. As,the fact remains they were as clueless as Obama as to

their roles and their own actions during Obama's Tarabma Gate!

So,very clearly none of the lessons learn from 9-11 and Hurricane Katrina have penetrated the thick skulls arrogant

inept incompetent Obama Administration as well. Since FEMA should have been taken out of Dept of Homeland Security along

with the US Coast Guard Immediately After Hurricane Katrina!

And,the whole worthless Department of Homeland Security Totally

Abolished and Disbanded here and now! Heads Need To Roll and

"The Buck Stops Right On Barack Hussein Obama's Desk" and none

of this BS of Obama "That The Buck Never Stops Here!" Impeach

Brack Obama,Kenny Boy Salazar,Janet Napolitano,and Eric Holder

and Vote Every Current Incumbent Out in 2010 and 2012!

Ralph of AZ 8:02PM May 19, 2010

Here we have a situation that is rife in our governmental systems from local to national! We keep on allowing political hacks, who have no idea as to how to manage complex systems.

We install people who have climbed the ladder of cronyism and placed them in positions that they are incapable of making sound judgements.

We see this tragic situation in our local buildings and highways!

The system is broken!

Frank Drozdick of MA 7:01PM May 19, 2010

Ever since the Reagan years, there have been moves either to avoid regulating or to deregulate. The offshore drilling catastrophe, now in the process of ruining wildlife habitat in and along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, is a current example.

Other examples abound--the economic crash of 2009, the ever increasing numbers of death by shooting here and in Mexico, the polluting of politics by money, the relentless pursuit of profits in the credit card industry and among health insurers, and so on--each and every one attributable to the failure to regulate and/or oversee existing regulations. Somewhere between the fervor, mainly on the Right, to free up regulation for the purpose of increasing economic growth and individual responsibility and, mainly on the Left, the fervor to protect the environment and people from abuse lies the truth. We cannot trust laissez-faire capitalism and we can't trust self regulation. Greed and degrees of irresponsibility take over in both cases too often.

Cozy relationships between our elected officials and vested interests must stop. There are those who have too easy access to senators and representatives, often with money in hand or the promise of future reward. There are those who have no access at all or are routinely denied it. There is no justification for either. Money must be gotten out of politics because money is provably behind the cozy relationships and much that is wrong in existing legislation and the management of it.

The development of new sources of oil offshore and on the mainland in the U.S. is only as necessary as we make it in the way we use carbon based fuel. Severely reduce demand for oil and world supplies are enough. Severely reduce demand ENOUGH, and much of the funding for those who find reason to financially support terrorism disappears. Illegal drugs use can be talked about in almost the same way, as can the explosive growth in firearms production, and, probably, many other social problems. Until we find adequate reason to curb our own appetites for oil, drugs, firearms, etc. there will always be BIG problems like oil spills, drug wars and abuse, deaths by shooting.

Regulations AND the effective management of them can do wonders for the health of a country. Economic health is not the only one that matters and, certainly, the individual careers of politicians do not, in the scheme of things, matter at all.

Ron W. Smith of UT 1:59PM May 19, 2010

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