Articles | Less
Editorial: Editorial: Cedar Key News Annual Meeting March 29 March 8th, 2008
Editorial: Let School Board Know What Should Be Taught February 15th, 2008
Editorial: What Is a Fair Tax? February 4th, 2008
Editorial: Inconsistent Appraisals Harm Taxpayers December 17th, 2007
Editorial: Energy Crisis? November 30th, 2007
Editorial: Florida Water War Heat Up October 16th, 2007
Editorial: Nobel Prizes in Medicine October 5th, 2007
Editorial: Editorial: Same Rules for Everyone September 22nd, 2007
Editorial: Demand Action on Bridge Repair August 8th, 2007
Editorial: Local Response Needed to Stem Clam Poaching July 24th, 2007
Editorial: Money, Money, Money...Votes July 9th, 2007
Editorial: We Celebrate Independence and Clams June 26th, 2007
Editorial: Are You Ready for Hurricane Season? June 12th, 2007
Editorial: The Sources of Progress in Medicine May 30th, 2007
Editorial: A New Era of Politics and Religion May 17th, 2007
More
|
|
|
Accidents Happen? The Dance Begins | Accidents Happen? The Dance BeginsEditor The legal definition of an accident is: an unforeseen event that occurs without anyone`s fault or negligence. BP released its "Deepwater Horizon Accident Investigation Report" September 8, 2010. The report emphasizes the complexity of the event. It assigns no blame, but suggests that many business entities were involved, muddying the water, so to speak. The BP investigators identified eight problem areas, six technical and two faulty human decisions. (The BP "accident" report is available online.) If any one of the acknowledged failures could result in an explosion, it seems that the combined probability of an explosion was predictable. Of the many off-shore oil wells, few explode, except for the one two weeks ago, and the BP well. It is in BP`s interest to spread the blame for what BP chooses to call an event without anyone`s fault or negligence. However, two problem areas were human failings. "Finding 3: The Transocean rig crew and BP well site leaders reached the incorrect view that the (pressure) test was successful and that well integrity had been established." Finding 4: The rig crew did not recognize the influx (of gas) and did not act to control the well until hydrocarbons had passed through the BOP and into the riser." Blaming the victims is underway. Eleven men died and many more were injured. BP says the Transocean rig crew was at least part of the cause of the disaster that BP calls an accident. The courts will answer whether the disaster was an accident "without anyone`s fault or negligence." Stay tuned! |
|
|
|
|