Title: Bouchard B. No. 120 Response Overview
1Bouchard B. No. 120 Response Overview
NRT- RRT 2004 Co-Chairs Mtg
- CAPT Mary
Landry - US Coast Guard
- MSO Providence
2COTP PROVIDENCE ZONE
3Spill Source
- Bouchard B. No. 120 with tug Evening Tide
- Enroute Staten Island to ESCO Terminal in canal
- Product
- Capacity 5m gal.
- Onboard 4m gal 6 fuel oil
- Night
- ICP UC established
- Dive survey
- Initial soundings estimate 14,700 gallons
- Investigation continues
4Incident Command Post
- An Incident Command Post was up and running the
night of the spill at the Coast Guard Air Station
Cape Cod - The Command Post was later moved to the
Massachusetts Maritime Academy
5Unified Command First Incident Action Plan
Objectives 4/28/03
- Comprehensive UCP Diagram
- Impact Assessment
- Max On Water Recovery
- Prep For Shore Impact
- Review Spill Trajectory for 24hr Period
- Best Response
- Site Safety Plan
- Review Assess Dusk Flight
- Hold Press Conference
- Watch Rotation
6(No Transcript)
7Spill Location Buzzards Bay
- Estuary of National Significance (one of 28)
- 280 miles of irregular coastline
- Approximately 8 mi. x 28 mi.
- 11 miles of public beaches
8Shoreline Oiling (any amount)
Block Island
9Shoreline Oiling (severity)
10Shoreline Cleanup
Cleanup techniques varied depending on the
shoreline characteristics and wildlife habitat.
11Some areas required total removal and replacement
of beach and the groins.
12Environmental Impacts
- Wildlife
- 461 dead birds 304 DOA, 20 released, remainder
died in - rehab
- Unclear on impact of
- Endangered Species
- Shellfish closures
- 4M shellfish industry
- Bay partially closed 4/28, completely 4/30
- Half of bay reopened 5/22
- Lost human use
- Several towns closed beaches for cleanup
operations - Maintenance mode achieved forpublic beaches by
Memorial Day
13Listed Species Roseate Tern
- Ram, Bird, Penikese Islands
- Ram Island Hazing and Cleanupinvolved up to 70
people for 3 weeks
14Additional Issues
- Wildlife Rehabilitation
- Tri-State Bird Rescue
- Cultural
- Tribal monitors for sensitive sites
- Cobble removal replacement
- ACOE assistance permitting
- Shoreline Cleaning Agent Use
- Tailgate test of Corexit 9580, PES-51, CytoSol
- Endangered Species Act Consultation Process
- Motivation/Focus
- Measurement System- Safety s
- Open Comms/Dialogue about professional tensions
15Valuable website for spillBuzzards Bay Project
(National Estuary Program Site)
Besides 7 different Coast Guard Units and the
affected towns, 31 different agencies were
involved with the B NO. 120 Oil Spill response.
16Public Information/Outreach
- A volunteer from the Buzzards Bay project
recorded important information from the morning
Ops. brief to post on a website available to the
public. The site not only gave a brief summary
of the Unified Command but also contained
shoreline maps with the status of the cleanup and
the Master Plan for shoreline Ops.
17Public Information/Liaison/Political
The Unified Command met with the Governor,
Senators, Congressmen, MA Attorney General,
towns, homeowner associations and the media to
keep the public updated on the progress of the
clean up and to provide information on the claims
process.
18Volunteers
- Volunteers worked around the clock answering
phones, participating in wildlife survey teams
(both dead and live bird pickups), conducting
training sessions for live bird rehabilitation,
SCAT guides, beach cleanups and delivering over
4,000 information packets and baby oil to beaches
and residents throughout the impacted areas
19REGIONAL RESPONE TEAM SUPPORT
- Notifications to the RRT Concurrence Network for
response related actions - Direct notifications to the Co-Chairs
- Most RRT agencies were involved directly via the
MSO, not via the RRT - The RRT Coordinated with the FOSC to provide Army
Corps resources via the RRT ACOE rep