Oil-spill protection increased for Strait of Juan de Fuca under U.S. Senate bill

  • Peninsula Daily News Staff and News Services
  • Saturday, May 8, 2010 5:38pm
  • News

Peninsula Daily News Staff and News Services

NEAH BAY — The Strait of Juan de Fuca would be better protected from a large oil spill under a Coast Guard spending bill approved unanimously by the U.S. Senate on Friday.

The bill, sponsored by Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Mountlake Terrace, seeks to designate the entire Strait as a “high volume port area,” which applies federal requirements for oil-spill-response equipment.

The designation currently applies to Puget Sound and as far west as Port Angeles.

More than 600 oil tankers and 3,000 oil barges travel through the Strait annually, carrying about 15 billion gallons of oil to refineries, according to Cantwell.

The bill, which will be sent to a House-Senate conference committee, would extend it to Cape Flattery.

The news was reason for celebration for both the Makah tribe — which has pushed for the legislation for the last six years — and the entire North Olympic Peninsula, especially after seeing what damage a major oil spill can do after the oil platform explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, said Chad Bowechop, Makah marine affairs manager.

“The whole coast will directly benefit,” he said.

The bill also places more restrictions on what vessels can enter the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary.

Bowechop said extending the high volume port area to Cape Flattery would likely lead to more spill response equipment being placed in Neah Bay.

He didn’t know specifically how the federal requirements differ from the state’s.

The Coast Guard spending bill also includes reforms to a multibillion Coast Guard contracting program which were sought by Cantwell.

Senate passage of the spending bill also could set the stage for congressional approval of a sweeping overhaul of federal fishery-safety laws that are contained in a companion bill approved by the House.

Cantwell “strongly supports the fishing-safety legislation,” and she will try to have it included in a final bill that would emerge from the joint House-Senate conference committee, said Katharine Lister, a Cantwell spokeswoman.

Cantwell is chair of a Senate subcommittee with jurisdiction over the Coast Guard and fisheries, but for the past four years she had been unable to gain passage of a Coast Guard spending bill.

Some Republican senators had objected to certain provisions and pursued tactics that would have required a difficult floor fight to gain passage.

In recent days, a compromise deal was struck to make changes to the bill.

Senate Republicans, for example, objected to a provision that would have allowed the Pacific Northwest pollock fleet to replace aging vessels because the provision was unrelated to Coast Guard spending.

This measure was dropped in the final bill approved by the Senate, according to Lister, but Cantwell will attempt to get it restored in the conference committee.

The bill also includes a provision that bans the use of private contractors to manage Coast Guard acquisitions.

Cantwell says that a 25-year, $24 billion program to replace the Coast Guard’s aging fleet has had major cost overruns, and that the legislation is intended to give the Coast Guard more oversight on the contracting process.

More in News

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and docent Hillary Sanders talks about the urchins, crabs and sea stars living in the touch tank in front of her at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center. Pochert, who lives in Sequim, drove to Port Townsend on Sunday to visit the aquarium because the aquarium is closing its location this month after 42 years of operation. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Aquarium closing

Oliver Pochert, left, and daughter Leina, 9, listen as Americorp volunteer and… Continue reading

Tree sale is approved for auction

Appeals filed for two Elwha watershed parcels

Port Townsend City Council to draw down funds in 2025 budget

City has ‘healthy fund reserve balance,’ finance director says

Man flown to hospital after crash investigated for DUI

A 41-year-old man was flown to Olympic Medical Center in… Continue reading

Signal controller project to impact traffic

Work crews will continue with the city of Port… Continue reading

Cities, counties approve tax hikes

State law allows annual 1 percent increase

Health officer: Respiratory illnesses low on Peninsula

Berry says cases are beginning to rise regionally

A puppy named Captain Kirk is getting ready for adoption by Welfare for Animals Guild after it was rescued near Kirk Road. An unsecured makeshift kennel fell out of a truck on U.S. Highway 101 last month and was struck by another vehicle. (Welfare for Animals Guild)
Puppy rescued from wreck to be adopted

A puppy named Captain Kirk is about to boldly go… Continue reading

Festival of Trees raises record $231,000

The 34th annual Festival of Trees, produced by the… Continue reading

Man flown to hospital after single-car collision

A 67-year-old man was flown to an Everett hospital after… Continue reading

Lost Mountain Station 36 at 40 Texas Valley Road recently sold to a neighbor after Clallam County Fire District 3 was unable to recruit volunteers to staff the station. Its proceeds will go toward future construction of a new Carlsborg Station 33. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group file)
District sells one fire station

Commissioners approve 2025 budget