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The San Francisco Bay oil spill
incident that occurred in November came back to the public eye as the Coast
Guard apparently failed to make a public announcement at the time of the
incident, and moreover, changed the figures, initially reporting a 140 gallons
spill, which later turned out to be 58,000 gallons. The toxic spill stretched
from San Francisco to Sonoma County, which put the authorities on high alert on
November 7. At the time of the incident, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom
complained the city officials have not been immediately notified of the spill.
The major problem here was that
the Coast Guard could have alerted the local authorities, which would have significantly
increased the number of workers and volunteers to deal with the significant oil
spill. The Coast Guard did order an intervention as soon as they found out
about the incident, but they underestimated both the size of the spill and the
spreading area. The consequences for that: only 40 percent of the crude oil has
been collected, leaving the other 60 percent to affect beaches and shore flora
and fauna.
The agency gets highly
criticized for practically rejecting the help of hundreds of volunteers, which
would have significantly changed the oil recovering percentage, but at the same
time the report, which was ordered by Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen, said
the agency also managed to recover a higher percentage than usual. However,
many beaches, such as Fort Baker, Rodeo Beach, Kirby Cove, Black Sand Beach, Tennessee
Valley and Angel Island were greatly affected by the spill.
On November 7, The Cosco Busan
container ship struck a Bay Bridge tower and 58,000 gallons of oil leaked into
the San Francisco Bay. Approximately 1,800 birds were found dead after the
spill, and other 648 died after being rescued. The costs of the cleanup and
recovery were estimated at $61 million, and the operations will continue until
at least May 2008.
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