John Siegel says “Let’s set the record straight. Coal is Already Shipped Through Oakland And It’s Safe: John Siegel Of Insight Terminal Solutions
Oakland – Let’s set the record straight. The EPA has authorized the shipment of millions of tons of coal throughout the Bay Area for years. These shipments include coal cars running through the city of Oakland, through Jack London Square, the Army Base and other rail points. Over the many years that this has occurred, there have been no reported adverse health effects, nor have there been reports of unhealthy levels of coal dust registered on any of the air monitors operating in West Oakland.
For these reasons and many more, I state unequivocally that the Op Ed in The Oakland Post on November 7 2020, ‘We Still Object to Coal’, and on the Oakland Bulk and Oversized Terminal co-developed with Phillip Tagami (Phil Tagami), disregards science, the truth and the welfare ofthe citizens of Oakland! There are no “inaccuracies” in the “Insight Terminal Solutions” Post article of October 31, ‘Bulk Commodity Terminal Operator Agrees to “Oakland Protocol” Phase-in Plan to Ban Coal’. To the contrary, the inaccuracies are in the article by opponents of the multi commodity bulk terminal.
But you need not take my word for it. Renowned local Oakland physicians, Dr. Washington Burns and Dr. Geoffrey Watson, who have dedicated their lives to caring for Oakland’s underserved residents, state without equivocation that coal in the Oakland Bulk and Oversized Terminal does not pose a health threat to Oakland residents; neither as it is currently shipped and certainly not under the process that will be used by Insight Terminal Solutions. As well, when the case was brought before the federal court on Oakland’s frivolous argument that coal was dangerous, Federal Judge Vincent Chhabria ruled that the City of Oakland failed to produce “evidence that the proposed coal operations would pose a substantial health of safety danger.’
The new state-of-the-art Oakland Protocol process is safe. Insight Terminal Solutions will use covered railcars and a fully encapsulated delivery system that eliminates the possibility of coal dust release. The terminal is also good for Oakland and the community. It will bring hundreds of millions of dollars in city revenue and community benefits.
Building the Oakland Bulk and Oversized Terminal also has the benefit of using coal to eliminate coal. Under the provisions of the 5-3-0 plan, 5 million tons of coal a year would be shipped through the terminal for the first 10 years of operation, and 3 million tons per year for the next 10 years, no more coal would be shipped through the Insight Terminal Solutions facility for the remainder of the 66- year lease. This would amount to a 92 percent reduction, and eliminate an estimated 900 million tons of coal, that would otherwise legally be allowed to be shipped through the terminal in accordance with the ruling of the federal judge. Coal will help pay the cost to build the terminal, but it will also be eliminated in 20 year.
The opposition author also suggest that shipment in covered cars is dangerous because of the potential for spontaneous combustion. This is nonsense! Rail cars have been covered for decades, enclosing various commodities, including coal. Coal is transported along the Mississippi River in covered containers; it is transported by sea in covered containers without combustion or other danger. The manufacturer that Insight Terminal Solutions will use for the Oakland Bulk and Oversized Terminal,Eco-Fab, has been covering rail cars in Europe since the 1970s without incident. This claim of potential spontaneous combustion, like the safety issue, is made up to advance the world view of coal opponents. It has nothing whatsoever to do with what will happen in Oakland.
Failure to issue permits to build a terminal will have devastating legal implications for Oakland. The city will have to repay the state of California over $242 million that the state advanced for development. The city will owe $500 million in damages to CCIG for wrongfully denying the development and not issuing the appropriate permits. The terminal, under its signed 66-year lease with the city, has secured all CEQA permits to operate a multi-commodity terminal that can handle upwards of 15 million tons annually, all of which could be coal per our lease if the city forces the owners to go through a long and costly legal challenge. If the city fails to act, it could jeopardize the option of phasing out coal under the 5-3-0 plan.
More to the point however, the City of Oakland would needlessly lose out on hundreds of high paying jobs, invaluable job training and additional revenue streams that over the life of the lease, could total hundreds of millions of dollars. These dollars could be earmarked specifically for the City’s most underserved and needy of its citizens. Thus, the truth is the risk of perpetuating this fraud by the City of Oakland is stunning. It has been this author’s observation that citizens in Oakland, particularly those who would most benefit and who are most underserved, in fact very much desire to see this terminal built. See the article by Pastor LJ Jennings, entitled ‘Our Community, Our Voice, We Speak for Us!’ in the Oakland Post.
John Siegel
Coal is Already Shipped Through Oakland And It’s Safe: John Siegel Of Insight Terminal Solutions – ITS is a client of Zennie62Media.