Here is my latest letter to Cong. Pence and copied to FERC. You may have seen the Greensburg Daily News article already.
December 7, 2008
Representative Mike Pence
1134 Meridian Plaza
Anderson , IN 46204
Re: Rockies Express, LLC Abuse
Dear Congressman Pence:
In our meeting in Greensburg in the fall of 2006, we discussed the Rockies Express, LLC (REX) natural gas pipeline. In that meeting you stated this project must proceed according to the rule of law, which we citizens have done. However, once again REX is in violation of our local laws. This time it appears one of their contract welders had a meth lab in his local hotel room. I am attaching a copy of the article that appeared in the Greensburg Daily News on Friday, December 5, 2008 for your review, and available at this link: http://www.greensburgdailynews.com/archivesearch/local_story_339192448.html
Since the REX East project was announced to landowners and stakeholders in the summer of 2006, REX has violated local laws/ordinances on several occasions, beginning with illegal trespassing on private land and damaging property in the process. Their contract employee, John Taylor, was finally sentenced in Franklin County ( Indiana ) earlier this year, pleading guilty to both offenses.
Then, Decatur County officials found REX contractors offloading and storing gas pipe in the northern part of our county late last year. The local county road official was out looking for a Christmas tree when he discovered what was going on. The county had to fine the landowner for a period of time for not getting zoning approval for this use of his farm land. After several weeks, REX complied.
Now, we have the most egregious offense to date (at least, that we know of) of allowing a drug user to be a welder on the REX pipeline in violation of United States government law. I am printing here for you an excerpt from the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) website:
Drug & Alcohol Regulations
49 CFR Part 199 (PHMSA drug and alcohol testing regulation) and 49 CFR Part 40 (DOT drug and alcohol testing regulation) require operators to conduct drug and alcohol testing of covered employees who perform operation, maintenance, or emergency-response functions regulated by 49 CFR Parts 192, 193, or 195.
And further:
Drug tests required.
§ 199.105 Each operator shall conduct the following drug tests for the presence of a prohibited drug:(a) Pre-employment testing. No operator may hire or contract for the use of any person as an employee unless that person passes a drug test or is covered by an anti-drug program that conforms to the requirements of this part.
In the past, REX has always used the argument that the problem is with their contractors, not Rockies Express. I feel any company that cannot control their sub-contractors, especially welders on the largest natural gas pipeline ever built in the U.S., should be called to account for this. How many other welders and employees are working here in Indiana and elsewhere who have not been tested, or a least monitored for their drug use? I know PHMSA has responsibility for pipeline safety and they will be inspecting the work, but that begs the question. On REX West, PHMSA had to require REX to dig up significant portions of the installed pipe to check for quality of welds. According to credible news accounts, the contractor even threatened inspectors and dumped anchors they were supposed to use to secure the pipe in water body crossings. FERC gives the pipeline operators a lot of leeway regarding compliance with environmental requirements. PHMSA may also do this. In the case of REX, this has not been a good idea and can potentially harm the citizens and environment of Indiana , worse than they already have. We deserve better than this from our government.
I would ask that you contact FERC and PHMSA and have them require REX to submit their pre-employment drug testing records, and have them certify to you how they conduct on-going drug screening, so we can be sure our communities will not be infested with more meth labs from their wayward contract employees. If this requires putting a hold on their current activities, I think it is the least they should be willing to do for the privilege they receive from our federal government.
Showing posts with label drug testing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drug testing. Show all posts
Monday, December 22, 2008
REX Aids our Local Economy
Now I know what Allen Fore, the REX PR guy, means when he says all of the REX contractors coming into a community will add so much to the local economy. Reading this article from the Greensburg Daily News would cause me to have to question the quality of the welds on the pipeline. Too bad REX apparently doesn't require drug screening of its contractor employees. At least his significant other wants her son to only have home made meth because you never know what you might get on the street. I love a family unit with such caring adults in it. Here is the link to the article and I pasted it below:
http://www.greensburgdailynews.com/local/local_story_339192448.html
Public Awareness Nabs Meth Makers
Joe Hornaday
Greensburg Daily News
December 04, 2008 07:24 pm
A quiet room and its strange, powerful odors caused workers at a local hotel to place a call to law enforcement that resulted in the arrests of two individuals for manufacturing meth on Wednesday.
Jeff E. Adams, 47 and Cleva J. Kimbrel, 42, were arrested early in the evening by Indiana State Police (ISP) Master Trooper Chip Ayers of the meth suppression section. The two had only been in Greensburg for approximately two weeks, according to Kimbrel. Both Kimbrel and Adams were from Arkansas and staying in the city while Adams was working on the construction of Rockies Express (REX) pipeline.
Upon arriving at the scene in the hotel room, Ayers said he immediately noticed the strong smell of solvents before speaking to the occupants and searching the room.
“We found an operational meth lab inside their room,” Ayers explained.
Also within the hotel room was Kimbrel’s 17 year-old son, who Ayers said was “higher than a kite” on the drugs when he arrived. Upon further investigation, Ayers discovered that the youth had been using the drugs for some time. Previously, when his mother discovered her son’s drug abuse, she insisted that he use only the meth she created so that it was “safe” and he “would not get poisoned.” After the arrest of Kimbrel and Adams, the 17 year-old was taken out of the mother’s care and put into a temporary foster home elsewhere in the state.
All of the necessary crystal meth precursors and chemicals were found in the hotel room. Ayers said that it was clearly an active meth lab in the process of making the drug. However, it could not be determined if the batches being made were for personal use or for distribution.
Both were charged with separate counts of manufacturing methamphetamines, a Class B felony. If convicted, each could face a sentence ranging from six to 20 years.
Kimbrel and her son accompanied Adams to Greensburg, as part of Adams’ duties as a welder for the installation of the REX pipeline. That pipeline will unite Ohio to Colorado and transport natural gas. The pipeline snakes its way through several Indiana counties, including Decatur.
The arrest of Kimbrel and Adams removed two meth users from the community, and Ayers believes much of the credit for their removal goes to the public.
“Law enforcement can only do so much without the community’s help,” he said.
Often, Ayers and the meth suppression section travel to Indiana communities spreading the word on meth identification. One of the average targets for meth makers is hotels, Ayers said, which is why the meth suppression section focuses on hotel staffs and encourages them to be wary and to keep an eye open for suspicious people.
“The training of hotel employees and staff have really helped us,” Ayers said.
He added the ISP meth suppression section engages in programs with all types of groups to help curb the problem of meth addiction and distribution.
http://www.greensburgdailynews.com/local/local_story_339192448.html
Public Awareness Nabs Meth Makers
Joe Hornaday
Greensburg Daily News
December 04, 2008 07:24 pm
A quiet room and its strange, powerful odors caused workers at a local hotel to place a call to law enforcement that resulted in the arrests of two individuals for manufacturing meth on Wednesday.
Jeff E. Adams, 47 and Cleva J. Kimbrel, 42, were arrested early in the evening by Indiana State Police (ISP) Master Trooper Chip Ayers of the meth suppression section. The two had only been in Greensburg for approximately two weeks, according to Kimbrel. Both Kimbrel and Adams were from Arkansas and staying in the city while Adams was working on the construction of Rockies Express (REX) pipeline.Upon arriving at the scene in the hotel room, Ayers said he immediately noticed the strong smell of solvents before speaking to the occupants and searching the room.
“We found an operational meth lab inside their room,” Ayers explained.
Also within the hotel room was Kimbrel’s 17 year-old son, who Ayers said was “higher than a kite” on the drugs when he arrived. Upon further investigation, Ayers discovered that the youth had been using the drugs for some time. Previously, when his mother discovered her son’s drug abuse, she insisted that he use only the meth she created so that it was “safe” and he “would not get poisoned.” After the arrest of Kimbrel and Adams, the 17 year-old was taken out of the mother’s care and put into a temporary foster home elsewhere in the state.
All of the necessary crystal meth precursors and chemicals were found in the hotel room. Ayers said that it was clearly an active meth lab in the process of making the drug. However, it could not be determined if the batches being made were for personal use or for distribution.
Both were charged with separate counts of manufacturing methamphetamines, a Class B felony. If convicted, each could face a sentence ranging from six to 20 years.
Kimbrel and her son accompanied Adams to Greensburg, as part of Adams’ duties as a welder for the installation of the REX pipeline. That pipeline will unite Ohio to Colorado and transport natural gas. The pipeline snakes its way through several Indiana counties, including Decatur.
The arrest of Kimbrel and Adams removed two meth users from the community, and Ayers believes much of the credit for their removal goes to the public.
“Law enforcement can only do so much without the community’s help,” he said.
Often, Ayers and the meth suppression section travel to Indiana communities spreading the word on meth identification. One of the average targets for meth makers is hotels, Ayers said, which is why the meth suppression section focuses on hotel staffs and encourages them to be wary and to keep an eye open for suspicious people.
“The training of hotel employees and staff have really helped us,” Ayers said.
He added the ISP meth suppression section engages in programs with all types of groups to help curb the problem of meth addiction and distribution.
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