British Petroleum’s Hands

This entry is part 1 in the series Gulf Oil Disaster

oil spill 2 300x199 British Petroleums HandsWhen I was a young boy growing up in Wharton County, my family would once a year drive to Matagorda Bay and buy shrimp off the boats.  We’d take them back to our family farm, clean them, eat some that night and freeze the rest.  After cleaning pounds and pounds of shrimp, your hands would smell for days no matter how many times you washed them.

There may come a day when no young boy does that with his family because of British Petroleum’s oil slick now covering so much of the Gulf of Mexico.  The Southern Shrimp Alliance says they’ve been nearly devastated by foreign competition and this disaster could put them under completely.

British Petroleum’s explosions and messes have haunted my career as a journalist.

pipelinexplosion 200x300 British Petroleums HandsIn 2000, I moved to the small town of Bellingham, Washington to become a radio reporter.  It was just one year after the Olympic Pipeline explosion rocked that community and killed three young boys.  They had been playing with a cigarette lighter near a creek that had been filled with 237,000 gallons of gasoline.  The mayor of Bellingham, Mark Asumundson, has called the boys heroes because the creek runs into downtown, but the boys playing with the lighter ignited the fuel before it could reach the city center.

British Petroleum took over operations of the pipeline and almost immediately began running jet fuel and gasoline through it again before there was ever any explanation as to why the fuel had leaked into the creek.  The community was changed forever but BP washed their hands of it and kept rolling right along.  It was later reported that a city crew doing excavation work in a park had scratched the pipe, leading to the leak.

In 2005, I was working at KTRH in Houston when BP’s Texas City plant exploded, killing 15 people and injuring hundreds of others. I was on the scene reporting for days afterward as to why the plant had exploded.  Despite the fact that there is heavy industry all along miles of the Texas coast, the BP Plant seems to be the one we were always reporting from because it often caught fire or exploded.  What struck me the most about it is that right across the street from the great exploding plant there are homes with play sets for children in the yards.

Shortly after that disaster, the head of the company, unchallenged by anyone in the media, told the people of Southeast Texas, “This is a safe plant.”  BP washed their hands of that and kept rolling right along.

This evening on my radio program in Dallas/Fort Worth, we talked about the history of British Petroleum.  Listen here.

These events led to a day when I would in no way be shocked by BP’s oil rig exploding, killing 11 people and sending millions of gallons of crude onto the surface of the Gulf of Mexico.  No matter how many times they wash their hands of these kinds of disasters, BP’s hands will always smell.

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About Scott Braddock

With over ten years of experience in radio, Scott Braddock brought his love for broadcasting to Newsradio 1080 KRLD in April 2008. He is the host of Beyond the Headlines, which airs weekdays at 2pm on KRLD.Most recently, Scott served as Chief Political Reporter for Newsradio 740 KTRH in Houston, where he was honored with an Edward R. Murrow award for investigative journalism and received recognition for excellence and fairness in political reporting from members of Texas' Congressional delegation.During his five years in Houston, he covered a broad range of issues with a special focus on education and immigration, two of the most important issues facing Texas and the nation. He also reported on stories of national importance including Hurricane Katrina, the prosecution of former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, Andrea Yates' release from prison, the death of Enron founder Ken Lay, and the BP Texas City refinery explosion that killed 15 and injured hundreds more.Scott has moderated congressional debates and served as an analyst of Texas politics.In honor of his many years of service to the Houston community, Houston Mayor Bill White declared Scott's final day in Houston as "Scott Braddock Day." A Texas native, Scott began his radio career at the age of 16 in Brenham spinning records (yes, records) and reading school lunch menus on the air. From that point forward, Scott was hooked. He developed a passion for broadcast communication. He was a disc jockey in Bryan/College Station and later transitioned into news reporting in both Washington State and California.Scott was born in Wharton County and enjoys making trips back to his family farm. In his free time, Scott spends time with his son Alex and his daughter Carolyn.