Due to high levels of butadiene a Shelter in place issued, school canceled tomorrow. I was cutting up deer when I found out, loaded up Weston and we out! This is getting ridiculous! The house we moved to after our house flooded is right at 1 mile away maybe closer as the crow flies. We are safe at my mom’s in Nederland.
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TPC Butadiene leak!
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You ain't lying. Wife and baby headed back over here to our house in Mont Belvieu. With windows and door still plywooded up there isnt going to be a shelter in place going on there.
The wind was ok at the time of the shelter in place but was supposed to start blowing right to our house later tonight.
Guess we can add more money into those evacuation checks they are supposed to cut us on Friday. Their guy still hasn't came by the house to assess the damage yet.
Hope they get this B.S. under control.
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It is very frustrating. I am lucky to be a few miles away but lots of my employees affected and killing my business. I really feeel for the local mom and pop places. I am starting to not like living here...Hurricane, 4 day power outage, flood and now this all in 7 years. Glad I didn’t grow up here or I would probably be outta here.
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Originally posted by TX CHICKEN View PostIt is very frustrating. I am lucky to be a few miles away but lots of my employees affected and killing my business. I really feeel for the local mom and pop places. I am starting to not like living here...Hurricane, 4 day power outage, flood and now this all in 7 years. Glad I didn’t grow up here or I would probably be outta here.
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Originally posted by ttaxidermy View PostProperty values will take a huge hit over all of this garbage..
So they placed chemical plants there, then idiots wanted the land nearby
It is naturally prone to major weather problems and also man made problems, thusly grossly over priced
You buy in a swamp and toxic waste center , violin music shouldn’t be played every time something happened
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Originally posted by pilar View PostThey are grossly over inflated anyway, that area is uninhabitable
So they placed chemical plants there, then idiots wanted the land nearby
It is naturally prone to major weather problems and also man made problems, thusly grossly over priced
You buy in a swamp and toxic waste center , violin music shouldn’t be played every time something happened
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Originally posted by Bayouboy View PostEven with all that said.... It is the company's responsibility to keep that crap inside their fence line. And, some of the damage done was miles away. From cradle to grave it is theirs.
Quote from the paper
“” Residents who live near sprawling oil and chemical complexes in parts of southeast and east Texas grow as accustomed to fires and false alarms as Oklahomans do to tornadoes and as Californians do to earthquakes. Jefferson County alone is home to four refineries and 32 chemical plants, and the history of the wider region can be told in some ways through explosions. The worst industrial accident in American history unfolded 100 miles west of Port Neches: On April 16, 1947, hundreds of people were killed in Texas City after a blast on a ship carrying ammonium nitrate set off huge fires.
“That thought sits in the back of your mind because there are refineries everywhere,” Ashlyn McDaniel, 23, an insurance agent who grew up in Port Neches, said from her apartment in Nederland, where she was defying an evacuation order.
“We’ve all thought, ‘What if one of these things goes up in flames one day?’” she said. “But we never really imagined it would happen.”Last edited by S-3 Ranch; 12-05-2019, 10:42 AM.
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Originally posted by pilar View PostThat’s highly debatable ( containment) what is a safe zone and who should assume such inherent risks
Quote from the paper
“” Residents who live near sprawling oil and chemical complexes in parts of southeast and east Texas grow as accustomed to fires and false alarms as Oklahomans do to tornadoes and as Californians do to earthquakes. Jefferson County alone is home to four refineries and 32 chemical plants, and the history of the wider region can be told in some ways through explosions. The worst industrial accident in American history unfolded 100 miles west of Port Neches: On April 16, 1947, hundreds of people were killed in Texas City after a blast on a ship carrying ammonium nitrate set off huge fires.
“That thought sits in the back of your mind because there are refineries everywhere,” Ashlyn McDaniel, 23, an insurance agent who grew up in Port Neches, said from her apartment in Nederland, where she was defying an evacuation order.
“We’ve all thought, ‘What if one of these things goes up in flames one day?’” she said. “But we never really imagined it would happen.”
So your saying its not the company's responsibility to contain their products and pollution?
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Originally posted by pilar View PostThat’s highly debatable ( containment) what is a safe zone and who should assume such inherent risks
Quote from the paper
“” Residents who live near sprawling oil and chemical complexes in parts of southeast and east Texas grow as accustomed to fires and false alarms as Oklahomans do to tornadoes and as Californians do to earthquakes. Jefferson County alone is home to four refineries and 32 chemical plants, and the history of the wider region can be told in some ways through explosions. The worst industrial accident in American history unfolded 100 miles west of Port Neches: On April 16, 1947, hundreds of people were killed in Texas City after a blast on a ship carrying ammonium nitrate set off huge fires.
“That thought sits in the back of your mind because there are refineries everywhere,” Ashlyn McDaniel, 23, an insurance agent who grew up in Port Neches, said from her apartment in Nederland, where she was defying an evacuation order.
“We’ve all thought, ‘What if one of these things goes up in flames one day?’” she said. “But we never really imagined it would happen.”
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