What a disgrace...
Now at 45%
Whistleblowing can be used as a potent creative tool to help your bureaucracy evolve towards a more enlightened organization. Phone: 1-603-209-4206 steamshovel2002@yahoo.com Note: I constantly update my articles. Comments at the bottom of the article are always welcome!!! Mike Mulligan, Hinsdale, NH
Friday, August 18, 2017
Thursday, August 17, 2017
Browns Ferry Uprate: A Big Duh
These plants can basically only maintain operation of their plants with the current resources. This is going to dilute their technical people resources leading to future poor performance. Everyone knows natural gas is going to continuously challenge grid low prices. They are going to replace or update only 2% of the equipment...the vast amount components won't be changed out.
I believe they can see the operation of this facility is under threat with low electric prices. This is a typical last stand ploy by the dummy utility. It is a waste of money. They are updating 1960s technology. This is un-American.
This ploy as perceived by TVA is a matter of survival...its not in the best interest of the ratepayers.
It is very common outcome the plant permanently shuts down within 5 years of the uprate. Or it could be similar to Grand Gulf where the plant never gets to the capacity factor the plant had prior to the uprate. This guy is getting a haircut with three plants at the same time...
I believe they can see the operation of this facility is under threat with low electric prices. This is a typical last stand ploy by the dummy utility. It is a waste of money. They are updating 1960s technology. This is un-American.
This ploy as perceived by TVA is a matter of survival...its not in the best interest of the ratepayers.
It is very common outcome the plant permanently shuts down within 5 years of the uprate. Or it could be similar to Grand Gulf where the plant never gets to the capacity factor the plant had prior to the uprate. This guy is getting a haircut with three plants at the same time...
Browns Ferry nuke plant to increase power outputThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission on Wednesday approved a TVA request to increase the power-generating capacity of the Browns Ferry Nuclear Power Plant in Limestone County.
- By Evan Belanger Staff Writer
- Aug 17, 2017 Updated 6 hrs ago
The uprate will allow the nuclear plant to increase its power-generating capacity by 14.3 percent by increasing the maximum operating temperature of each of the plant’s three reactors and upgrading related systems.
In a statement, the NRC said staff had reviewed the Tennessee Valley Authority’s evaluations showing the plant “can handle the increased power level” and that NRC had conducted an independent confirmation of the calculations.
“The NRC staff determined that TVA could safely increase the reactors’ output primarily by upgrading certain plants systems and components,” the NRC said in a statement.
The NRC assessment focused on nuclear steam supply systems, instrumentation and control systems, and accident evaluations.
TVA spokesman Jim Hopson said the uprate would enable the plant to produce an additional 450 megawatts of electricity, enough to power about 200,000 homes.
“It’s a significant output in power,” he said...
Tuesday, August 15, 2017
Tuesday, August 08, 2017
Junk Entergy's Southern Fleet: Short Created Leaking Roof Special Inspection At Waterford
Junk Plant Waterford and Severe Continued Capacity Factor Problem With Entergy's Southern Fleet.
NRC Begins Special Inspection at Waterford 3 Nuclear Power Plant
NRC Begins Special Inspection at Waterford 3 Nuclear Power Plant
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has begun a special inspection at the Waterford 3 nuclear power plant to review events that led to and occurred following an unplanned shutdown on July 17. The plant, operated by Entergy Operations, is located near Killona, La.
The plant was operating at full power during a rain and lightning storm when operators decided to shut it down as a precautionary measure. All safety systems responded as expected and the reactor was safely shut down. However, the NRC wants to better understand why some equipment failures occurred.
The two-member NRC team will spend about a week on site developing a chronology of the event, evaluating the licensee’s cause analysis and the adequacy of corrective actions. An inspection report documenting the team’s findings will be publicly available within 45 days of the end of the inspection.
Tuesday, August 01, 2017
Entergy's Southern Fleet Severe Capacity Problems: Profitability
Update Aug 4
Grand Gulf: 87/78/98/88/78
Waterford: 19/18/17/0/0
River Bend: 88/78/65/50/100
Palo Verde 1 80/80/80/80/80
And Watts Bar 2 has been stuck at 14% for two day...below getting the main turbine on the line. It doesn't look good for Watts Bar 2.
Grand Gulf remains stuck at 88%. The other two made it up to 100%.Five days of power history in region IV and more. This is highly erratic operation. with RB and Waterford. The steep power changes from day to day.
Grand Gulf: 87/78/98/88/78
Waterford: 19/18/17/0/0
River Bend: 88/78/65/50/100
Palo Verde 1 80/80/80/80/80
And Watts Bar 2 has been stuck at 14% for two day...below getting the main turbine on the line. It doesn't look good for Watts Bar 2.
Monday, July 31, 2017
River Bend/Waterford Nuke Plants: Race To Get To 100% First.
Yep, both Entergy’s nuclear plants.
Waterford just started up at 18%
Grand Gulf has been recently flailing at a assortment of
power levels. She is at 78% now.
And troubled Watt Bar is at 18% power.
I saying Watts Bar 2 if she doesn't trip?
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
New Plant Watts Bar 2 Tried To Restart from Collapsed Condenser, Then New Scram
This is a very troubled site. Systemic NRC safety culture problems, poor quality equipment and severe capacity factor problems.
Facility: WATTS BAR
Region: 2 State: TN
Unit: [ ] [2] [ ]
RX Type: [1] W-4-LP,[2] W-4-LP
NRC Notified By: BRIAN MCLINAY
HQ OPS Officer: VINCE KLCONotification Date: 07/25/2017
Notification Time: 11:07 [ET]
Event Date: 07/25/2017
Event Time: 04:28 [EDT]
Last Update Date: 07/25/2017Emergency Class: NON EMERGENCY
10 CFR Section:
50.72(b)(3)(iv)(A) - VALID SPECIF SYS ACTUATIONPerson (Organization):
ALAN BLAMEY (R2DO)Event Text
Unit SCRAM Code RX CRIT Initial PWR Initial RX Mode Current PWR Current RX Mode 2 M/R N 0 Hot Standby 0 Hot Standby
MANUAL REACTOR TRIP DUE TO ROD POSITION INDICATION SYSTEM BEING INOPERABLE
"On July 25, 2017, at 0428 Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) Watts Bar Nuclear Plant (WBN) Unit 2 was in Mode 3, beginning a Reactor Startup. While in the initial phase of withdrawing the first of four Control Rod banks, the two associated group demand position indicators deviated greater than 2 steps from each other. In accordance with Technical Requirement 3.1.7, Position Indication System, Shutdown, with one or more group demand position indicators inoperable, the reactor trip breakers are to be opened immediately. Operations personnel opened the reactor trip breakers immediately by initiating a manual trip of the Reactor Protection System (RPS). The Auxiliary Feedwater system was in service and controlling Steam Generator water levels at the time of the event and did not receive any valid actuation signals. No other system actuations occurred as a result of this reactor trip and all systems operated as designed.
"The cause of the position indication system inoperability is currently under investigation.
"NRC Resident Inspector has been notified."
Tuesday, July 25, 2017
Dominion Begs Proverty on Millstone: Governor Orders Study on Viability
Will the study end up having a national scope. This is in the top 3 most expensive state electricity in the nation...what about the less expensive electricity states?
Can Millstone Survive Natural Gas? Malloy Orders State Review
Stephen SingerContact Reporter
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy on Tuesday ordered a state review of whether the Millstone nuclear plant can continue operating in energy markets that increasingly rely on natural gas.
The executive order he signed directs an assessment of the Waterford plant, evaluating the “current and projected economic viability” for its continued operation.
Dominion Energy Inc., Millstone’s parent company, has broadly hinted it would close the plant without legislation it sought rewriting the state’s energy rules giving it broader access to Connecticut’s power markets.
Critics scoffed at Dominion’s threat, citing ISO-New England, the region’s power grid operator, that said the next opportunity to retire Dominion will not be until 2022.
Malloy’s order follows the failure, for the second year in a row, of the legislation Dominion sought. The Richmond, Va.-based energy company said the measure was needed to help compete with abundant and relatively cheap natural gas. Several nuclear plants nationwide have closed recently as natural gas overtakes nuclear energy as the preferred source of power.
Critics of the legislation said rewriting the law to benefit Millstone would have driven up electricity costs for residents and businesses.
Opponents also said Dominion, which refused to make its financial records public, failed to prove it needs special assistance from the state. Malloy’s order authorizes the state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection and Public Utilities Regulatory Authority to use the best available information, including audited financial statements, “and such other financial data that is reasonably requested.”
Malloy’s order directs the two agencies to review the role of nuclear generating plants and large-scale hydropower and measures used to reduce demand, promote energy storage and emissions-free renewable energy.
The agencies are directed to determine the best way to ensure continued progress toward interim and long-term carbon and other emissions targets.
The governor’s directive says a review must consider the compatibility of efforts to reach those targets with competitive wholesale and retail electricity markets and their effect on ratepayers.
Sen. Paul Formica, R-East Lyme, and co-chairman of the legislature’s Energy and Technology Committee, said a study is “is just one step forward, but we also need action.”
“It’s apparent that there is a problem in the market. Given the many nuclear facility closings around the country, it’s clear we need to act now before we become the next state where such a closure occurs,” he said.
The legislation approved by the Senate on the final day of the General Assembly June 7 authorized the state to decide whether to select one of two competitive procurement processes for nuclear power-generating facilities and in some cases, large-scale hydropower plants. The measure died in the House of Representatives.
Malloy’s order cites the lack of adequate natural gas pipeline capacity in New England, the “critical role” of emissions-free sources of electricity such as nuclear and Millstone’s importance to Connecticut’s economy.
A study commissioned in October by Dominion said Millstone generates $1.47 billion in annual economic impact and employs more than 1,000 workers. It accounts for 59 percent of the power consumed by Connecticut utility customers, Dominion said.
Three nuclear plants operate in New England: Millstone, Pilgrim in Massachusetts and Seabrook in New Hampshire. Nuclear power accounted for 30 percent of energy generated in the region in 2015, down from 34 percent the previous year, according to ISO-New England.
The agencies are directed to determine the best way to ensure continued progress toward interim and long-term carbon and other emissions targets.
The governor’s directive says a review must consider the compatibility of efforts to reach those targets with competitive wholesale and retail electricity markets and their effect on ratepayers.
Sen. Paul Formica, R-East Lyme, and co-chairman of the legislature’s Energy and Technology Committee, said a study is “is just one step forward, but we also need action.”
“It’s apparent that there is a problem in the market. Given the many nuclear facility closings around the country, it’s clear we need to act now before we become the next state where such a closure occurs,” he said.
The legislation approved by the Senate on the final day of the General Assembly June 7 authorized the state to decide whether to select one of two competitive procurement processes for nuclear power-generating facilities and in some cases, large-scale hydropower plants. The measure died in the House of Representatives.
Malloy’s order cites the lack of adequate natural gas pipeline capacity in New England, the “critical role” of emissions-free sources of electricity such as nuclear and Millstone’s importance to Connecticut’s economy.
A study commissioned in October by Dominion said Millstone generates $1.47 billion in annual economic impact and employs more than 1,000 workers. It accounts for 59 percent of the power consumed by Connecticut utility customers, Dominion said.
Three nuclear plants operate in New England: Millstone, Pilgrim in Massachusetts and Seabrook in New Hampshire. Nuclear power accounted for 30 percent of energy generated in the region in 2015, down from 34 percent the previous year, according to ISO-New England.
Monday, July 24, 2017
Junk Plant Grand Gulf: Last 100% Was 11 Days Ago
Today was 80%. This is the rest: 80%, 65, 59, 53, 74, 67, 52 64, 64, 82% and 100%
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
Junk Plant Waterford and Severe Continued Capacity Factor Problem With Entergy's Southern Fleet.
My bad, the DGs operated as designed. It would be a blackout if the DGs didn't startup. They just lost off site power...depended on internal power.
Junk Plant Waterford and Severe Continued Capacity Factor Problem With Entergy's Southern Fleet.
Junk Plant Waterford and Severe Continued Capacity Factor Problem With Entergy's Southern Fleet.
The idea this didn't get into a anticipatory ALERT is ridiculous. Something is wrong with the Emergency Classification system.
A LOOP is a big deal. Can you even imagine this in a Cat 4 hurricane.
The isobus leak is a common issue coming from poor maintenance. The idea of possibly the isobus leak and some maintenance thing preventing the DGs not starting is chilling...two failed components showing up in one accident. This condemns Entergy's maintenance on the southern fleet.
I think this all stems from Arkansas Nuclear One. They had to divert monies from the fleet in order to recover from everything discovered in the stator drop accident.
Wonder what the power lever is a Grand Gulf?
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Monday, July 17, 2017
Junk Plant Browns Ferry Junk Safety Relief Valves
A host of precious metal coating on seats and ending in platinum...now two delaminated with platinum and some spring is sprung. I is bad when two component are broken.
July 7, 2017Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant, Unit 2 Renewed Facility Operating License No. DPR-52 NRC Docket No. 50-260https://adamswebsearch2.nrc.gov/webSearch2/main.jsp?AccessionNumber=ML17188A157Subject: Licensee Event Report 50-260/2017-004-00On May 8, 2017, the Tennessee Valley Authority was presented with as-found testing results indicating that four of th hirteen Main Steam Relief Valves (MSRV5) from Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant, Unit 2, were outside the +/- 3 percent setpoint band required for their operability. Troubleshooting determined that three MSRVs exceeded their setpoints when their valve discs failed by corrosion bonding to their valve seats. The valve discs were previously platinum coated to prevent this, but the valve seat's rough Stellite surface caused the coating to delaminate. This was the first Unit 2 MSRV service interval to implement the improved surface treatment since a resolution to the delamination issue was identified in 2015. The valve which failed below its setpoint band was determined to have a faulty pilot spring.Ihese four MSRVs were found to have been inoperable for an indeterminate period of time between April 9, 2015, and February 25, 2017, and longer than permitted by Technical Specifications. The affected valves remained capable of maintaining reactor pressure within American Society of Mechanical Engineers code limits. Additionally, the valves' ability to open under remote-manual operation, activation through the Automatic Depressurization System, or MSRV \utomatic Actuation Logics were not affected. The valves remained capable of performing their required safety unction…
Horrendously Continued Grand Gulf Capacity Issue
Beginning today: 52, 64, 64, 64. Sixty one percent capacity factor...
It's getting worst. They spent a lot of money on fixing equipment, incompetent operators and retraining employees in the last year, and one voluntary four month safety shutdown.
It's getting worst. They spent a lot of money on fixing equipment, incompetent operators and retraining employees in the last year, and one voluntary four month safety shutdown.
Saturday, July 15, 2017
Obama, Exelon, Utilities and the NRC: "The Beat Goes On"!!!
So why didn't all his voters throw in a few bucks each to build his political mausoleum? These utilities and their executives hold so much sway over our elections. Both Democrats and Republicans. Effectively the utilities are so powerful, they have veto power over the politicians and who becomes a politician. The politicians couldn't govern without the utilities, as they know our political system so well. They usually become the top aids of the politicians.
I don't hold these people as much accountable, as the public in general. You all just can't govern your selves anymore in so many ways. You keep scapegoating the politicians, you keep voting for over and over again the same style politician, or just didn't vote. All we do is vote form the least worst politician.
We are all so damaged by our political system!!!!
I don't hold these people as much accountable, as the public in general. You all just can't govern your selves anymore in so many ways. You keep scapegoating the politicians, you keep voting for over and over again the same style politician, or just didn't vote. All we do is vote form the least worst politician.
We are all so damaged by our political system!!!!
Obama Center Adds Exelon to top Donor ListManya Brachear PashmanContact ReporterChicago TribuneTechnology and energy corporations have joined the list of top donors to the Obama Foundation, which on Friday made public the names of more than 700 patrons from the last three months.Exelon and Microsoft have given more than a million dollars to the foundation, which was founded in 2014 but boosted its fundraising efforts after President Barack Obama left the White HouseThe list of new donors also includes at least one anonymous contributor who directed more than a million dollars through a donor-advised fund managed by The New York Community Trust and another who gave a half-million dollars through the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.Chicago's billionaire Crown family gave between $250,001 and $500,000. Meanwhile, the family foundation of investor Andrew Hauptman, owner of the Chicago Fire, has brought its cumulative contribution closer to the million dollars it has pledged.In addition to Hoffman and wife Michelle Yee, two other philanthropists who previously donated have now given more than $1 million: billionaire David Shaw and wife Beth, who advised Obama on financial capability; and through their family foundation, Debbie and Glenn Hutchins, who co-founded a private equity firm specializing in technology and technology-enabled companies such as Skype.Every three months, the foundation posts the names of those who have contributed more than $200 and their gifts, listed in a range of dollars. The quarterly postings lack the specificity of Federal Election Commission filings, which give the exact contribution to candidates for federal office. FEC reports also give information about donors, including their address, employer and occupation.The Obama Presidential Center is slated to open in Chicago's Jackson Park in 2021. While the foundation declines to provide a cost estimate, the George W. Bush library and endowment broke records at more than $500 million.mbrachear@chicagotribune.com
Friday, July 14, 2017
Arkansas Nuclear One: Extraordinary NRC Hand Holding And Little Self-Direction
This is the roadmap of a horribly defective and unsafe organization. We still don't know what drove it. It condemns the NRC oversight and the value of the ROP. Once again a terrible accident, a humongous surprise, in this killing one and injuring eight. Outside the trigging event, we find a horrendous boatload of violations and organization chaos never addressed by the NRC and licensee prior to the accident. Why even have regulations if your don't enforce them. It is the accident that uncovers the never addressed violations. It is the total breakdown on the on site NRC inspection. A good NRC would have observed the darkening storm clouds, hit the plant with enormous resources like just like occurred after the drop accident. The politicians have made the NRC inspectors blind and reactionary...not anticipatory. I am sure there are many plants out there with multitudes of known unaddressed violation just like ANO pre stator drop accident waiting for a big accident...waiting for the accident to exposed the whole rotten show. I guarantee you, another accident in another plant, will soon show up and model this ANO even.
I am sure once the NRC drops their intensive inspection activities, this is what the function of this inspection...the progress will quickly decay away. They just don't have enough funding for upkeep for all their plants
I see chaotic conditions and poor capacity all across Entergy's southern regulated fleet. In propping up ANO, they stole funding from the remaining southern fleet. I am shocked the NRC can't see this association.
I doubt ANO will ever have the capacity factor they had before the stator drop accident... obviously the NRC and licensee corruption was propping up capacity and profits...
***That man wouldn't be dead if the NRC didn't have a regime of not violating all violation. The system would have picked up the disorder and cleared it before the stator drop.
I am sure once the NRC drops their intensive inspection activities, this is what the function of this inspection...the progress will quickly decay away. They just don't have enough funding for upkeep for all their plants
I see chaotic conditions and poor capacity all across Entergy's southern regulated fleet. In propping up ANO, they stole funding from the remaining southern fleet. I am shocked the NRC can't see this association.
I doubt ANO will ever have the capacity factor they had before the stator drop accident... obviously the NRC and licensee corruption was propping up capacity and profits...
***That man wouldn't be dead if the NRC didn't have a regime of not violating all violation. The system would have picked up the disorder and cleared it before the stator drop.
July 14, 2017
EA-14-008 EA-14-088 EA-16-124
SUBJECT: ARKANSAS NUCLEAR ONE – NRC CONFIRMATORY ACTION LETTER (EA-16-124) FOLLOW-UP INSPECTION REPORT 05000313/2017011 AND 05000368/2017011
Junk plant Grand Gulf Capacity Factor and Entergy's Southern Fleet
Entergy's southern fleet is in big trouble. They are not preforming enough maintenance to maintain capacity factor
So Grand Gulf power today is 65% and River Bend is 82% power. Waterford had capacity factor issues coming out of the last outage. Remember ANO 2 just completed the longest refueling in the world.
82, 96, 81, 62%, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 90, 91, 91, 80, 74 81, 50, 3, 0 (6/25)
There is 21 days of RB capacity factor. I get on average about a 70% capacity. RB has had terrible capacity factor for years. It goes way beyond insufficient maintenance...they have had procedure and training problems with the ops people.
Maybe they got all the money in the world...but they don't have the expertise to plan and schedule the kinds of maintenance to maintain decent capacity factor...
So Grand Gulf power today is 65% and River Bend is 82% power. Waterford had capacity factor issues coming out of the last outage. Remember ANO 2 just completed the longest refueling in the world.
June 28, 2017
Mr. Eric Larson Site Vice President Operations Entergy Operations, Inc. Grand Gulf Nuclear Station P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150
SUBJECT: ASSESSMENT FOLLOW-UP LETTER FOR GRAND GULF NUCLEAR STATION
Dear Mr. Larson:
As a result of our continuous review of plant performance the NRC updated its assessment of Grand Gulf Nuclear Station. The NRC’s evaluation consisted of a review of performance indicators and inspection results. This letter informs you of the NRC’s assessment and its plans for a future inspection at your facility. This letter supplements, but does not supersede, the annual assessment letter issued on March 1, 2017 (Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) Accession No. ML17059D517).
The NRC’s review of Grand Gulf Nuclear Station identified that the Unplanned Power Changes Per 7,000 Critical Hours performance indicator has crossed the Green-to-White threshold. The performance issues included in this performance indicator were associated with three unplanned downpower events that occurred in the second quarter of 2016 due to operator actions to reset turbine stop valves, an unplanned downpower and shutdown required by technical specifications that occurred in the third quarter of 2016 due to a failure of residual heat removal subsystem A, and an unplanned downpower that occurred in the first quarter of 2017 due to condensate booster pump seal degradation.
The NRC determined the performance at Grand Gulf Nuclear Station remains in the Regulatory Response Column of the Reactor Oversight Process Action Matrix following a second White performance indicator input in the Initiating Events cornerstone beginning in the fourth quarter of 2016. Therefore, the NRC plans to conduct a supplemental inspection in accordance with Inspection Procedure 95001, “Supplemental Inspection Response to Action Matrix Column 2 Inputs” due to the Uplanned Power Changes Per 7,000 Critical Hours performance indicator. Additionally, the NRC previously indicated our intent to perform a supplemental inspection in accordance with Inspection Procedure 95001 due to the Unplanned Scrams Per 7000 Critical Hours performance indicator crossing the Green-to-White threshold in the third quarter of 2016 as indicated in a letter sent on November 8, 2016 (ADAMS Accession No. ML16313A169). As of the date of this letter we have not been notified that you are ready for this inspection. The objectives of the supplemental inspection are: (1) to assure that the root causes and contributing causes of significant performance issues are understood, (2) to independently...
82, 96, 81, 62%, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 100, 90, 91, 91, 80, 74 81, 50, 3, 0 (6/25)
There is 21 days of RB capacity factor. I get on average about a 70% capacity. RB has had terrible capacity factor for years. It goes way beyond insufficient maintenance...they have had procedure and training problems with the ops people.
Maybe they got all the money in the world...but they don't have the expertise to plan and schedule the kinds of maintenance to maintain decent capacity factor...
Thursday, July 13, 2017
The Columbia Experience: Training and Procedure Problems are Now Epidemic in Nuke Industry
Just Google my articles on the horrendous training and procedure problems at Grand Gulf as seen in their pathetic capacity problems in the last few years...
July 6, 2017
EA-17-028
Mr. Mark E. Reddemann Chief Executive Officer Energy Northwest P.O. Box 968 (Mail Drop 1023) Richland, WA 99352-0968
SUBJECT: COLUMBIA GENERATING STATION - FINAL SIGNIFICANCE DETERMINATION OF A WHITE FINDING, NOTICE OF VIOLATION, FOLLOW-UP ASSESSMENT LETTER, AND NRC INSPECTION REPORT 05000397/2017009
Dear Mr. Reddemann:
This letter provides you the final significance determination of the preliminary White finding discussed in our letter dated April 10, 2017, which included Special Inspection Report 05000397/2016009 (Agencywide Document Access and Management System (ADAMS) Accession ML17100A499). The finding involved the failure to ensure that the contents of a radioactive waste container did not exceed the radiation level requirements for shipping.
A regulatory conference was held on May 2, 2017, to discuss your views on this issue. During the meeting, your staff described your assessment of the significance of the apparent violation and associated corrective actions, including the root-cause evaluation. Specifically, your staff stated that the root cause was that station procedures to implement spent fuel pool clean-up activities and the associated radioactive waste surveys, processing, and shipping activities were not sufficient to ensure compliance with all requirements. Additionally, your staff identified contributing causes of inadequate management oversight and non-conservative decision-making. Your staff indicated that the corrective actions included developing and issuing an updated procedure to implement the clean-up activities and that key personnel had been trained to provide increased and more effective oversight...
Tuesday, July 11, 2017
Was The Mississippi KC 130 Marine Crash Related to the USS Fitzgerald Collision?
Having the FBI on a domestic military plane crash is highly abnormal. Are we on a special alert, as if we had other terrorist events that are ongoing. Has the USS Fitzgerald collision flipped into a terrorism investigation based on developed information?
Marine aircraft disaster: FBI seeks answers in Mississippi crash that killed at least 16
The FBI reportedly has joined local and state agencies to investigate what caused a U.S. military plane to corkscrew out of the sky and into a Mississippi field on Monday, killing at least 16.
A KC-130, used as a refueling tanker, "experienced a mishap" when it spiraled down about 4 p.m. into a soybean field, about 85 miles north of Jackson, the Marine Corps said. The aircraft's debris scattered in a radius of about 5 miles.
Leflore County Sheriff Ricky Banks told The Associated Press that officials were continuing to look for possible survivors. Banks earlier told the Greenwood Commonwealth 16 people were believed to be on board, but would not confirm that information to The Associated Press.
"We're still searching the area," Banks said. "It's hard to find bodies in the dark."
Monday, July 10, 2017
Friday, June 30, 2017
MSNBC Morning Tweet: It Was a Deep National Security "Madman Theory" Operation
You people are so unsophisticated. Trump is sabotaging his reputation in the hopes of preventing a war. It's is the classic Nixonian crazy president Madman Theory' philosophy.
I heard poorly rated @Morning_Joe speaks badly of me (don't watch anymore)," Trump tweeted. "Then how come low I.Q. Crazy Mika, along with Psycho Joe [Scarborough,] came to Mar-a-Lago 3 nights in a row around New Year's Eve, and insisted on joining me. She was bleeding badly from a face-lift. I said no!"
Madman theory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
The madman theory was an important part of Richard Nixon's foreign policy
The madman theory was a feature of Richard Nixon's foreign policy. He and his administration tried to make the leaders of hostile Communist Bloc nations think Nixon was irrational and volatile. According to the theory, those leaders would then avoid provoking the United States, fearing an unpredictable American response.
Nixon's Chief of Staff, H. R. Haldeman, wrote that Nixon had confided to him:
I call it the Madman Theory, Bob. I want the North Vietnamese to believe I've reached the point where I might do anything to stop the war. We'll just slip the word to them that, "for God's sake, you know Nixon is obsessed about communism. We can't restrain him when he's angry—and he has his hand on the nuclear button" and Ho Chi Minh himself will be in Paris in two days begging for peace.[1]
USS Fitzgerald To Return to U.S. for Extensive Repairs...NOT!!!
The home shipyards are going to be fight to do the expensive repair job. To minimize the heat from the public and politicians, they are saying its going to be repaired. This is the attack submarine USS Miami model damaged in a NH shipyard fire. They knew it was destroyed. They wasted $50 to $75 million dollars at a shipyard investigating to see if it could be repaired. The Navy decided it is too expensive to repair a year or two after the fire. It's a 22 year old ship and it was in terrible material shape before the terrorism event. Its obsolete. Its dead right now and the Navy knows it.
USS Fitzgerald to return to U.S. for extensive repairs
Kyodo
YOKOSUKA, KANAGAWA PREF. – The U.S. Navy’s guided-missile destroyer USS Fitzgerald will return home for repairs following its fatal collision last month with a Filipino freighter south of Tokyo Bay, a naval official said Friday.
Seven crew members died in the collision on June 17. Whether the crew of the vessel will also return home remains undecided, the official said, adding that the United States will continue to cooperate with Japanese authorities to shed light on the incident.
According to the official, the U.S. side will share information such as the accounts of the crew members.
Once the 8,315-ton warship goes back, the Japan Coast Guard, which is investigating the accident, will be unable to assess the damage.
The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, equipped with the state-of-the-art Aegis missile defense system, sustained heavy damage to its starboard side near the bridge. The bodies of the seven sailors were found in their flooded cabins.
The damaged destroyer is currently berthed at Yokosuka naval base. The extent of the damage will be assessed after it is moved to a dock at the base early this month. The navy will then decide whether it can sail on its own or require towing by other vessels...
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