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EPA: 1M Gallons Of Oil May Be In Mich. River

Federal officials now estimate that more than 1 million gallons of oil may have spilled into a major river in southern Michigan, and the governor is sharply criticizing clean-up efforts as "wholly inadequate.''

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released the update Wednesday night, shortly after Gov. Jennifer Granholm lambasted attempts to contain the oil flowing down the Kalamazoo River. She warned of a "tragedy of historic proportions'' if the oil reaches Lake Michigan, which is still at least 80 miles downstream from where oil has been seen.

Pipeline's Firm Warned Of Oil Leak

Granholm called on the federal government for more help, saying resources being marshaled by the EPA and Enbridge Inc., which owns the pipeline that leaked the oil, were "wholly inadequate.''

Calgary, Alberta-based Enbridge said earlier Wednesday that it had redoubled its efforts to clean up the mess. Chief executive Patrick D. Daniel said the company had made "significant progress,'' though he had no update on a possible cause, cost or timeframe for the cleanup. The company didn't return messages for comment after Granholm's statements.

The overall work force on the spill Wednesday was likely more than 400 people.

EPA officials said they're ramping up efforts with air and water testing. Local officials said they weren't concerned about municipal water supplies.

Tom Sands, deputy state director for emergency management and homeland security, said during a conference call with Granholm that he had seen oil past a dam at Morrow Lake. The lake is a key point in the river near a Superfund site upstream of Kalamazoo, the largest city in the region.

But his report could not be immediately confirmed. The company's latest update statement Wednesday said oil was about seven miles short of the opening to Morrow Lake. A press conference scheduled for late Wednesday, which was to include company and EPA officials, was canceled for what a company spokesman called scheduling conflicts.

Morrow Lake is being called the 'last stand' to stop oil that has already travelled over 30 miles down to Kalamazoo River. A local resident near Morrow Lake, Carol Minne, visited the site to see what was happening.

"There's many, many narrow passageways between here and Augusta that could have contained and got it out," said Minne. "And why they would let it come this far? I don't understand."

Minne said that Morrow Lake is a pristine body of water, where one can see the bottom of the lake.

"You can see every kind of fish there is going out there. It's just a beautiful place and it really, just makes me want to cry to think about it. That they've let it go this far," said Minne.
 
Anticipating the arrival of the slick, Kalamazoo County Health Officials have closed access to Morrow Lake to fishing or swimming. Kalamazoo residents, like Bob Vogel, are worried about what could happen to an area they've known all their lives.
 
"It took them a long time, they just got this river squared away. And now this here happens. We've got kids in Galesburg who jump off the bridge. They're not going to jump off the bridge and swim no more," said Vogel.

Vogel said the fish population at Morrow Lake is at risk, along with the quality of life.

"You know, I'm curious. Are they going to restock it after it's all dead? It's a bummer. It's got me bummed out because it's just not going to come back naturally," said Vogel.

A boom has been set up at the mouth of Morrow Lake. This is seen as the last best hope to stop the slick before the oil gets over the dam. The fear is that if the oil makes it over the dam, clean up efforts could be complicated by an EPA Superfund site with toxic sediments.

State and company officials previously said they didn't believe the oil would spread past that dam.

"It's going to hit a Superfund site unless somebody like the EPA and the company get very serious about providing significant additional resources,'' Granholm said.

The spill has killed fish and coated wildlife as it made its way westward about 35 miles downstream past Battle Creek, a city of 52,000 residents about 110 miles west of Detroit.

State Senator Glen Anderson of Livonia visited the oil spill area. Anderson told WWJ in a statement that he was shocked at what he found when he visited the site Wednesday.

"It's quite a disaster out there. There is oil splattered everywhere, crude oil. It's all in this little stream. The reaction and the response seems to be terribly inadequate," said Anderson.

"They had the only thing we could see on site were vacuum trucks on the shore. There did not appear to be any equipment in the water anywhere, vacuuming or suctioning any of the oil out of the stream that we observed," said Anderson.

Anderson is proposing legislation to permanently ban drilling for oil in the Great Lakes. He is also calling for greater government oversight on existing pipelines, many of which he says, are aging and running under densely populated areas. 

Both company and EPA officials have said oil is no longer leaking. Enbridge has been working to clean up the spill since the leak was reported early Monday.

Before the EPA announced its new estimate, Enbridge reiterated its belief that about 819,000 gallons of oil spilled into Talmadge Creek, which flows into the Kalamazoo River. State officials said they were told during a company briefing Tuesday that about 877,000 gallons spilled, but company officials disputed the number.

An 800,000 gallon spill would be enough to fill 1-gallon jugs lined side by side for nearly 70 miles. It also could fill a wall-in football field including the end zones with a 14-foot-high pool of oil.

Granholm has declared a state of disaster for some areas along the river, and President Barack Obama called Granholm to offer federal support.

An oily reflective sheen could be seen in patches along the Kalamazoo, and the affected area still had a strong odor, although not as strong as on Tuesday.

Anil Kulkarni, a mechanical engineering professor at Penn State University, said a quick response was vital to the river's ecology. Snails, frogs, muskrats and even birds eat, live and nest on or near the riverbank.

"The river banks are nearby. It has more potential to inflict damage because of the proximity to land. Anything that comes in contact with oil is going to be affected badly. It prevents the natural life of species, whether it's collecting food or anything else.''

Enbridge affiliates have previously been cited for skirting environmental regulations in the Great Lakes region.

Houston-based Enbridge Energy Co. spilled almost 19,000 gallons of crude oil onto Wisconsin's Nemadji River in 2003. Another 189,000 gallons of oil spilled at the company's terminal two miles from Lake Superior, though most was contained.

In 2007, two spills released about 200,000 gallons of crude in northern Wisconsin as Enbridge was expanding a 320-mile pipeline. The company also was accused of violating Wisconsin permits designed to protect water quality during work in and around wetlands, rivers and streams, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources said. The violations came during construction of a 321-mile, $2 billion oil pipeline across that state. Enbridge agreed to pay $1.1 million in 2009.

The Michigan leak came from a 30-inch pipeline, which was built in 1969 and carries about 8 million gallons of oil daily from Griffith, Ind., to Sarnia, Ontario. The river already faced major pollution issues. An 80-mile segment of the river that begins at Morrow Lake and five miles of a tributary, Portage Creek, have unsafe levels of PCBs and were placed on the federal Superfund list of high-priority hazardous waste sites in 1990. The Kalamazoo site also includes four landfills and several defunct paper mills.

For more on this story click here.
   
(Copyright 2010 WWJ.  All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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