Archive for July, 2007

Scrap metal thieves sabotage California farms

 Scrap metal prices - particularly for copper - have led to thieves stealing phone lines, plaques from public memorials, and all manner of farming infrastructure.

From Jennifer Steinhauer’s excellent piece in today’s Times  :

The rampant thefts have left farmers without functioning water pumps for days and weeks at a time, creating financial loss and occasional crop devastation in a region still smarting from a spectacular freeze last winter.

Theft of scrap metal, mostly copper, has vexed many areas of American life and industry for the last 18 months, fueled largely by record-level prices for copper resulting from a building boom in Asia. Common in developing counties, metal theft is now committed in nearly every state, largely by methamphetamine users who hock the metal to buy drugs, the authorities say.

Thieves have stripped the wires out of phone lines, pulled plaques off cemetery plots, raided air-conditioning systems in schools and yanked catalytic converters from cars, all to be resold to scrap metal recyclers.

But perhaps no group has been as been as consistently singled out as California farmers, who provide roughly half of the nation’s fruits and vegetables. Irrigation systems, a treasure trove of copper, tend to be in remote places, out of the eyes of farmers and, until recently, law enforcement.

- snip -
Some sheriff’s departments in agricultural counties have rural crime units that investigate metal crimes almost exclusively these days, setting up sting operations in recycling shops and tagging copper bait with electronic tracking devices.

Metal theft from California farmers rose 400 percent in 2006 over the previous year, according to the Agricultural Crime Technology Information and Operations Network, a regional law enforcement group headed by Mr. Yoshimoto [Bill Yoshimoto, an assistant district attorney in Tulare County]. The numbers this year are equally high. Through the end of June, there were nearly 1,000 incidents of scrap metal theft on farms, causing more than $2 billion in losses, the group’s figures show.

Here in Kern County, there were 213 incidents of copper theft, the greatest number in the state.

“They go out and take a farm pump in the middle of nowhere,” said Sgt. Walt Reed, head of [the] county’s rural crime task force. “And they can pull the copper wire strands from the electrical wire box and get 60 feet of wire, remove the insulation and take it to the scrap yard for $2 to $3 a pound.”

Alan Scroggs, an almond farm manager in Wasco, knows the story only too well. Over the course of three months this spring, his irrigation system was raided five times by copper thieves; his well was hit twice, and the booster system that helps pump the water underground to irrigate the almond trees three times.

Copper thieves cut the wires in the conduit that runs to the power source, tie the wires to the back of a pickup truck and drive away, pulling the wire behind them and generally making off with roughly 75 pounds of scrap metal.

“When the sheriff’s department came out here for the third time,” Mr. Scroggs said, “they said, ‘I can’t believe I am here again.’ ”

Over the last 18 months, copper prices have hovered over $3.50 a pound, hitting $4 at one point, the highest price the metal has reached in recent memory, said Patrick Chidley, a mining and metals analyst at Barnard Jacobs Mellet in Stamford, Conn. By comparison, copper fetched 65 cents a pound in 2001.

“It is really the law of supply and demand,” Mr. Chidley said. “You have a lot of demand in China, where there is a big infrastructure build-out. Every building, every car, every motor, every wind turbine needs copper, and there are not enough mines out there to keep up.”

From Hawaii, where an accused copper thief is about to go on trial for felony theft charges, to Maryland, where a 41-year-old man was electrocuted recently after trying to cut through a high-voltage line in an abandoned discount store, stolen metals have filled a market void. This summer in Oakland, Calif., a memorial to 25 people who were killed nearly 16 years ago in a fire was stripped of stainless steel memorial plaques, and metal scavengers were suspected.

Let’s leave aside  the specious claim [2nd quoted graf above] that it’s all because of drugs and drug use - and please bear in mind that Steinhauer reported it as a claim - rather than endorsing the truth of the claim. Steinhauer has painted a very clear picture of how market forces drive illicit as well as licit markets. And she’s suggested - reasonably, I think - that at current record high prices - thieves are willing to undertake relatively low-risk larcenies and burglaries: unattended farm equipment.

Unattended infrastructure, of course, includes pipelines, water mains, power lines and lots of other things that we’d prefer to have where they are.

But what if prices go even higher? Is there a price at which it makes sense for thieves to start stealing copper from occupied buildings? Of course there is. Let’s just hope the market doesn’t supply it.

Pop Quiz: who can identify the following symbol?

b-934781484_31834e9a17_o.jpg

Answer after the jump:

Continue reading ‘Pop Quiz: who can identify the following symbol?’

“an official policy of premeditated ignorance”

After FEMA started providing trailers to survivors of Katrina and Rita, high levels of formaldehyde were found in many of the trailers. I first learned of this from Dr. Irwin Redlener’s excellent Americans At Risk, which we’ve referred to before, and will again. Suffice it to say for present purposes that

  1. There was formaldehyde in the trailers, in which were housed many people, of every age, male and female, and varied in many ways - although probably very few of them affluent.
  2. The formaldehyde is dangerous -
  3. And its presence in housing - above certain parts-per-million (I believe that’s in air samples - not in the building materials themselves)
  4. When FEMA officials first found out that this was a possibility  - FEMA counsel instructed them not to test - and to take the position that that was not a FEMA function - fearing that with knowledge would come responsibility.

Alas, the index of Americans at Risk does not do it justice - so a discussion of Dr. Redlener’s account will have to wait for an updated post.

“an official policy of premeditated ignorance”

Congressman Henry Waxman’s description of FEMA lawyers instructing FEMA employees not to test trailers for formaldehyde.

Professor David Michaels has been providing excellent coverage of this issue at The Pump Handle, a most-excellent public health blog.

You can read Michaels’ excellent post of July 26th here;

Michaels’ two previous posts here and here.

Michaels points out that The Washington Post, in an editorial calledFEMA’S TOXIC ENVIRONMENT,” says that the Post tells FEMA director R. David Paulison that “knocking a few heads in FEMA’s general counsel’s office would be a good first step” in sending a strong signal that the beleaguered agency needs to undergo major changes.

The Post is right, of course. Michaels links to an excellent article by Bob Egelko in the San Francisco Chronicle - citing a number of legal ethics experts - who agree that the FEMA attorneys’ behavior was unethical. These attorneys include Monroe Freedman, perhaps the best-known legal ethics expert in the United States, and Ronald Rotunda, another leading ethics expert. Ask most lawyers to name nationally known legal ethics experts, and most will give you a short list - Freedman and Rotunda would, I think, be on nearly every list.

[Disclaimer: I know and admire Monroe Freedman, and have worked with him on at least one matter].

Professor Rotunda - who has the funniest law professor’s web page that I’ve seen - was assistant majority counsel to the Ervin Committee (for you young people, that was the Senate Select Committee on what’s now referred to as “The Watergate Affair”) - which might mean he was once a Democrat - but he’s also been counsel to Ken Starr while Ken Starr was Special Prosecutor, special counsel to the Department of Defense in the current administration - would, I hope, not be offended if we described his politics as “other-than-leftist.”

My point is that there’s a consensus that government lawyers should not take the position that “we don’t do those tests, because if we did we’d be responsible for knowing about the results and acting on them.” This is not a controversial proposition.

However - will these FEMA lawyers be disciplined? Our best bet is - probably not - unless someone formally brings it to the attention of legal ethics officials in a state in which any of the attorneys is licensed. Because this involves what is probably unethical conduct - but hasn’t resulted in a conviction - although it may have made some people very, very ill - the state licensing agencies (in some states, the bar association) aren’t likely to act on the basis of news reports.

We’re going to have the crack Popular Logistics research team look at the five thousand page document set released by Congressman Waxman’s committee and report back. Stay tuned.

Walmart Flip-Flops reported to cause chemical burns

The following images are reported to have been caused by flip-flops sold by Wal-Mart - which, according to the same report, told the consumer to take the matter up with the Chinese manufacturer.

200707231608.jpg

200707231609.jpg

If Chinese-made items as innocuous as rubber sandals can cause injury - perhaps, until circumstances change, emergency caches should not contain any items made in China. Let’s hope this manufacturer hasn’t also been making respirators.

Original link.

Via Boing Boing.

It’s Fuel Economy, Stupid

Congressman Dingell’s loyalty to the US automobile industry is laudable. However, resisting higher mileage standards does not help the industry. It doesn’t help management, it doesn’t help the workers, and it doesn’t help the stockholders. (Click Here or Here) It helps the Japanese, especially Toyota.

 

Ford Motor Company, for example, started losing the taxi and limosine market to Toyota long before Mayor Bloomberg’s initiative that all new taxis were to be hybrids. All around Wall Street, where the limos pick up investment bankers and hedge fund managers in cars that are driven 50,000 to 100,000 miles per year, you see old Lincolns and brand new Priuses.

 

Each Prius (Edmunds, Toyota, Car Talk), which gets 45 miles to the gallon, will burn 2,222 gallons as it is driven those 100,000 miles.

 

Each Lincoln Town Car, (Edmunds, Lincoln, Car Talk), which gets 12 mpg, will burn 8,333 gallons in that 100,000 miles.

 

At $3.00 per gallon, fuel for the Prius costs $6,222; fuel for the Lincoln costs $23,333. It’s economics not environmentalism. Fuel costs for the Lincoln are almost four times higher than for the Prius.


Even with a new set of batteries at $5,000, the operating costs for the Prius are less than half those of the Lincoln.

 

GM and Ford act like a man with a toothache who won’t go to the dentist because it will hurt. But unless he takes action the man will lose the tooth. They act like someone with pain that ‘is probably nothing’ who dies of cancer. And Congressman Dingell is saying ‘It’s ok, it’s probably nothing.’

 

Dingell’s loyalty is laudable. But rather than tell them what they want to hear, he should tell Detroit the hard truth - milage matters. Or to paraphrase Bill Clinton, ‘It’s fuel economy, stupid!’

Mike Mercurio’s Energy Choices

Chez Mercurio

Meet Mike Mercurio, a friend of mine in Long Beach Island, NJ. The image shows his PV Solar installation and small wind turbine. The turbine sits 34 feet above the ground. The 6-foot blades make the tip 40 feet above the ground.

Mercurio’s wind turbine and solar panels produce power without pollution - without greenhouse gases, mercury, and radioactive wastes. And with an annual bill of $114. Click Here for Treehugger, or Here for the International Herald Tribune.

His neighbors prefer smog. They prefer the hacking cough of polution related “health effects” and other “externalities” to the gentle whirr of wind power. And electric bill of $2500 per year and $3500 per year, as opposed to his grid-connect charges of $114. What are they thinking? Are they thinking?

Mercurio is a real patriot who believes in intelligent action, not empty words. His wind turbine and photovoltaic solar panels show us how to achieve energy independence, and national security, with clean safe energy, with lower costs, with no pollution.

He should be applauded and emulated, not sued and shut down.

New Blog - Zuzu has returned from the mountaintop!

Our dear friend and pack-member (that’s right, we’re a lot like dogs, in good ways and bad) Zuzu has started her own blog, Kindly Pog Mo Thoin.

We’re aware that most Popular Logistics readers excel in obscure languages - and spoken Irish, even taking into account recent efforts to revive it - falls ino the category “obscure.” (And the people who post responses in Aramaic - we have good reasons for not publishing those comments. I’m not even going to discuss the Esperanto types). But in case your Irish isn’t too strong - this means “Kindly Kiss My —-.”

Never at a loss for words, Zuzu is like Shakespeare’s Beatrice - with a little Emma Goldman a tiny touch of Maureen Dowd mixed in.

So please check out Kindly Pog Mo Thoin.

Vested Interests: allmed.net - EMS and rescue supplies

I’ve been looking for a while for a high-visibility vest - ideally ANSI Class III (visible at - I think it’s 1,250 feet - in poor lighting conditions, like snow or rain, visible from all sides) - that also  had pockets. And had great difficulty finding a garment that was serious about storage and visibility. Lots of great special ops-type vests - in any color you want as long as it’s black.

I’ve been looking every time I find a new EMS or SAR or similar supplied. I  stumbled on  these guys through a Google search (I think for “ANSI” +”vest” +”pocket”).

Here’s a link to the vest. 

And, of course, it comes in any color you want, as long as it’s high-visibility yellow. Trimmed with Scotchlite at virtually every opportunity. The person I spoke with, Mark Robinett, told me that while they don’t make this in-house, it was designed by Dan White of AllMed. So I’ve ordered one - and I’ve got high expectations. (My nefarious scheme is to try to get them to add some Reflexite to each surface, some velcro or dual-lock on the back and/or front for names, assignments, etc).

New Yorkers involved in CERT stuff know that people are often selling “CERT” gear that doesn’t remotely approach the ANSI specs, and is very overpriced.

I’ll try to add photos of the AllMed vest - and the not-so-useful “CERT” vests to this post later.

I did some quick comparisons of AllMed’s gear and prices and my impression is that they’re very  competitive about price - and, while they have a pretty wide range of merchandise - one gets the impression they’re fussy about the brands they stock.

Here’s a link to AllMed.

Note: not that we’re not thoroughly corrupt (we are, after all, New Yorkers, and have a reputation to live up to) - but because we’re going to review this item, we paid for it, as is our current policy.

Find your own longtitude and latitude - and lots more

An extraordinarily useful site - even for those of us who don’t understand satellites - Eric Johnston’s SatSig.net -which we’ve just added to our blogroll.

Find your own latitude and longtitude.

Community-building meeting scheduled for the local crowd

Those of you living on or around the Parade Grounds in Brooklyn have probably noticed a decline in police presence in our neighborhood this summer. That’s because after two years, the ‘impact zone’ defined by the 70th Precinct to address serious safety issues with a whole lotta beat cops, has moved on to shadier climes. Fair enough, but we still get a lot more visitors than most neighborhoods because of the athletic fields, on top of a thriving core of our very own home-grown thugs.

Since the end of May, a group of area residents has been working closely with members of the 70th Precinct to try to reverse the spike in criminality that resulted when the impact zone moved on. We’ve been very pleased by the responsiveness of the police. Now we’d like to invite other concerned residents of the area immediately around the Parade Grounds to join us for a community meeting and briefing with the police on Tuesday, July 17th at 7:30 pm in the lobby of 25 Parade Place. The idea is to expand and organize the network of neighbors willing to use their eyes and ears and voices for the welfare of the community. Please help us to spread the word among those who care. Thank you!

An economists’ take on the Katrina failure

This is a post-Katrina take on why the system didn’t work - so it’s not new - but no less relevant - from a blog, Marginal Revolution, which we’ve only recently discovered.

Link to post here.

Another Canary in China’s Coal Mines

Pollution kills 750 thousand per year in China, according to a self-censored World Bank study described in the Independent and on Yahoo News. According to these reports, the Chinese government is suppressing knowledge of the issue, rather than addressing the problem, and the World Bank agreed to suppress the data.

While three quarters of a million people in a population of one point three billion is only six out of ten thousand and is a low percentage of the population, this corresponds to 173 thousand Americans. If 173 thousand Americans were dying each year from pollution, which is slightly more than the 150,000 Americans who die each year from stroke, we might be upset.

The worse things are:

  • The Chinese government is supressing the news, rather than addressing the problem.
  • The Chinese State Environmental Protection Agency, SEPA, and Health Ministry are the agencies suppressing the news.

As China continues to industrialize, as they put an additional 1000 cars on the road each day, things will only get worse.

And according to the World Watch Institute, 16 of the worlds 20 most polluted cities are in China.