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Stack Fire Sends Smoke Plume Over Port of Anchorage

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Stack Fire Sends Smoke Plume Over Port of Anchorage

Gas pier at Port of Alaska at Anchorage, proper (USACE file picture)

Revealed
Nov 20, 2022 2:11 PM by

The Maritime Government

On Friday, a stack hearth aboard a product tanker startled residents across the port of Anchorage, Alaska with a loud explosion and a plume of smoke.


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The foreign-flagged tanker Atlantic Lily was alongside at a gasoline pier in Anchorage on Friday and unloading a cargo of jet gasoline. For causes of a technical malfunction, the boiler started to emit unburned gasoline vapor up the stack, a harmful situation that can lead to an explosion. At about 2200 hours, the vapor ignited within the stack, producing a loud increase, thick smoke and visual flames. 


The vessel’s crew responded to the emergency by deploying hearth hoses and extinguishing the flames. The Anchorage Hearth Division and Port of Alaska personnel arrived on scene shortly after to offer help, however didn’t have to board the vessel. The cargo switch operation was paused till the fireplace was absolutely out and the trigger had been investigated with Coast Guard oversight. 


The crew discovered {that a} technical difficulty with the ship’s auxiliary boiler resulted in an improper fuel-to-air ratio, igniting soot within the exhaust stack and inflicting the loud blast, in response to Sector Anchorage. A technician was known as in to repair the boiler, which stays turned off till after the ship has completed offloading her cargo. 

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On Saturday, gasoline offloading had resumed when the stack caught hearth once more, however at a lesser scale, the Coast Guard informed the Anchorage Every day Information. No accidents or air pollution had been reported from both incident. 


Atlantic Lily is a 50,000 dwt product tanker in-built 2008. Her current port state management file is clear, however in 2019 she was cited for hearth security and SOLAS points, together with firefighting tools, air flow and lifeboat deficiencies. 

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Sunday Puzzle: Double take, famous names with repeated letters

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Sunday Puzzle: Double take, famous names with repeated letters

Sunday Puzzle

NPR


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NPR

On-air challenge: Every answer today is the name of a famous person in which the first two letters of the first name are the same as the last two letters of the last name. I’ll give you the repeated letters and categories of the people. You tell me who they are.
 

Ex. GE, Oscar winner for Best Actress  –>  Geraldine Page (winner for the 1985 movie “The Trip to Bountiful”)

  1. RO, Oscar winner for Best Actor (in “Raging Bull”)
  2. SA, Seven-time M.L.B. All-Star (primarily with the Chicago Cubs)
  3. EL, Writer and Peace Nobelist (author of “Night” and other works on the Holocaust)
  4. MA, Former White House daughter
  5. AN, Woman who taught Helen Keller
  6. [one name:] BA, queen consort in the Bible (wife of David, mother of Solomon)
  7. LO, Comic actor of old Hollywood (partner of Bud Abbott)

Last week’s challenge: Last week’s challenge comes from listener Michael Schwartz, of Florence, Ore. Think of a classic American author, whose first and last names are each one syllable. The last name, when said aloud, sounds like part of the body. Insert the letters AS into the first name, and you’ll get the location of this body part. Who is the author?

Challenge answer: Bret Harte (breast, heart)

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Winner: Stan Durey of Anacortes, Washington

This week’s challenge:  This week’s challenge comes from listener Greg VanMechelen, of  Berkeley, Calif. Name a state capital. Inside it in consecutive letters is the first name of a popular TV character of the past. Remove that name, and the remaining letters in order will spell the first name of a popular TV game show host of the past.  What is the capital and what are the names?

Submit Your Answer

If you know the answer to the challenge, submit it here by Wednesday, November 27th, 2024 at 3 p.m. ET. Listeners whose answers are selected win a chance to play the on-air puzzle. Important: include a phone number where we can reach you.

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Robert Vito Won't Be Charged With Felony in L.A. Domestic Violence Case

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Robert Vito Won't Be Charged With Felony in L.A. Domestic Violence Case

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Trump taps Brooke Rollins of America First Policy Institute for agriculture secretary

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Trump taps Brooke Rollins of America First Policy Institute for agriculture secretary

Brooke Rollins, president and CEO of America First Policy Institute, introduces former President Donald Trump during a press conference in July 2021 in Bedminster, N.J.

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images


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President-elect Donald Trump has tapped Brooke Rollins, president and CEO of the America First Policy Institute, to oversee the Department of Agriculture, one of the most sprawling federal agencies. 

Rollins was previously the director of the Domestic Policy Council during the first Trump administration. She has a long history in conservative politics, including also running the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

Originally from Texas, she graduated from Texas A&M University with a degree in agricultural development. She then got her law degree at the University of Texas school of Law.

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During the first Trump administration, Rollins also served as assistant to the president for intergovernmental and technology initiatives. After leaving the White House, Rollins was among a group of senior advisers to create the new nonprofit group aimed at promoting Trump’s policies.  

As the new head of USDA she would oversee nearly 100,000 employees, and would oversee the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which makes up over half of its nutrition budget, as well as the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) and school meal regulation. She would be the second woman to lead the department, following Ann Veneman who served under President George W. Bush.

The department could be at the front lines of Trump’s efforts to trim what he calls the “deep state” of federal bureaucracy and his efforts to implement tariffs on foreign goods — though it also provides crucial assistance to farmers and rural areas.

The department distributes agricultural subsidies and is the first stop for farmers to receive financial assistance for their operations. USDA is also the only agency with a rural development branch that distributes federal broadband, housing and utilities programs to rural communities.

The first Trump administration had to address the consequences of Trump’s trade war with China and others, which resulted in retaliatory tariffs on U.S. agricultural products leading to decreased farmer profits. The federal government did step in with some assistance to boost incomes due to the trade war, and then the COVID-19 pandemic.

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It is possible Trump could also sign a second farm bill into law, a potentially trillion-dollar bill reauthorized every five years to provide farmer safety nets, programing, rural development and government nutrition assistance. The last farm bill was signed by Trump in 2018 and Congress has since failed to reauthorize it.

SNAP is estimated to serve 42 million participants each month with food benefits, and WIC serves about 40% of all infants in the United States. Making changes to the safety-net programs has been one of the sticking points for the legislation, in addition to its funds for conservation programs.

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