PCBs

The P-I’s front page story about PCB contamination in the South Park neighborhood is assuredly not the sort of fornt-page news one wants to see about an area in which one has just put an offer on a house. The good news is that the contamination is in the river-bottom area of the neighborhood, on the other side of the freeway. The bad news is, well, I know a little bit about PCBs, heath risks, and the related spectacular collisions of industry, local politics, class, and bureaucracy.

One item that really gave me the willies in the article is the offhanded note that the PCBs came from “the waste oil that Malarkey Asphalt bought from City Light as a cheap energy source in the 1970s.” Apparently, the company was burning the oil as fuel. But not in a high-temperature incinerator. Presumably, the oil was burned in convential ways, which would have had the effect of creating multiple airborne plumes of presumably-intact PCBs. It’s interesting that this use occurred here, as in Bloomington, the primary issue was dumped transformers form the plant that built them. I can’t recall any anecdotal information about people using the oil as fuel.

I guess the next thing for me to do is learn about the prevailing winds and to what extent the City or EPA has done soil sampling up-slope, near our potential house.

Here’s the City’s research and activity report, and here is the site of the Duwamish Cleanup Commission. This PDF is the city map that was the basis for the P-I’s graphic embedded in the story linked at the start of this entry.

Mother Earth News hosts a fascinating narrative from Bloomington in 1976 concerning a family that inadvertently fertilized their farm with sludge contaminated to the order of 300 ppm (parts per million), resulting in soil contamination levels of 50 ppm. By comparison, the Washington state cleanup level is 1 ppm, and some of the sites sampled along the Duwamish exhibit levels greater than 50 ppm.

Hostisicity

Time to look at hosting again. This looks good, and so does the hosting provider’s detail page. Sadly, though, no MT listed (sensible enough, I suppose). What’sthe scoop over at the support site for the provider? Well, nothing, in a word.

Well, Google to the rescue, with this cached entry originally recorded as found here.

Dated October, 2003:

My webhost (which is now my former webhost), WebHostingBuzz.com, decided on Wednesday night that they would ban the Movable Type software which I use to run this blog.

So, ah, no, not them, I’d say.

I guess I’ll look here and possibly here (found here).

Chitty

The blessed and indispensible Things blogs the living heck out of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, exposing my mind to the odd fact that Ian Fleming’s absurdist flying car was a) based on a real car and b) that said car was powered the engine of a WWI era Gotha. Thus, she flew.

seamless

You all know of Google Maps. Did you know of the USGS Seamless Map?

Click to zoom, as you might expect. But under the disclosure triangle “Elevation,” try looking at an area you’re geographically familiar with with the selection “NED shaded relief (1/9 arc second)” set. I turned off the road labels but kept the roads on, under the “Transportation” triangle.

South Park

Some news and information regarding the neighborhood of South Park in Seattle. Recently, the Stranger featured a charming tale of the neighborhood association’s new meeting spot, a watering hole known as the County Line. Prior to that, the P-I featured not one but two stories concerning gang-related killings and community response in the one-square mile neighborhood directly to the south of Georgetown. In 1999, the P-I’s Regina Hackett also contributed a sunny survey of the neighborhood’s future.

The neighborhood association’s old-school website contains links to information about a number of things including some interesting historical data from the City of Seattle and Historylink.org.

Cringley joins the fray

Venerable statesman of the networked and nerdly Robert X. Cringely announces his entree (or is that re-entry) to the media-blog-o-sphere, introducing a new version of the always-entertaining and often influential I, Cringley that will somehow tie into his PBS-slash-online TV show, NerdTV. What’s interesting about this is:

a) he terms the new show “videoblogging,” which seems a stretch, but who knows

b) I, Cringely as a blog is clearly the Right Thing if maybe Several Months Late and

c) he promises “plenty of interesting guests.”

Based on Bob’s track record of provoking discussion, headshaking, and worse, this has me more-or-less excited. Maybe the time is now to write about the incipient adoption of online distro for video – cf. Galactica, I gotta say. Gaah! I hope I have time for this!