[Vision2020] ISP Warns of ‘Threats’ to Megaloads

Tom Hansen thansen at moscow.com
Sat Apr 30 07:58:22 PDT 2011


Courtesy of today's (April 30, 2011) Spokesman-Review.

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Idaho state police warns of ‘threats’ to megaloads

BOISE – The Idaho State Police believes there may be an attempt to disrupt
megaload shipments on U.S. Highway 12 in north-central Idaho, an ISP
official told a state hearing officer Friday.

ISP Capt. Lonnie Richardson said the police agency has received
information about “people who may want to interfere with the loads.”

Richardson declined to provide more information, saying the intelligence
was “confidential information.” He said, “There have been threats,” and
said, “Everybody has got a different definition of terrorism.”

Margaret Ross, a spokeswoman for ExxonMobil, which is proposing the giant
shipments, said, “I don’t have any information about that. 
 I
hadn’t heard it before.”

Opponents of the giant loads, which would take up both lanes of the
two-lane scenic highway between Lewiston and the Montana state line,
scoffed at the reports and suggested the ISP was overreacting to local
residents who tried to monitor the three megaload shipments that already
have traveled through.

Karen “Borg” Hendrickson, a Highway 12 resident and one of the leading
opponents of the loads, was listening in the audience as Richardson
testified. “I was astonished,” she said. “All of the monitors are just
ordinary north-central Idaho citizens. I mean, the assumption that anyone
among us is a terrorist is just astonishing.”

Hendrickson said three to four dozen area residents have organized to
monitor the loads, attempting to follow them on assigned segments.
However, the traffic plan for the loads calls for following traffic to
pass at designated points, so the monitors have had to double back.

Richardson said police escorts have taken license plate numbers and made
inquiries only of people who repeatedly passed the loads.

Vickie Garcia, one of the monitors who testified on Thursday, said state
troopers told her she couldn’t travel back and forth more than one time
while the megaloads were en route, and she questioned such restrictions on
area citizens.

“I have it on video,” Garcia said.

Richardson was called to testify in the contested-case hearing over the
Imperial Oil/ExxonMobil loads – the company has proposed more than 200 of
the giant loads over the next year and a half – by attorneys for megaloads
opponents, who had questions about state police escorts for the big loads.

He testified that the ISP will provide one to four on-duty officers per
load to escort the shipments across Highway 12.

Mammoet Transportation, the hauling firm for Imperial/Exxon, is paying for
the officers’ overtime; it pays the ISP, and the ISP pays the officers.

There are 17 ISP trooper positions in the five-county region in
north-central Idaho; two of those are currently vacant and a third officer
is deployed to Iraq on military service.

Earlier in the hearing, which ran all week and will continue Monday, there
was testimony that three loads could be on the highway at one time as
Imperial Oil/ExxonMobil moves equipment from Lewiston to the Alberta oil
sands project in Canada, but Richardson said he thought there’d only be
one at a time.

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One other thing, beyond these alleged threats, that may be slowing down
the megaloads . . .

Highway 12 at Lolo Pass
http://rwis.mdt.mt.gov/scanweb/lolo.shtml

Seeya round town, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to
changeand the Realist adjusts his sails."

 - Unknown




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