At the 135,000 barrel-per-day refinery just outside of Toledo,
Ohio, run by BP Plc and Husky Energy Inc, most of the nearly
300-person staff have been calling the refinery home since Feb. 9.
For the last week, they have slept on recently purchased mattresses
inside rental trailers to rapidly respond to any problems and avoid
striking workers, sources say.
On Tuesday, a van full of washing and drying machines gingerly cut
through about a dozen United Steelworkers carrying pickets and
walking a strike line at the facility's front gate.
Those efforts underscore how far operators are willing to go to
retain normalcy in the face of the largest national U.S. refinery
strike since 1980. And as more replacement workers join the ranks
here and the other eight refineries where strikes have occurred,
more questions are arising about potential safety and production
risks from an extended walkout.
While such warnings may seem a self-serving negotiating tactic, even
some on the other side of the line are concerned. John Ostberg, a
non-union control engineer who works in the main computerized
control center at Toledo, quit his job on Monday weeks before he was
scheduled to retire.
For months, Ostberg has been warning his bosses in emails about
their plans to rely on replacement workers and supervisors if a
strike occurred. He feared they were not properly trained, or too
far removed from the frontlines, to respond to unit upsets and other
problems that can escalate quickly without experienced intervention.
“Management says it’s safe. I disagree,” Ostberg said in a phone
interview on Thursday.
BP spokesman Scott Dean said the company does not discuss publicly
discuss personnel issues, but did provide highlights of the
refinery's safety record, such as how workers logged 15 million man
hours, or 39 months, without a serious injury by June 2014. Husky
Energy deferred all questions to BP.
In dozens of interviews with local USW workers, craftsman and
experts, a portrait of the day-to-day role they play emerges:
monitoring large electronic boards that detect problems, turning
valves, checking the quality of refined products and overseeing work
permits.
But their biggest contribution, the people say, is serving as the
refinery’s frontline defense when things go wrong.
Chad Coburtson, president of the USW local at the Toledo refinery,
described his members' role this way: "The steelworkers are like the
nails in the frame. Without us the structure will crumble.”
At least three of the nine U.S. oil refineries targeted by a
nationwide strike of USW members have reported upsets and unplanned
repairs since their workers walked out on Feb 1. There is no
indication of what caused the upsets, none of which resulted in any
harm or serious damage to equipment.
TURNING WRENCHES
BP Husky’s strategy will get its first real test this week when it
attempts to restart its catalytic cracker, a major
gasoline-producing unit that unexpectedly went down a few weeks ago.
About 100 contract workers have been working around the clock to
restart the unit on Wednesday, a source said.
“BP has trained multiple workers for every operations position
normally performed by a striking USW employee. These replacement
workers are comprised primarily of current and former BP employees
who have been trained to the same legally required and BP-mandated
standards as regular workers," BP spokesman Scott Dean said in an
email.
Mark Broadbent, a research analyst with consultants Wood Mackenzie,
said the longer the strikes last, the more exposed the refineries
may be to disruptions caused by unit upsets.
"They are experienced. They know their facilities, what valves to
turn. Their response time is much quicker, and they can easily
resolve problems when units flare up,” he said. “The companies have
certainly shown they are capable of running the refineries, but over
time, as more upsets occur, they will likely not be handled as
quickly.”
At Tesoro Corp's refinery in Martinez, California, managers and
other non-union employees are sleeping in tents inside a centralized
control room while they monitor the currently idle plant, according
to striking workers at the site.
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Criff Reyes, who has worked in the refinery's alkylation unit for 16
years, says he believes that Tesoro opted to shut down the plant -
rather than restart it following maintenance - because managers are
not qualified or experienced enough to run it after about 400 USW
members walked out.
Tesoro spokeswoman Tina Barbee said the employees at the refinery
are the "same ones who provide technical support to the facilities,
supervise the operators on a daily basis and train them in how to
safely operate the refineries."
THREE TO ONE
Currently, there are 320 workers at Toledo refinery represented by
the USW and about 278 non-union employees, according to BP.
At any given time, there are also anywhere from 300 to 1,000
contract workers at the refinery. During most days, USW workers are
outnumbered by contractors by 3-to-1, building trade and union
sources said. The USW used to have members in a boiler and carpenter
shop, but now that work has gone to contract workers.
Typically, USW workers are responsible for shutting down a unit,
while contractors do the work. But there are a host of jobs at the
refinery that do not fall neatly in the project category done by
contractors work and operations done by USW.
This type of work is described as routine maintenance - replacing
wires, screens and other tasks - and it is at the heart of the
disagreement between the USW and the companies. USW says these jobs
are routine tasks closely aligned to operations while the companies
want to retain the flexibility that comes with contract workers -
sometimes represented by their own unions - and limit their exposure
to USW strikes.
The issue has divided traditional allies.
"On one hand, we are union brothers and sisters and we support
them," said one local leader in the building trades. "On the other
hand, they want our jobs, so it's not like we can picket with them."
Inspectors have visited refineries in Carson, California, and
Catlettsburg, Kentucky, where strikes have occurred to determine
whether the replacement workers have the proper training and
qualifications. In Kentucky, inspectors from the state's Department
of Labor were responding to a complaint, while California inspectors
from the state's Department of Industrial Relations were already at
the site for a routine visit and decided to expand their inquiry.
Both the Kentucky and California investigations are ongoing,
officials said Friday. Inspectors from the U.S. Occupational Health
and Safety Administration, the lead agency in Ohio, have not visited
Toledo, officials said Friday.
THE FINAL STRAW
Ostberg, the 56-year-old engineer who worked at Toledo since 1980,
helped run the refinery operating center, known locally as the ROC,
the heart of the plant. Behind a blast-proof wall, Ostberg and
others monitor the dozens of units that populate the refinery to
ensure things are running properly and alert USW workers manning the
units when they are not.
Toledo is an integrated system, which means each unit depends on
another for feedstock. So, if there is a problem with one unit, it
can quickly grow to other units and often takes more manpower to put
under control.
“I sit behind a blast-proof wall, so I’m not worried about my
safety," he says. "But I fear for everyone else.”
(Reporting by Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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