
On September 28, 2017, personnel from North Star Terminal & Stevedore Company and Harris Sand & Gravel placed the TAPS Pipeline Workers Statue in its new home near Kelsey Dock.
The location was specifically selected as it provides a clear view of the Alyeska Valdez Marine Terminal on the opposite side of Port Valdez.
With the statue in place, Harris Sand & Gravel will work to install rods and straps to permanently secure it to its foundation.
The Pipeline Workers Statue was sculpted from bronze by Malcolm Alexander and represents the 70,000 workers who worked on the pipeline during the three years and two months spent on construction. The figures represent a surveyor, engineer, laborer, welder, and teamster. The laborer is an Alaskan Native and the teamster is a woman.
To commemorate the 40th anniversary of TAPS, Alyeska and the TAPS owners donated the statue to the community of Valdez.
On August 23, 2017, North Star Stevedores loaded the statue from its original home on the Alyeska Valdez Marine Terminal onto a flatbed truck. Harris Sand & Gravel trucked the statue to its property on Airport Road, where it was stored until Zastrow Enterprises could complete pouring the statue’s new foundation.
A formal community dedication ceremony will be scheduled in the future once construction efforts are complete. The Mayor’s Beautification Task Force will also be working to develop landscaping and interpretive signage to install next spring in the area surrounding the statue.
A special thank you to North Star Stevedores for voluntarily donating their services, crane, and personnel to assist in the effort to move the statue from the Valdez Marine Terminal to the Kelsey Dock uplands.
Posted September 28, 2017 Allie Ferko, Public Information Officer City of Valdez, Alaska
Around 11:30am last Thursday, September 21st, a crude oil spill was observed on the water at the West end of Valdez Marine Terminal, near Berth 5. Public Information Officer Kate Dugan said in a statement to media that an investigation is ongoing.
A preventative maintenance task which tests the integrity of loading arms is believed to have caused the spill. The source of the spill is contained.
Quotes from Incident Commander:
“The cause of the spill, piping that released an oily water mix, makes it very difficult to give a precise estimate of the amount spilled,” said Scott Hicks, Incident Commander “But any crude oil in the water is too much, and we will bring all necessary resources and expertise to the response.”
“While we never want this sort of event to occur, we train year round to prepare for events like this, and we have the resources to respond,” said Scott Hicks, Incident Commander. “Crews have been working diligently overnight and will continue again today, keeping safety as their first priority and reducing any impacts to the environment.”
Impacts to Shipping
Safety and Security Zones
Preliminary determination of the cause of the spill
Alyeska crews were conducting planned annual maintenance of the loading arms; to test the integrity of the loading arms, a fire water pump routed salt water through the system at an increased pressure.
During a pause in the testing, oily test water flowed back through hose and piping related to the maintenance, out of the fire system salt water intake piping, and into Port Valdez.
Boom was deployed at the time of the loading arm testing; the salt water intake piping which was the source of the spill was outside of the booming.
Alyeska personnel have confirmed the cause was not mechanical or piping integrity, and that a problem occurred during the execution of the loading arm testing.
Alyeska has initiated a full investigation of the event to confirm these findings.