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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Those Local Chemical Plants and Your Healthy Lifestyle

Fractionation TowerFinding it hard to stay healthy in Houston? Do you find yourself wheezing and coughing . . . maybe because you’re uh, so out of shape? Blogger and chemical-plant worker Baytown Bert has come up with a solution: Industrial Trekking.

Industrial Trekking (IndyTrek) is a planned path consisting of climbing/walking obstacles or evolutions inside a refinery, chemical plant, factory, water treatment plant or even a large office building whereby a person can use stairs and ladders to promote fitness. An IndyTrek typically consists of 8-10 evolutions, usually requiring an hour to complete.

What a great way to get out, lose some weight, and get some fresh air, too! But how can anyone find the time?

I do it on the clock, as I can do it while strolling through the Chemical Plant I work in, but it can be done anywhere stairs are and in time-frame sections, throughout the day until all the evolutions are completed. It can be incorporated into your daily schedule (while on the clock or on break).

After the jump: A Baytown Bert photo shows an IndyTrekker in action!

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Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Slime in the Internet Machine: County Restaurant Inspection Reports Now Online

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If only Marvin Zindler had lived to see this!

Houston’s longtime consumer reporter is no longer around to deliver his stirring “Slime in the Ice Machine!” reports on TV, but Harris County Public Health & Environmental Services is now allowing online access to its database of inspection reports for retail food establishments.

Though it’s not nearly as user-friendly as, say, being able to see letter grades in restaurant front windows, the ability to search through reports online is a big step forward. And hey, now that they’re available, maybe someone can turn distributing inspection report cards to county restaurants into a business.

If you’re on the prowl for ice-machine violations in the new database, maybe to put into your own Zindler-style restaurant-inspection broadcasts on YouTube, look for “Slime on soda nozzles, soda gun & holster, ice machine, yogurt machines” under inspection item 25, “Food Contact Surfaces of Equipment and Utensils Cleaned, Sanitized/Good Repair.”

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Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Happy New Year from Baytown!

Baytown Sunrise

That beautiful flare glowing from atop ExxonMobil Chemical’s Olefins plant in Baytown last Thursday night wasn’t just a pretty New Year’s display for the city. It came with a couple of bonuses: two “not specifically authorized” releases, including 6,857 pounds of benzene, plus a bunch of other fun toxins.

Not to be outdone, the nearby ExxonMobil oil refinery decided to celebrate the new year in its own special way, releasing a bouquet of smelly agents including 3,010 lbs. of neurotoxicant carbonyl sulfide into our lovely Gulf air.

Now when Houston visitors ask you why the east side of the city has an odor reminiscent of cooked cabbage, you’ll be able to explain why.

Meanwhile, two environmental organizations are interrupting the normal course of business over in Deer Park with a pesky lawsuit:

“On average of more than once a week for at least the past five years, Shell has reported that it violated its own permit limits by spewing a wide range of harmful pollutants into the air around the Deer Park plant,” said Luke Metzger, executive director of Environment Texas.

Photo of Baytown sunrise: Bill Jacobus

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Thursday, June 29, 2006

Catch the Buzz: Pesticide in the Houston Skies

What’s that buzzing you’ve been hearing outside since last night? Why, just the sporting folks from Harris County Mosquito Control, spreading good cheer and an insecticide called dibrom throughout the northern parts of the city:

At an airfield in Sugar Land, health officials Wednesday evening loaded three small airplanes with more than 3,150 pounds per gallon of insecticide as they prepared to fly over portions of northwest and northeast Harris County throughout the night.

The county began spraying by truck in the spring, and the planes allow officials to strike larger areas and parts of the county that are less accessible by vehicles.

The airplane spraying that began this week is earlier in the “season” than usual. West Nile virus was first identified in area mosquitoes in 2002. Director Rudy Bueno tells the Chronicle that a recent upsurge in West Nile virus in captured mosquitoes

is unusual because areas with West Nile often experience a decrease in the virus two or three years after it is detected. “It is not common,” he said. “However (Harris County) is in a much warmer area, and changes in the weather pattern are part of the reason for increase.”

Ah, it’s our warm and welcoming climate that’s brought it on! More airplane fun tonight, over a tiny 265,200-acre section of north Harris County.

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