Charlie Crist Says Oil Rig Explosion Changed His Minds About Off Shore Oil Drilling
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Posted: 7:24 AM Apr 28, 2010
Charlie Crist Says Oil Rig Explosion Changed His Minds About Off Shore Oil Drilling
Oil from last week’s explosion in Louisiana’s gulf coast is 85 miles from Florida’s shoreline and moving east. Governor Charlie Crist flew over the oil ridden waters Tuesday afternoon. What he saw closed the door to the possibility of drilling off Florida’s coast as long as he has a say-so.
Reporter: Whitney Ray

Crist Says Oil Rig Collapse Changes His Mind
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Oil from last week’s explosion in Louisiana’s gulf coast is 85 miles from Florida’s shoreline and moving east. Governor Charlie Crist flew over the oil ridden waters Tuesday afternoon. What he saw closed the door to the possibility of drilling off Florida’s coast as long as he has a say-so.

Seeing is believing for Governor Charlie Crist. He boarded a plane Tuesday afternoon to get a peek of the oil spill off of the Louisiana Gulf Coast. What he saw sealed the deal on his thoughts about offshore drilling.

“There’s no way that we could entertain the though of drilling, not now..”

Oil from the spill is 85 miles from Florida’s coast, and depending on the wind and ocean currents, it could hit Florida beaches. The Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection Mike Sole flew with the governor to assess the state’s risk.

“If it’s small enough I think we can control it from having an adverse impact, but if it’s large and we get a lot coming to Florida I think we can begin to see impacts.”

At the sight of the accident a thousand barrels of oil a day are being pumped into the Gulf of Mexico. It could take months to stop the bleeding.

Crist says he’s surprised by the amount of time it will take to get the spill under control… because the explosion happened on one of the industries newest rigs. Using technology the industry deemed safe.

“That was supposed to be one of the most technologically advanced rigs that exists and we’ve seen what’s happened.”

Crist’s new view on drilling marks the second time in two years he’s switched positions, but he’s not alone. Now most elected officials in Florida who were supporting a lift on the state drilling ban are reconsidering.

The Spill may prove to be the worst in US history. Clean up crews are considering setting the oil on fire. Florida’s Department of Emergency Management will be watching Florida’s coast and communicating with clean up crews to keep.


Latest Comments

Posted by: George Location: Lynn Haven on Apr 30, 2010 at 03:08 PM

Drill regardless. We need the money, and a governor who cares about helping bring this state back. If we don't drill, let's do the next-best thing-- legalize marijuana. And I'm a Republican saying this.
Posted by: Chief on Apr 30, 2010 at 01:34 PM

Louisana fisherman have already filed suit against BP . If BP has to file for bankruptcy those who file first will be paid first. This isn't a remote part of Alaska like the Valdez this spill coud effect 30 to 40 million people. Lets hope they get it stopped but it doesn't look good . Two weeks to two months is the best estimate the two week fix is an unproven fix.
Posted by: Natan Location: Miami on Apr 29, 2010 at 06:43 AM

deedee - There are "different sets of rules" because Florida voters exercise their voice! If people in other Gulf states had done the same, there wouldn't be "different sets of rules". Why should Floridians have to "share in the problems"? All citizens should be sharing in solutions - like renewable energy!
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