Tuesday, November 16, 2010

What's that smell?


TEXAS CITY, Texas — A smell similar to rotten eggs enveloped Texas City about 5 p.m. Monday afternoon after a leak from a subunit at BP’s Texas City refinery.

Workers were doing maintenance work on a sour water compressor on the refinery’s Power 2 unit when workers noticed a smell after a piece of equipment failed, company spokesman Michael Marr said. The odor, which forced some businesses on Palmer Highway about 13 blocks from the refinery to shutter their doors and close windows, lasted more than an hour.

The smell is believed to come from liquid in the subunit that contained hydrogen sulfide, which is a hazardous chemical that has a strong smell of rotten eggs, Texas City Homeland Security Director Bruce Clawson said. The Texas City Fire Department and BP industrial hygienists conducted ground-level air monitoring and did not find any readings of hazardous chemicals in the air, Clawson said.

Between one and two barrels of sour water — which is waste water that contains hydrocarbons and is pumped to an enclosed sewer system for disposal — spilled, causing the offensive odor, officials said.

There was not a shelter in place order for the city, but Clawson issued a phone and e-mail alert to residents notifying them of the situation.

There was a brief shelter in place order within the refinery for areas downwind of the leak, Marr said. BP set up an incident command center and the leak was contained at about 9 p.m.

http://www.khou.com/news/local/BP-sends-stink-across-Texas-City-108436904.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Human trafficking topic of lecture

CYPRESS, TX - Former Lone Star College System summa cum laude international student, Diana Velardo, will be the keynote speaker Nov. 16 during LSC-CyFair’s joint International Education and Global Entrepreneurship Week celebration.
Velardo, a multi-lingual attorney specializing in immigration law, serves as the Executive Director of Artemis Justice Center, a nonprofit organization she founded to help victims of domestic violence, human trafficking and victims of crimes. (For information, go to www.artemisjusticecenter.org.)

“I have always spoken up wherever there was injustice,” said Velardo, who was appointed to the Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee by the Texas Supreme Court.

“My mother said that I was a born attorney from the day I could babble. I felt that the path to justice would be easier if I had a law degree.”
After graduating high school with honors in Germany, Velardo came to the United States in 1994 to pursue her dream of becoming an attorney. She began with an associate degree at LSC-North Harris (formerly a North Harris Montgomery Community College District campus.) She went on to earn a bachelor’s in psychology and minor in sociology at the University of Houston with honors and her Juris Doctor at the University of Houston Law Center.

Velardo, a co-founder and past chair of the Houston Coalition Against Human Trafficking, returns to LSC for her keynote presentation “Have you met a slave today?” in which she will address human trafficking, an international problem with local implications.

“I want the audience to understand that ‘you are the future’ means that it comes with the responsibility for building a better life, not just for themselves, but for all those who are not as fortunate,” said Velardo. “I want them to realize that slavery is alive and well and it is not a problem of the past. I want them to know that they have the power to make a difference and change the world, one small deed at a time.”

Velardo is making a difference as a legal expert on issues of human trafficking, domestic violence and victims of crimes who mentors to attorneys in her field of expertise, presents at conferences, conducts trainings and serves on boards of several nonprofit organizations. Her dedication to such issues comes from her mother’s example. Volunteering alongside her mother at demonstrations, safe houses, abused women’s houses, refugee camps and more, she saw a part of the world that most people shield from their children.

“Seeing the plight and devastation that trafficking, wars and domestic abuse have on our fellow humans instilled in me the need to do something about it when I grew up,” said Velardo, who’s setting an example now for her own daughters, Artemis and Aphrodite. “Seeing my mother spend her days searching for the next homeless family she could put in our home, the next orphan she could help, left an everlasting impression in my soul.”

Don’t miss Velardo’s keynote presentation set 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Conference Center, rooms 151-152 on the campus at 9191 Barker Cypress. For a full schedule of LSC-CyFair’s International Education and Global Entrepreneurship events Nov. 15 through Nov. 18, go to LoneStar.edu/cyfair.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Houston murders may be work of a serial killer


by Michelle Homer / khou.com
khou.com
Posted on November 1, 2010 at 1:38 PM
Updated today at 1:42 PM


HOUSTON – Police are looking into a possible link between the strangulation murders of at least three women since June.
The most recent cases involved homeless women. The body of Carol Flood, 62, was found on Oct. 10 in a stairwell behind the old YMCA building. She was partially nude. On Sept. 30, Retia LaFaye Long, 52, was found dead behind the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart at 1700 San Jacinto.

Now police believe the same killer may have strangled Raquel Mundy last June 17, then dumped her body in a field in the 300 block of St. Charles.
Mundy, 24, was murdered after accepting a ride from a stranger when she was stranded downtown.

She had dropped her mom and two kids off at the Greyhound bus station downtown around 1:30 a.m. Thursday. She then discovered her car had been towed from a McDonald’s parking lot across the street.
Mundy tried to call friends and relatives, but couldn’t find anyone to give her a ride to the tow lot. Witnesses saw her get into a grey car with an unknown man, according to police.

Mundy later sent a text message to her mother saying she thought she was in danger and feared the man was going to hurt her.
Angela Collins was still on the bus to California with her two grandchildren when she got the disturbing message.

She tried frantically to reach Mundy. Collins then called several relatives and asked them to try to find Mundy.
By the time the bus arrived in California, there was still no sign of her daughter.
"Next call we got, they had found the body. It was my baby, Collins said as she choked back tears. "This man took away my baby."
An autopsy revealed Mundy had been strangled.

READ THE FULL STORY HERE AT KHOU

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