5/21/2006

Copper Caper?

Yesterday, I went to Home Depot to buy a coil (250') of 14/2 NMB, or "Romex" as in the trade call it. But when I saw the price of it I couldn't believe my eyes! $78.00? And get this: 12/2 was $130.00! Thank God I already had a full coil of 14/3 on my van. Before you say "Well that's tough" or something like that, this copper caper is going to force myself, and other electricians and plumbers to have to charge our customers more. So just why is copper so expensive? I've heard rumors that China is buying it all up, that because of the war in Iraq, that India is hoarding it, etc. All of these mean nothing to me. What matters is seeing the price of wire per foot triple since this time last year. I pity the larger Electrical Contractors who wire new homes, as they go through thousands of feet a week. My final question: Will the price ever go down? Or will everything, like Gasoline, Food, Utilities, etc just continue to go up? If so, then it seems to me that America is heading for a serious ressession. Higher prices mean less spending, less spending means less work, less work means less income. Maybe I will win the lottery.. P.S. If you live in Delaware County and are in need of an Electrical Contractor, Click Here.

5/20/2006

While Were On The Subject..

I found this on Alex Jones web site. Alex is quite a Conspiracy guy, far more than I ever could be. But he raises valid questions about just what did hit the Pentagon on Septemember Eleventh, 2001. Even Donald Rumsfeld was quoted that " The Missile that struck this building". So was it? Who was behind this? Why did the "Warren Commission 2" just disregard the evidence? We all may never know but God willing SOMEBODY will shed some TRUTH on this.

5/19/2006

Very Interesting... Far From Stupid

 Curt, we are very curious as to your knowledge of Able Danger and other interesting things... A visitor from 134.152.241.118 (nslookup) arrived from www.google.com curt weldon 31-40, and visited www.totallydelco.com/blog/2004/10/curt-weldon-demigod-or-pariah.html at 05:32:34 PM on Friday, May 19, 2006. This visitor used Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.4) Gecko/20030624 Netscape/7.1 (ax). Status: string 134.152.241.118 pattern matches to an IP address. Performing lookup... Status: address 134.152.241.118 maps to Host241118.osd.mil Status: the forward resolution of Host241118.osd.mil maps back to 134.152.241.118, as expected. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status: connecting to whois server 'whois.arin.net'. Status: sending query '134.152.241.118'. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OrgName: The Pentagon OrgID: THEPEN Address: OPN-BM, Pentagon Address: Rm BE884 City: Washington StateProv: DC PostalCode: 20310 Country: US NetRange: 134.152.0.0 - 134.152.255.255 CIDR: 134.152.0.0/16 NetName: OSD-NET NetHandle: NET-134-152-0-0-1 Parent: NET-134-0-0-0-0 NetType: Direct Assignment NameServer: DNS-PUB-01-U.OSD.MIL NameServer: DNS-PUB-02-U.OSD.MIL NameServer: DNS-PUB-03-U.OSD.MIL Comment: RegDate: 1989-06-19 Updated: 2006-01-25 OrgTechHandle: IPMAN18-ARIN OrgTechName: IP Management OrgTechPhone: +1-703-692-0269 OrgTechEmail: dns@pentagon.mil It's about time someone with some authority looked into this, God knows that it, "The Story" has bothered me now since I first read it. P.S. Now, only if this fine patriot would visit the same blog post, it would make me believe that their are still more people that I put my faith in are protecting us. I like to call it; "The Triple Crown". Shop The Bunny Valentines 2007

5/15/2006

Rainbow Over Delco

rainbowoverdelco rainbowoverdelco rainbowoverdelco I just had to go out and take these pics a few minutes ago. Amazing that my neighbors also remembered that after a violent thunderstorm and the sun shines, a rainbow is formed. Must be in our genetics..

5/12/2006

Mario Civera is the Legislature

The polls tell us that we are disgusted with our Pennsylvania Legislature. Yet, the same polls tell us we are not as disgusted with our own Legislator. Does this make any sense? Are they not one in the same? Our own Mario Civera stood with the Republican caucus, clapping like a seal approving with his leadership's decision to kill the property tax relief plan. This plan, not perfect, was at least a start towards breaking the 30 year logjam. Mr. Civera talks out of both sides of his mouth. On one hand he said he favored the plan, yet he stood in the Capitol Rotunda with his Republican caucus applauding the death of the property tax bill that would have at least offered some help to those who needed it most. His loyalty is to the Harrisburg leaders, of which he is one, rather than the people he represents here in Upper Darby, the 164th District. How many people will lose their homes while Civera and the Republicans fiddle in Harrisburg. Before it's too late I implore you to understand that Mario Civera is the Legislature. Unable to accomplish the things that matter most of us here at home. Instead of taking a stand, being a leader, Mr. Civera prefers to stand in the political safety of the backround. Making no noise, taking no chances and more concerned with being re-elected than doing what's right. If there was ever an opportunity to send the message that the time has come for a change, it is now. As much as you may like Mario personally, as I do, he no longer deserves to represent us in Harrisburg. The go along party politics has us mired in quicksand, all Mario does is follow the leader. How about following us for a change, have some guts and do something bold. I've not mentioned myself thusfar, but it's clear that I will be the opposite of Mr. Civera in the Legislature. Bold action will be my byword, I won't stop until the people of Upper Darby get what they want and need. Sure, I could hold meaningless hearings, and make promise, promise, promise. I choose a different direction. Pennsylvania first, Upper Darby first, the people first. Make the tough decisions and toss the consultants and lobbyists out the door. People first, simple. Casey R. Roncaglione

5/11/2006

Testing yet again

It seems that GOOGLE got their act together and fixed the problem that has plagued this blog and countless others who do not use their servers to handle the blog posts. But .. For how long? Philadelphia had a "Terrorist Exercise" yesterday, only KYW announced it. I have many things on my mind, from Peter Porcupine to the gasoline ripoff to the primary coming up. To my fellow contributors, please post away anything that is on your ming and let me know if you cannot access this blog as I will move it to word press. Cheers..

5/09/2006

Challenger Football

I saw a beautiful piece on SportsCenter about a sports program for special need children who play football. Many are wheelchair bound, all with physical and mental situations that don't allow them to play with able bodied children. I would like to start a program here in Delaware County for those children. If you had seen the pure joy of a child being wheeled over the goal line scoring a touchdown it would make even the toughest of us cry. I played Drexel Hill football, badly, but I played. Now that I'm in a position to accomplish some of my dreams, I want to do the same for others. This has nothing to do with politics, let me make that clear. It inspired me to do something of value for those who could truly benefit from such a program. If you are interested in helping me explore the posibilities of establishing this program, please get in touch and we can start from there. Casey Roncaglione caseyroncaglione@excite.com

5/07/2006

Hero cop in Clifton Heights

CLIFTON HEIGHTS -- An ordinary day turned into an extraordinary day for the chief of police who captured a brazen burglary suspect in record time. Chief Walter Senkow was in his vehicle when the burglary and a description of the alleged intruder were broadcast on the police band radio. Sgt. Stephen Brown reported a resident of the 200 block of Walnut Street had just returned home shortly before 10:30 a.m. Friday and heard a noise. "She saw a hand in the back doorway and saw a guy by the back door of her house," Brown said, noting a neighbor and the victim provided a description. "While we were responding Chief Senkow spotted a man fitting the description about four blocks away walking on East Baltimore Avenue," Brown said. "The chief stopped, exited his vehicle and called out the suspect’s first name," and called for back-up officers. James Whinnery, 53, of the first block of North Highland Avenue, Lansdowne, was taken into custody without incident and jailed for criminal attempt to burglary and related offenses. "He’s a career burglar," Brown said of Whinnery, noting the suspect was on probation for break-ins eight years ago. "I was out in the police car and knew a neighboring police department had expressed an interest in Whinnery for questioning on numerous unsolved burglaries since January," Senkow said, noting he remembered Whinnery from incidents in 1998 involving burglaries in the borough and Springfield."I was the arresting officer then," Senkow said. "I knew he was released from prison in November and fit the description. Police cars were heading toward Walnut Street, but I headed the other way because I knew he would be heading toward Lansdowne. I saw him in front of Rite-Aid. "I got out and said, ‘Jim, get down on the ground,’" Senkow said. "I only had a radio in my hand and called for backup because I don’t carry handcuffs."Whinnery had a small cut on his right hand allegedly from breaking the glass in the back door of the residence. ©DelcoTimes 2006

4/27/2006

I wish they would identify the REAL problem...

'The new agency, which would be called the National Preparedness and Response Authority, or NPRA, would have responsibility both for natural disasters, such as a hurricane, and a possible terror attack.'

'While the NPRA would be within DHS, it should be a "distinct entity" and should be protected from diminution by the department. Numerous witnesses testified that FEMA had been stripped of resources and power in recent years, making it less nimble and effective.'

'"The Director would have a direct line of communications to the President during catastrophes," the report reads.'

'The committee's recommendations went into great organizational detail, calling for more regional offices than the 10 FEMA now has, the consolidation of three interagency coordinating groups into one and greater funding for preparedness at the state and federal levels.'

Amazing how things come full circle. They're saying what many are saying without really saying it. huh? Yeah that's return FEMA to an independent agency. Why? Well FEMA used to have a direct line to the president. FEMA used to have resources and power. FEMA seemed to work fine during the september 11th terrorism attacks. Amazing what FEMA has asked for (noted back in the post-katrina days) is now being said should be given to some other agency?

Of course now I can't find the quote regarding how FEMA is broken due to a lack of leadership and funding...a quote made by a senate committee member. Think about that for a second. Read into that a bit. Who decides the leadership? Who decides the funding? So...who's broken?

BUT, take the cash cow out of Homeland Security? Take away the Homeland Security privelege tax from the FEMA cash cow? Preposterous.

Its a wholesale housecleaning.....of an acronym.

Of course the problem isn't this crazy DHS thing. Duh.

FEMA's a good idea. DHS is not. Its creation was political, a 'yes we're doing something to change things due to sept 11th'. Why create an independent agency within a department? How does that make sense? I'd love to be there when this 'independent agency within a department' goes straight to the pres and the chertoff-esque guy is left out. That doesn't work within the framework of politics nor the National Incident Management System.

Its the regulations that are the freaking problem, but they can't admit that. That would mean votes.

4/21/2006

Get your gas - NOW

After I overheard some conversation among Wawa supervisors at their Glen Mills store about possibly running dry on some gas pumps by this weekend, and then seeing every station filled with cars waiting to get gas, I went on-line to see if there was some sort of gas shortage in the area. The following is taken from the Philadelphia Inquirer web site.

Problems at refineries have disrupted some supplies. AAA warned that problems could continue for weeks - and drive prices higher.

By Harold Brubaker, Edward Colimore and Marc Schogol
Inquirer Staff Writers
Tanker trucks wait in line to fill up at Pacific Atlantic Terminal in South Philadelphia. Gasoline supplies have been disrupted in the Philadelphia and New York markets as refiners have run into problems working to replace a gasoline additive with ethanol. Some Philadelphia- area gas stations have had to close temporarily when they ran out of fuel to sell.
MICHAEL S. WIRTZ / Inquirer
Tanker trucks wait in line to fill up at Pacific Atlantic Terminal in South Philadelphia. Gasoline supplies have been disrupted in the Philadelphia and New York markets as refiners have run into problems working to replace a gasoline additive with ethanol. Some Philadelphia- area gas stations have had to close temporarily when they ran out of fuel to sell.

As if rising prices weren't enough, the tanks have run dry at some Philadelphia-area service stations in the last few days as the refining industry stumbles through a change in the formulation of gasoline.

Oil refiners are phasing out a petrochemical that makes gasoline burn cleaner but which also has been found to contaminate groundwater. Refiners are switching to corn-based ethanol.

The changeover is creating supply-chain bottlenecks because much work must be done at fuel terminals and service stations to handle ethanol.

The maintenance-related shutdown of one area refinery, production problems at another, and the change from winter-blend to summer-blend gasoline are exacerbating the problems.

"There is truly a dearth of supply in the Philly and New York markets today," Wayne Hummel, of Liberty Petroleum L.L.C., said yesterday. His firm supplies 40 stations in the Philadelphia region.

Hummel said four Liberty stations had run out of fuel the last two days, as tanker trucks drove from terminal to terminal, unable to find fuel. "It's ugly. It's very ugly," he said.

AAA Mid-Atlantic warned drivers yesterday that gasoline-supply disruptions could continue for the next few weeks and contribute to higher pump prices.

The group said the average gasoline price in Philadelphia and its Pennsylvania suburbs had climbed 52 cents a gallon - or 22 percent - to $2.85 since the most recent upturn began on March 7. In South Jersey, yesterday's average was $2.71 a gallon, an 18 percent increase from a month ago. A key benchmark price for crude oil on the New York Mercantile Exchange yesterday was $71.95 a barrel, up more than $10 from a month ago.

Catherine Rossi, spokeswoman for AAA, said she knew of eight stations in the region that were out of fuel yesterday.

Areas of Virginia and Texas, also going through the ethanol conversion, have experienced similar supply disruptions, said Jeff Lenard, spokesman for the National Association of Convenience Stores.

Locally, gas retailers said scheduled deliveries had been late - sometimes up to a day or more - causing them to turn customers away.

Lou Stiles' Sunoco service station in Mount Laurel ran out of gas at least four times this month. Yesterday afternoon, he ran out of regular and was waiting for a tanker.

"We're a 24-hour operation and pay two men to stay on when there's nothing to do but wait for a load of gas," said Stiles, who has operated the station at Route 38 and Hartford Road for 40 years.

As of 6:25 p.m., cones were blocking the gas lanes at the station.

Jai Kulkarni, owner of a Lukoil station and Kwik Farms convenience store on Route 23 in West Conshohocken, said he was out of gas for about four hours Wednesday. He kept the convenience store open, but he closed the pumps - at a cost of $200 an hour in lost sales.

At that station yesterday was Vinnie Zambuto, a 31-year-old graphic designer from Coatesville who said he had never seen a dry gas station before encountering one last week. Recalling the gas shortages of the 1970s that his "parents keep talking about," he said he hoped the new shortages were short-lived.

"I'm hoping it will work itself out."

The conversion to ethanol was prompted by the federal Energy Policy Act of 2005, which left refiners vulnerable to groundwater contamination suits and mandated greater use of renewable fuels. The use of ethanol forced gasoline retailers to clean their tanks, remove all water from them and install extremely fine filters on their pumps.

Ethanol is a solvent that picks up any gunk in tanks and readily blends with water. Those properties could ruin a 9,000-gallon tank of gasoline at a huge cost to a retailer.

It costs up to $1,500 to clean tanks, said Kevin S. Kan, president and chief executive officer of American Auto Wash Inc. in Malvern, which operates 18 stations in the region, including 13 BPs that have converted to the ethanol blend.

Ethanol is logistically more complicated than the petrochemical it replaced - MTBE, or methyl tertiary butyl ether. Refiners could blend MTBE into gasoline at the refinery and send the finished gasoline through pipelines to terminals.

But ethanol must be blended into gasoline at the terminal because it would mix with water if it were sent through pipelines, ruining the fuel. So, fuel terminals have to go through a similar process of cleaning tanks to store ethanol before it is blended.

They must also install blending equipment.

Independent gasoline distributors said few fuel terminals had gas yesterday. Those that did, such as the former Exxon terminal in South Philadelphia now owned by Pacific Energy Partners L.P., had trucks waiting four hours for fuel because the terminal was filling trucks in only two of the five lanes that they use normally. "We are doing our best to activate the others," said Jennifer Shigei, manager of investor relations for the Long Beach, Calif., company.

The three companies that operate refineries on the Delaware River - Sunoco Inc., Valero Energy Corp., and ConocoPhillips - declined to discuss the supply situation in much detail.

Valero spokeswoman Mary Rose Brown said the company's Paulsboro refinery began blending ethanol yesterday, but did not respond to a question about a disruption there this week.

Shannon Breuer, a spokeswoman for Sunoco, said the company was "focused on being a reliable supplier" and was confident that any problems would be short-term.


Contact staff writer Harold Brubaker at 215-854-4651 or hbrubaker@phillynews.com.