tv CNN Special Report CNN March 25, 2014 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT
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>> thank you to richard quest as well. this is how we communicate in life off-camera as well. >> and coming up, oil and water, the the following is a cnn special report. try to imagine the seismic force that pushed alaska's mountains to the skies. or the enormity of the glaciers that melted to fill the sea. it looks indestructible. but on an overcast night, 25 years ago, the exxon
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valdez hit a wreath in the pristine waters of alaska's prince william sound. >> 11 million 300,000 gallons of oil have spilled. >> you don't run a ship aground without it being a big damn deal. >> it was the biggest tanker spill in american history. >> once you get oil out, you don't get it back. >> the oil slick polluted the shore. killed wildlife. >> i just remember this pool of black. >> and threatened the livelihoods of thousands of people. including this man. the exxon valdez captain, joseph hazelwood. vilified as a drunk, and silent for years about a disaster many people believe he caused, captain hazelwood speaks out. >> i don't want to bury the
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past. >> and opens up about what happened that fateful night. why did you decide to talk to me? >> it's something i've had to live with for 25 years. i'm keira phillips in valdez, alaska. for years there were warnings. and then it happened. a complete breakdown in a system that was supposed to prevent catastrophe. now, 25 years later, we're asking the question, could it happen again? it began in the port of valdez. like thousands of other routine voyages. if there's anything routine about shipping 53 million gallons of flammable toxic crude. how many times had you done that route?
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>> i think over a hundred times, in and out. >> 42-year-old captain joseph hazelwood was highly regarded by his crew. including chief engineer. >> i would sail global with him across the atlantic. >> and the exxon valdez was no row boat. only two years old, it was the length of three football fields. >> certainly wasn't the love boat. it was industrial strength. utilitarian, but it was top notch. >> and that night, 25 years ago, it was loaded with alaska crude. >> the weather wasn't too bad. it was spitting a little snow. >> it entered one of the richest fishing grounds in the world. prince william sound, thriving with schools of herring and salmon. now in the path of complete
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disaster. it was just after midnight. take me to that moment, the moment of impact, what do you remember? >> i was sitting at the desk in my office, and it just started to shake. not a violent shaking, but a very strange vibration. at that moment, the phone that was hanging on the bulkhead next to my desk rang. it was the third mate. he said, we're in trouble and i took off. >> hazelwood's ship had hit a two-mile underwater ridge, bligh wreath. were alarms going off? >> when i got to the bridge, they were going off, yes. loud bells, sirens. >> when you heard those alarms, were you thinking, oh, my god? >> well, i had a pretty good idea we had run aground.
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i threw up in the toilet that was adjacent to the bridge when i got up there. >> i felt like i had been kicked right in the stomach. >> hazelwood checked to make sure the crew was safe, and calmly notified the coast guard. >> we've fetched up hard aground. and evidently leaking some oil. we're going to be here for a while. >> so everybody knew we were in trouble. >> while the crew saw oil bubbling to the surface here at bligh wreath, they had no idea how bad it was down below. until the first diver went in. >> i was the eyes of everybody else.
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>> exxon hired rick wade to survey the damage. it was catastrophic. >> in fact, that is what i told the captain when we got on the radio. he said, how big is the hole? i said it's big enough to drive our boat through. >> and it was getting worse. >> we could hear it crack and groaning. we could watch the sides of the ship starting to spread up the side like a tuna can. >> 8 of the 11 cargo tanks were ruptured. millions of gallons of oil were billowing out. and no one yet knew why. at that point, are you still calm? >> well, i'm trying to be calm. i'm trying to figure out what do i do next? when we come back, investigators learn about a dark
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secret from the captain's past. >> i abused alcohol, yes. but i wasn't addicted to it. hey there, i just got my bill, and i see that it includes my fico® credit score. yup, you get it free each month to help you avoid surprises with your credit. good. i hate surprises. surprise! at discover, we treat you like you'd treat you. get the it card and see your fico® credit score.
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>> the vessel has lost 105,000 barrels of oil so far. >> it's coming up so fast, it's shooting five feet above the surface. >> so did you ever worry about shallow water? >> not in alaska. should be turning. >> we asked captain hazelwood to walk us through the events of 25 years ago. in a simulator at his alma mater, the state university of new york maritime college. take me back to that moment. back to a chain of events after the exxon valdez left port with hazelwood's decision to change course. hazelwood was worried about ice from the columbia glacier. large chunks had broken off and floated into the shipping lanes. where would it have been on the radar? >> it would have been coming out of here in this position here.
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>> what did you tell the coast guard at this point. >> i said there's ice in the lanes. i request permission to cross over the separation zone. >> i'm going to alter my course to 2-0-0. >> coast guard said roger that? >> yes. two ships prior to me had done it. >> even though the coast guard's radar could have tracked the ship, there was no requirement to look more than six miles out. exxon valdez was eight. so you didn't even know you were off the coast guard radar? >> i'm not sure where their range went to. but i assumed i was on it. i assumed they had that range. >> captain hazelwood then made a decision that would doom the ship. he turned the bridge over to the
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third mate, with instructions to turn back into the shipping lane. >> i went down to my office, had some paperwork to fill out and i wanted to look at the latest weather. >> the third mate called hazelwood and said he was turning. but what happens next remains a mystery. the third mate and the helmsman at the wheel both say they followed orders. but whether it was miscommunication or poor 1/2 vags, navigation, the exx exxon valdez did not turn when it was supposed to. >> the turn was initiated. it was just initiated late. >> so late the ship ran aground. what do you think happened? >> i don't know. sad to say i wasn't there. >> according to the national transportation safety board, the third mate likely missed the turn due to fatigue and overwork, although the third
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mate says he felt fine. but there was another potential issue with captain hazelwood. alcohol. coast guard investigator mark delozier was suspicious when he talked to hazelwood that night on the ship. how strong was the smell? >> it was strong enough to smell it at a distance of a few feet. >> turns out hazelwood and two other crew members had been drinking earlier that day. >> i didn't think it was a risk other crew members had been drinking earlier that day. >> i didn't think it was a risk. i thought i was drinking moderately. >> it was normal, in the sense that none of us got intoxicated. >> but what seemed normal was getting worse with every second.
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inan in an incredible fate that very night, the mayor of valdez was meeting here at city hall with oil industry officials and local citizens. the topic -- what would the response be like if there were a major oil spill? when we come back, why they were right to worry. and later -- why even have one drink? why take that risk? >> captain joseph hazelwood confronts his past while a jury decides his future. >> you talk about being lonely and alone. your entire freedom resides in the hand of 12 strangers now. [ coughs, sneezes ] i have a big meeting when we land, but i am so stuffed up, i can't rest. [ male announcer ] nyquil cold and flu liquid gels don't unstuff your nose. they don't? alka seltzer plus night fights your worst cold symptoms, plus has a decongestant. [ inhales deeply ] oh. what a relief it is. for what reality teaches you firsthand.
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♪ prince william sound is teaming with wildlife. abundant fish provide a living for thousands of people. and food for millions. the clear water is also home to majestic birds. sea otters. porpoises and whales. it is a national treasure. but on that terrible night 25 years ago, the wreck of the exxon valdez threatened it all. >> it was like a bomb went off
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in prince william sound. >> marine biologist rick steiner was a professor at the university of alaska. >> there's no great mystery there. oil and water and fish and wildlife don't mix. and we knew that long before exxon valdez. >> that's why the pipeline service company had a state-approved plan to protect the sound from an oil spill. they operate an 800-mile pipeline that carried oil to its terminal in valdez. that's where tankers load the toxic cargo. but for years, this man, dan lawn, was concerned that aleyeska could not handle a
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major spill. he was the pointman from the alaska department of environmental conservation, assigned to monitor aleyska. >> it became obvious that the plan was not being implemented properly or it was inadequate or both. >> july, 1982. in this memo to a state official, he writes that aleyska's oil skimmers are not capable of working in any conditions beyond windless and glassy seas. >> windless and glassy seas occur a little bit of the time in alaska. 95% of the time it's not that way. the conditions are much worse. >> may 1984. he alerts his bosses that aleyska's oil spill recovery equipment is becoming outdated. >> there were better skimmers available. they weren't using them. there were a lot bigger skimmers available that they needed that they didn't have. >> seven months later, he warns they need realistic data on aleyska response times. and issue because aleyska's
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barge for use in an oil spill is outfitted and ready in the summer, he says. but all equipment is stored in winter. >> some of the equipment was in the storage room. most of it was outside in a field covered in snow. >> in a statement to cnn, aleyska said the exxon valdez oil spill was an unprecedented and tragic event. the resources in place at the time were nowhere near as comprehensive as the world class prevention and response system in place today. improvements that were long overdue. >> everything in those memos came true. do i wish it hadn't? absolutely. >> lawn's agency, among others, would conclude alyeska's response was slow and weak. it did not meet the requirements of the contingency plan. >> they should have had their
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cleanup equipment on site within five hours. i think it took 13 or 14. >> precious hours wasted as the oil slick grew. by day three, high winds pushed the oil even farther, deep into coves, high into rocks. >> it just shoved it up the shore. and then it would roll in and out like waves. >> suddenly, the animals in prince william sound were fighting for their lives. >> there were otters that were completely coated with oil. throats had been ripped out by goals that had seized opportunistically on these birds that could no longer fly. >> look at that, something has been eating it. >> there were birds flapping in the water that couldn't get airborne because of the oil on their feathers.
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it was truly a horrific scene. >> exxon took control of the cleanup. it hired workers to clean the shore. and wildlife biologists from around the country to save the animals. terry williams had just published a study on cleaning oil from california sea otters. the longer the marine animal is sitting in oil, the more you're going to be dealing with death. >> it was a race against time. >> we noticed that the lungs were not normal. >> he's been so sick. >> the livers weren't normal. we were seeing ulcers in the stomach.
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>> some otters so sick, they faced a slow death. >> knowing what i know now, they're animals i would know enough to euthanize before i would put them through a whole rehab process. >> scientists would come to learn the oil was even more toxic than they originally believed. so toxic that the multimillion dollar fishing industry in prince william sound was at risk. when we come back, the men and women who make their living at sea. >> it really sunk in, oh, we're in trouble. >> and what captain joseph hazelwood would say to them today. do you still think about that, the people of prince william sound? >> i sure do, how their lives were turned really upside down. so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 a month? yup. all 5 of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text.
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off bligh reef. evidently leaking some oil. >> what's it like to hear that 25 years later? >> hmmm. part of it sounds like an out-of-body experience. part of it sounds like it happened yesterday. it's still pretty gut-wrenching. >> captain hazelwood has maintained a stoic silence for years, rarely talking about the details of that night. why did you decide to talk to me? >> well, just to show that i'm a human being. i think i probably just wanted to be heard. >> a thoughtful and private man, accustomed to a solitary life at sea, hazelwood flies home to his wife and daughter to find his picture on the front page of "the new york times."
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what were you thinking at that moment? >> it's going to really suck. >> it wasn't supposed to turn out this way for joseph hazelwood. he was a star student and always aspired to a career at sea. >> water always fascinated me, and i wanted to go out and see what was on the other side of the horizon. >> exxon hired him right out of college, and he quickly rose through the ranks, becoming one of the youngest captains in the fleet. he earned a stellar reputation as a skilled seaman. in fact, for the two years preceding the accident, the exxon valdez won best performing ship, including safety, under his command. did the crew know they were safe in your hands? >> i would like to think so. >> but there was another side to captain hazelwood. >> captain hazelwood reportedly has a history of alcohol-related
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driving offenses. >> a few days after the wreck, reporters revealed he had a record, two drunk driving convictions. >> four years ago, the company became aware that captain hazelwood had a problem with alcohol abuse. >> turns out, four years earlier, hazelwood came here for 28 days of rehab. >> i didn't drink excessive amounts at work. but my drinking was ratcheting up at home, and i was trying to find out why i was doing it. >> hazelwood says he was torn between life at home and life at sea. were you happy? >> i was satisfied. i'm not sure what happiness is. that's a philosophical plane i haven't reached yet. >> he took a short leave of absence and attended aa meetings. did you have to stand before the
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group and say hi, i'm joe hazelwood and i'm an alcoholic? >> i did, yeah. >> so you told them you were an alcoholic? >> in the context of the meetings, yeah. >> did you consider yourself an alcoholic? >> no. i abused alcohol, yes. but i wasn't addicted to it. i didn't have to have a drink. >> he may not have had to drink the afternoon of the accident, but he did. here at the pipeline club with a couple of his shipmates. how much has never been resolved. witnesses gave conflicting accounts. how much did you drink that day? >> i had three drinks. vodka on the rocks. >> how would you have described how you were feeling? >> felt pretty normal. >> so your judgment was not impaired at all by drinking? >> no. >> you carried so much
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responsibility, a crew, millions of gallons of oil. why have even one drink? why take that risk? >> i didn't think it was a risk. i thought i was drinking moderately. >> when word got out that the captain of the exxon valdez had been drinking that day, the target was on his back. >> do you have any comment? >> blood-alcohol tests showed captain hazelwood was over the coast guard's legal limit to operate a commercial vessel. but there were questions about the handling of the tests, taken more than ten hours after the accident. >> we're all extremely disappointed and outraged that an officer in such a critical position would have jeopardized his ship, crew, and environment. >> exxon fired him by telegram.
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joseph hazelwood became the only person criminally charged for the exxon valdez oil spill. >> we have a manmade destruction that probably has not been equaled since hiroshima. >> his close friend from college joined his defense team. >> he was neither drunk nor reckless in his behavior. >> hazelwood was facing up to 12 years in prison for one felony and three misdemeanors. the jury would have to decide was he impaired at the time of the accident and was he reckless to leave two lower ranking shipmates to steer the tanker when he left the bridge? >> joseph hazelwood goes to trial this week. >> not a single witness testified that captain joe hazelwood showed signs of being impaired by alcohol that night.
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and his crew testified that he was calm, in control, and fit to command the ship. leaving the bridge is his only regret. >> the only thing i would have changed, if i could rewrite the whole script, i wouldn't have left the bridge. that's what i should be faulted for, nothing else. >> not the drinking? >> it had nothing to do with it. >> how are you feeling this morning? >> fine. >> after almost seven weeks of testimony, judgment day. >> you talk about being lonely and alone. your entire freedom resides in the hands of 12 strangers now. >> we the jury find the defendant joseph hazelwood not guilty of criminal mischief in the second degree.
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>> hazelwood is acquitted on all charges except a misdemeanor, negligent discharge of oil. >> what was the last year like? >> it's been long and difficult. just want to try to get on with my life now. >> what does getting on with your life now mean? >> i would like to go back to sea. it's what i do. >> captain hazelwood paid a $50,000 fine and served 1,000 hours of community service in alaska. is there anybody that you blame for that accident? >> other than myself? >> uh-huh. >> no. >> you don't blame anybody else? >> no, that would be too easy. i'm not going to finger point. a guy missed a turn. people miss turns every day.
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whether i should have been closer, that falls on me. coming up -- >> you still don't have anything to clean it up with. >> angry fishermen push back against exxon. >> we were told it would be cleaned up, it would be taken care of, we wouldn't have to worry. >> and later, what is captain hazelwood doing now? discover card. i missed a payment. aw, shoot. shoot! this is bad. no! we're good! this is your first time missing a payment. and you've got the it card, so we won't hike up your apr for paying late. that's great! it is great! thank you. at discover, we treat you like you'd treat you. get the it card with late payment forgiveness. suddenly you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right.
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there are no roads to cordova, alaska. you get here by boat or plane. with only about 2500 residents, it's a tightly knit community. >> everybody does know your business. but everybody's in that business. >> the business is fishing. >> i'm a third generation fishermen. i can go out there and see the same things my grandpa saw back
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in the '30s. >> john platt and robert beadle. they're commercial fishermen. 25 years ago, michelle hahn o'leary was, too. but all that changed when the exxon valdez ran aground. >> to see it go from this exuberant, i mean, it's just exuberant prince william sound in the springtime, to see it go from that to dead quiet. dead quiet, no sound. except the helicopter flying overhead. >> this pool of black, it's just black, and it just is surging up and down this rock face. it really sunk in, oh, we're in
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trouble. >> the spill was to large, it would take weeks for exxon to get cleanup equipment in place. meanwhile -- >> you still don't have anything to clean it up with. >> among fishermen, mounting anger. >> we need some more pressure from the state to get exxon to do what has to be done. >> when exxon's cleanup began, it eventually hired the fishing fleet, the very men and women whose livelihoods were on the line. exxon ultimately spent more than $2 billion on the cleanup. >> the year of the oil spill, i mean, it was a bonanza. money was getting thrown around here like crazy. that's where they get the term, spilling era. >> cleaning the shore included gruesome work. >> i remember we found this sea otter, it was just matted, oily, and bagged it and dropped it
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off. >> what do you mean, you bagged it? >> you put it in the plastic bag. you don't want to get oil all over everything else. >> so they were dead? >> oh, yeah. >> basically body bags. >> many of those carcasses were burned. >> it wasn't only the otters, it was sea gulls, it was ducks, it was all kinds of things. >> the biggest economic shock would come a few years later when the herring population suddenly collapsed. herring were so abundant in prince william sound, it was absolutely magical. it was beyond belief. it was really a sight to behold. >> and it's gone? >> it's all gone, it's all gone. >> scientists debate whether the exxon valdez was solely to blame. but there's no doubt the repercussions were severe.
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>> losing the herring is so big. it goes really deep. >> the financial and emotional stress for many people was unbearable. >> there were suicides. we lost our mayor to suicide. there was a lot of domestic abuse. there was a lot of alcoholism. a lot of alcoholism. >> exxon voluntarily paid out $300 million in the year after the spill to compensate 11,000 alaskans and businesses. but 34,000 others took exxon to court. a jury found exxon reckless for leaving a captain with a history of drinking problems in command. >> this was to the full
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knowledge of exxon, and he was in charge of a super oil tanker. >> the jury awarded $287 million in damages, and it hit exxon with an additional $5 billion in punitive damages. exxon appealed, all the way to the supreme court, which cut that $5 billion to about $500 million. >> as far as the punitive damages, it wasn't a slap on the wrist. it was an insult. it was an insult to us. it was an insult to the fishermen. >> the herring have still not returned. but over the years, salmon runs grew larger. and cordova slowly turned a corner. >> to be a fishermen, you have to be optimistic. >> last year, robert beadle bought a new $290,000 boat. john platt has his eye on this one.
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economically and psychologically, cordova is finally moving on. if captain joe hazelwood were sitting right here at this table, what would you want to say to him 25 years later? >> i would say, i hope you have forgiven yourself. that's what i would say to him. i can't imagine being that man carrying that burden. >> after everything you've been through, after everything that the people of alaska have been through, you want to extend him grace? >> absolutely. yeah. yes. when we come back, captain hazelwood responds. you just can't shake it, can you? [ coughs, sneezes ] i have a big meeting when we land, but i am so stuffed up, i can't rest. [ male announcer ] nyquil cold and flu liquid gels don't unstuff your nose. they don't? alka seltzer plus night fights
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beneath the surface on eleanor island, on this beach, you can still find exxon valdez oil 25 years later. >> it usually gets in under these rock ledges. >> most scientists, including environmental advocate rick steiner, thought it would have decomposed by now. >> this is exxon valdez crude oil. >> oh, my gosh. it still smells so strong. >> it smells like it was just a few weeks out of the tanker. >> how much is there? 17,000 gallons on the shores of prince william sound, according to the scientists who led years of federal studies. that's less than half of 1% of what spilled. >> and the surprising thing, of course, it's still toxic. >> however, exxonmobil says in a statement to cnn, the isolated pockets of oil residue are so effectively sheltered, they pose no credible threat to wildlife.
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rick steiner disagrees. he says even a small impact matters over time. >> by the government scientist's own admission, if this oil is not remediated in the beaches, it will be here for decades and potentially centuries. >> steiner's bigger concern is out there. according to the exxon valdez oil still trustee council which monitors the environment, 12 species, including seals, bald eagles and pink salmon have recovered. ten others, including sea otters, are making progress. two species, including the herring, are not recovering at all. exxonmobil says research shows the ecosystem in prince william sound is healthy and thriving. but not to rick steiner. >> it's different.
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it will never be the way it was before the oil spill. ever. >> the u.s. coast guard is trying to make sure it never happens again. >> what we have now is far better than what we had in '89. >> but coast guard commander benjamin hawkins sure feels the pressure. radar now follows tankers all the way to bligh reef. tankers have double hulls, and two tugboats now escort them all the way out to sea. but hawkins does not trust technology to do it all. commander, what keeps you up at flight? >> the complacency scares me. as time goes by and nothing happens, it's easy for somebody
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to say it will never happen. >> alyeska, the pipeline company, now has strict requirements for handling a major spill. it has ten times more oil containment boom than in 1989. eight times as many oil skimmers. and accident response teams stand i by 24/7. mike day oversees the operation. >> it's an order of magnitude different than what existed in years past. it's night and day. >> even so, alyeska's practice drills show it still needs to improve. >> we're just like any other organization in any other industry. so we have to stay on top of our training. >> 90 miles away in cordova, the fishermen who lived through it are still wary. they saw the federal government clamp down after exxon valdez. only to see another calamitous response in 2010. not with exxon but with bp.
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its drilling rig, deep water horizon, blew up in the gulf of mexico. >> they were absolutely no more prepared for that spill than they were for this spill. >> the only thing that gives them comfort is having a citizen advisory council. a watchdog to hold government regulators and the industry accountable. >> we need advocacy. because if we're not watching and protecting ourselves, no one else will do it. >> exxon and its shipping company were charged with environmental crimes, pleading guilty to a combined four counts. and paying $1 billion in fines and civil claims to the government. exxonmobil says the oil spill was a catalyst and turning point to completely re-evaluate how it manages risks. among the reforms, drug and
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alcohol tests for safety sensitive positions, and better training for ship captains. exxonmobil says its unswerving commitment to safety has shown results, and that it has enduring regret over what happened. as for joseph hazelwood, his wife and daughter have stood by him. but his dream of returning to sea as a captain is over. he still has a license to pilot a super tanker, but no one has hired him. instead, he investigates maritime accidents for the lawyer who defended him, his best friend, michael challos. >> do you miss being a captain? >> parts of the job, i do. i miss the people, crew members. >> not surprising for a man who always wanted to go to sea. but what struck me was his special kinship with the people of alaska.
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>> i hope that their lives have achieved some sort of normalcy now. >> one of the fishermen said, she extends you grace, and you should extend yourself grace. >> i appreciate the sentiment again. but the responsibility doesn't just go away. >> you just can't shake it, can you? >> it's not that i can't, i won't. >> that's a big burden to carry. >> well, it's the burden i've chosen. >> and hazelwood's ship, the exxon valdez was sent back to sea under various names. but in 2012, the tanker that became a symbol of environmental catastrophe was sold, beached,
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