Walker close to decision on governor's race
by Becky Bohrer / The Associated Press
Sep 10, 2010 | 1480 views | 11 11 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
JUNEAU, Alaska - Bill Walker, who finished behind Gov. Sean Parnell last month's GOP gubernatorial primary, is close to deciding whether to continue his candidacy.

Campaign manager Taylor Bickford says Walker wants to see if a third-party candidate withdraws by Wednesday, clearing a spot on the Libertarian or Alaskan Independence Party tickets. Bickford says Walker hasn't been in negotiations with or courting either party, but Walker sees the third-party route as a leading option.

He also could mount a write-in candidacy.

During the campaign, Walker focused almost singularly on building an all-Alaska natural gas pipeline. He invested about $300,000 of his own money into his run.

Bickford says Walker's decision will boil down to whether a run is in the best interest of the state and whether Walker can win.

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jmacinak
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September 10, 2010
Bull`s eye Joe. Like Yogi Berra said, "it ain`t over till` it`s over!"
Joealaska
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September 10, 2010
Bumpo: You are missing the point,it's the pipeline now, not the parties, if you want to stop the Dems,you better hope walker runs, why do you think they are picking up on the All Alaska Gasline, and Parnell has skirted it, but can't really embrace it like the Dems no doubtedly will do. Alaskans will remember they voted on it already twice. The candidate that spells out the clearest and thought out plan will go to Juneau. Thats why we have more than two parties in this state, and you haven't lost until the general election. That is when the majority of the people vote and we determine who wins, not the primary.
bumpo
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September 10, 2010
Shorty

I feel exactly the same way about Walker's flirtation with running in the general election as I do with Murkowski. You lost. Get over it. It's time to stop the Democrats.

Joealaska
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September 10, 2010
Jimbo: Remember what Wally hickle did, good idea folks.

Life is Short: gasline is going to Valdez not Fairbanks. Bone up on everything else you don't know. billwalkerforgovernor.com

SnowyOwl: Best interest of the state is All Alaska Gasline, not any political party.

Liberty Valance: To clear up your confusion, the voter intent is All Alaska Gasline.

DistantThunder
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September 10, 2010
I predict the first gasline over Atigun Pass will be propane in polypipe...

http://s281.photobucket.com/albums/kk209/DistantThunderbolt/?start=all

=========

http://i281.photobucket.com/albums/kk209/DistantThunderbolt/6inchgaslineP2FBX.jpg
DistantThunder
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September 10, 2010
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39100434/ns/us_news/

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39100434/ns/us_news/

Natural gas mains made of steel, like the one that apparently failed in Thursday’s deadly California explosion, are considered especially susceptible to corrosion and leaking, leading regulators in some states to consider replacing them.

Pacific Gas and Electric Co., which serves the San Francisco Bay Area, said Friday that it had isolated a damaged section of a 30-inch steel pipeline in San Bruno after the blast, which killed at least four people, injured 52 others, destroyed 38 homes and set off a fire that charred 15 acres.

In general, gas pipelines are safer than ever: “Distribution incidents” like leaks, fires and explosions have declined sharply since 1970, when many utilities began switching over to plastic pipes, which are less vulnerable to corrosion, according to the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration. Deaths in such incidents have declined in turn, from 246 in the 1970s to 120 in the 2000s.

But while the majority of natural gas pipes are plastic, about 60 percent of the nation’s 475,000 miles of larger gas mains — those wider than 16 inches in diameter — are steel, according to the Natural Gas Supply Association. That’s because steel pipes can better withstand the pressurization used to move gas efficiently through large pipes.

That strength doesn’t necessarily translate to safety — federal figures show that steel pipes are implicated in more natural gas incidents than those made of plastic materials.

Through Aug. 11 — the last date for which data are available — the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration recorded 57 such incidents this year, 21 of them involving steel pipes and 11 of them plastic pipes. Most of the other incidents also involved metal pipes, usually aluminum or cast iron.

If you own a gas grill, you probably already deal with the main vulnerabilities of steel pipes. Steel corrodes, and because it’s rigid, it can crack under stress. As older steel gas mains have started giving way, explosions — some of them deadly — have led regulators in several states to reconsider whether they’re the best option.

Atmos Energy Corp., the second-largest natural gas distributor in the country, with operations in 12 states, agreed last month to replace 100,000 of the most vulnerable steel pipelines in its North Texas territories by late 2012. The agreement follows years of investigations by Dallas TV station WFAA into explosions involving steel pipes or steel couplings, like one in January, when leaking gas exploded in a home in Irving, killing the owner and seriously injuring his wife.

All told, regulators have identified at least six major explosions since 2006 involving Atmos steel pipelines in Texas, prompting the Texas Railroad Commission, which regulates natural gas pipelines, to study the feasibility of replacing all 525,000 steel service lines across the state.

“Experience has revealed that [steel] is the most prone to leak, so it all needs to come out,” said Geoffrey Gay, a lawyer representing several Texas towns in negotiations with Atmos and the Railroad Commission. “Obviously, my clients are always worried about the health and safety of their citizens.”

Regulators in other states are also starting to crack down.

In Washington, Puget Sound Energy Corp. has until the end of the year to replace about 9,000 older steel natural gas lines in the western part of the state. The deadline was set as part of a settlement with regulators after an investigation of an explosion that killed a 68-year-old woman at her home in Bellevue, a suburb of Seattle, in 2004.

And in Arizona, regulators include a notice in monthly bills sent by Southwest Gas Corp., which serves nearly 2 million natural gas customers in the state and in California and Nevada. The notice warns that “buried steel gas lines are subject to the effects of corrosion if they are not maintained, which could result in leakage,” and says it’s the customer’s responsibility to monitor the lines “to identify these potential problems before they become hazardous.”

It’s not yet known whether the steel composition of the pipe was a factor in Thursday’s blast, but PG&E said it would “take accountability” if it was at fault. The National Transportation Safety Board sent a four-member team to investigate.

DistantThunder
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September 10, 2010
I'm writing in my support for Bill Walker right now..

Bill will support Alaskan self-determination and economic sustainability that will last far longer than another Boom/Bust cycle that AGIA will lead us into.... powerful outside influences want to hook a big central vacuum system to Alaska and suck on it until Alaska looks like the dark side of the moon.
jimbo285
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September 10, 2010
Anybody remember what Ross Perot did? Bad idea folks.
snowy_owl
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September 10, 2010
Seriously, this is becoming the season of sore losers. Tearing the Republican Party apart is never what is in "the best interest of the state."
TheManWhoShotLibertyValance
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September 10, 2010
Betrayal is becoming epidemic.

If people write-in "Judas" there might be some confusion on voter intent.
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