
A pipeline rupture near East Cesar Chavez and North Eastern avenues caused crude oil to spill into storm drains and flow into the Los Angeles River. Wildlife officials found multiple oil-covered birds and removed them for treatment at the Los Angeles Oiled Bird Care & Education Center in San Pedro. The number of affected birds was not immediately known. The rupture occurred around 3:20 a.m. Friday when a telecommunications crew boring underground for fiber-optic cable hit a pipeline transporting crude oil from Kern County to the Port of Los Angeles. The spill was estimated at 2,400 gallons. The operator shut down the pipeline within 30 minutes, and the intersection stayed closed while crews excavated and repaired the line. Long Beach officials monitored river conditions and reported no new oil entering the river, while booms and skimming operations addressed existing oil.
"Wildlife officials said this weekend that they had found multiple birds covered in oil after the rupture of an East Los Angeles pipeline on Friday caused crude oil to spill into storm drains and flow into the Los Angeles River. The birds were removed from the river and taken to the Los Angeles Oiled Bird Care & Education Center in San Pedro to be treated and cleaned, according to a statement Saturday from the Oiled Wildlife Care Network, a collective of wildlife emergency response organizations and universities."
"The rupture was reported around 3:20 a.m. Friday near East Cesar Chavez and North Eastern avenues, according to the Los Angeles County Fire Department. A telecommunications crew boring a 6-inch hole 10 feet underground to lay fiber-optic cable hit a pipeline that runs beneath the street and transports crude oil from Kern County to the Port of Los Angeles, L.A. County Fire Capt. Aaron Katon said."
"The pipeline spilled an estimated 2,400 gallons of crude oil, according to the county Fire Department. It flowed onto surface streets and into nearby storm drains, eventually reaching the river. The pipeline operator shut down the pipeline within 30 minutes. The intersection remained closed Sunday as crews worked to excavate and repair the line."
"In a statement Sunday afternoon, the city of Long Beach said officials there were monitoring L.A. River conditions. "At this time, we understand that no new oil is entering the river," the statement read. " Current mitigation efforts are focused on addressing the oil that is already present." An oil sheen was visible Saturday near the Pacific Coast Highway bridge over the river, the city said."
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