Howard T.
Barnes, Alfred Wegener, and Vilhjalmur Stefansson had three things in common. They were all alive and
well in 1912 and they were all experts on icebergs. I will get to the third
thing later.
If you are wondering
what this could possibly have to do with the still somewhat townish City of
Watertown, I would ask you to bear with me for the next two minutes, which just
happens to be the same amount of time allowed for a member of the public to address
the Watertown City Council at the public forum segment of each council meeting.
It was Sunday,
April 14, at 11:40 PM, ship’s time, that the Titanic struck the iceberg,
sending 1500 people to their deaths.
At the time,
the sinking of the Titanic was considered the deadliest peacetime maritime
disaster in history. While later disasters would surpass its death toll, the
sinking of the Titanic remains one of the most significant avoidable
tragedies due to glaring failures in safety and judgment.
Captain
Edward Smith did not see the iceberg before the collision. At the time it was
spotted, he was not on the bridge but was likely in his cabin or the nearby
navigation room.
First
Officer William Murdoch, who was the officer in charge of the bridge at the
time, was the first officer to see the iceberg. He immediately ordered the helm
"hard-a-starboard" and signaled the engine room to stop or reverse.
It was a useless
panic maneuver. 30 to 40 seconds later the ship struck the iceberg.
Captain
Smith rushed onto the bridge moments after the impact. Witness accounts state
he arrived and asked Murdoch, "What have we struck?" to which Murdoch
replied, "An iceberg, sir."
The Captain
and his officers had been warned of ice throughout the day and expected to
encounter it around 11:00 PM. However, several factors made the iceberg nearly
impossible to see until it was too late.
One was calm
seas. There were no waves breaking against the base of the iceberg, which would
normally create a visible "white fringe" of foam.
The other
was the moonless night. The lack of moonlight meant there was no light for the
ice to reflect.
Captain
Smith and his crew received at least six ice warnings via wireless telegraph on
the day of the disaster. While some reached the bridge and influenced the
Captain's decisions, several critical messages sent by ships that had already encountered
ice never left the Titanic’s wireless room.
The SS Californian,
at 8:45 PM radioed to say they were "stopped and surrounded by ice".
Because the message was so loud in his headset and lacked a formal priority
prefix, wireless operator Jack Phillips famously told the operator to
"Shut up! I am busy" while he continued sending passenger messages to
Cape Race, the nearest wireless station.
The most
critical warning, which came from the SS Mesaba at 9:40 PM reported a massive
ice field containing "heavy pack ice and a great number of large
icebergs" directly ahead. Phillips still overwhelmed with a backlog of
passenger telegrams and never delivered this critical message to the bridge.
Despite the
warnings that he did receive, Captain Smith maintained a speed of 22 knots
while entering a known ice field.
So, imagine
how different it would have been had Howard T. Barnes, Alfred Wegener, or
Vilhjalmur Stefansson been in direct communication with Captain Smith and his
officers. The fact that none of them were was the third thing those three
experts had in common.
But, what if one or all of them were directly
or indirectly in communication with the captain or his officers ? I think it is
very likely that any of those experts would have advised Captain Smith to:
Not
be misled by the calm waters,
To regard
the moonless night as an extreme hazard,
To limit
wireless communications to vital information only.
And, undoubtably,
any of those experts on icebergs would have advised Captain Smith to either
drastically reduce speed or to bring the ship to a full stop and wait for the
sun to come up before proceeding.
But that may
not have worked because Captain Smith was known to be stubbornly confident in
his navigational abilities and he believed that the Titanic was absolutely
unsinkable.
Now allow me
to introduce you to four experts of a different kind − Joe DeLaura, Patrick De
Haan, Mark Wolfe, and Tracy Gordon − which I will do as soon as I set the stage…
While you
can’t help but notice the alarming price of gas whenever you pull up to the
pump, most of you probably ignore the price of diesel fuel.
Out of
necessity, you might be changing your driving habits and/or your fill up habits
to use less gas, but you might have the notion that diesel fuel is someone
else’s problem.
You couldn’t
be more wrong.
It is about
to become OUR problem.
DeLaura, De
Haan, and Wolfe are three experts who
make clear how the growing shortage of diesel
fuel is on course to collide with the world’s economy. Gordon explains how
communities like ours pay the price for energy shock – something we are now
experiencing but that so far has been (excuse the expression) the tip of the
iceberg.
The closing
of the Strait of Hormuz has caused diesel prices to surge more than 50% since
the start of the war, with retail prices nearing $6.00 per gallon. Because New
England lacks its own major refineries and pipelines, this region is uniquely
vulnerable.
Because
nearly all of our grocery items are trucked into the Boston area daily, grocery
delivery surcharges, ranging from $60 to hundreds of dollars per load, are
being passed directly to consumers.
In fact
every type of product that arrives by truck, whether we eat it, wear it, or use
it, will be taking a bigger chunk out of our budgets and out of our
government’s budget.
While gasoline
prices command our attention, it’s diesel that runs the city.
Municipal
exposure to diesel includes school buses, fire apparatus and ambulances, public
works trucks (plows, sanitation, road crews), construction equipment (for
capital projects like the middle school / fire station / senior center), and delivery
costs embedded in everything the city buys.
And here is
the real danger: it happens quietly.
Gasoline
prices trigger headlines. Diesel prices trigger budget overruns.
By the time
the impact shows up, it is too late to adjust. Contracts are signed. Projects
are underway. Taxpayers are on the hook − and that includes renters who pay those
taxes indirectly.
And that
brings us to the questions our city council has yet to address:
Why, in the
face of this kind of systemic risk, are we proceeding with major discretionary
projects − like the misadventurous Demonstration Project behind CVS − as if
nothing in the world has changed?
Has the
council quietly prioritized the Demonstration Project over the replacement or
renovation of the Middle School, or the building of a new Senior Center, or a
new East End Fire Station?
If so, we
have a right to know. And we have a right to know why.
There was a
time when our councilors would have questioned our city manager. Kounelis,
Woodland, Donato, and Airasian stood out for demonstrating that they were in
touch with ordinary people who live outside the current political bubbles and who
feel the financial vise that continues to get tighter and tighter.
And of
course, when the manager known as “Fiscal” Driscoll, famous for his
tight-fisted grip on taxpayer dollars was at the helm, councilors’ budget
oversight was often more about punctuation than substance.
Most of today’s
councilors seem to be going along for the ride, as though they believe that
everything is under control and that we can move forward at full speed as
though the world outside Watertown will somehow not reach us.
But the
world always reaches us. Covid reached us and altered our daily lives. Inflation
and tariffs continue to reach us. The life science / biotech swan dive has
reached us. AI-driven job loss has reached us and will only accelerate.
And when the
diesel crisis really reaches city hall, it won’t arrive as a headline. It will
arrive as higher bids, shrinking margins, stalled projects, and either rising
property taxes or deep cuts in municipal services.
This city
council needs to stop and heed the warnings of the experts before they continue
allowing Watertown to be driven through deceptively calm waters on a moonless
night when they should be preparing for impact.
But, they
should not take my word for it. They should find their own experts (yes, there
are others) or they should listen to mine:
Joe DeLaura: A global energy strategist at
Rabobank, tracks how geopolitical conflicts (like U.S. - Israel war with Iran
cause diesel prices to surge faster than gasoline due to tight supplies and
high energy density.
Patrick De Haan: Head of petroleum analysis at
GasBuddy, is known for explaining the “inelastic” nature of diesel demand, meaning
that the amount of diesel people buy
doesn't change much, even when the price goes way up or down. Price spikes hit municipalities
especially hard because heavy equipment cannot be switched to gasoline or
electric overnight.
Mark Wolfe: Energy economist, explains the “filtering effect,” − the process
by which rising fuel costs (specifically gasoline and diesel)
"filter" into the price of food and other consumer goods, creating a
secondary layer of inflation for households.
Tracy Gordon: Co-director and Robert C. Pozen
Director of the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center, focuses on the fiscal challenges facing state
and local governments, including how cities operate with rigid budgets, limited
revenue flexibility, and long-term obligations that do not adjust when costs
suddenly rise. In other words, when external shocks hit − whether from fuel,
labor, or materials – local governments are often forced to absorb the impact
in real time, with very few tools to respond.
We are a
long way from 1912. In this day and age, we all have easy access to the best
economic expertise on the planet. Now we need a few councilors brave enough and
serious enough to face the harsh economic realities and begin asking hard
questions about budget tradeoffs and long-term sustainability. It’s about making
tough choices right now! If they do, they will be heroes. If they don’t, they
will be something else, because Watertown’s fiscal health is not unsinkable.
Bruce
Coltin, The Battle For Watertown