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Mobil Plans to Hold Party at Refinery

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Times Staff Writer

To the unease of Torrance officials, Mobil Oil plans to invite thousands of its refinery’s neighbors to party at its beleaguered facility on Oct. 7. There will be jugglers, clowns, hot dogs, hamburgers, a Ferris wheel, carousel and booths at the refinery.

It will be free and refinery officials, who have yet to send out the invitations for the $200,000 bash, expect as many as 12,000 people to attend.

Mobil officials said it has nothing to do with a measure on the ballot in March, which would force the refinery to stop using hydrofluoric acid, a highly toxic chemical, or a lawsuit by the city that seeks to declare the refinery a public nuisance subject to city regulation.

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Rather, Mobil officials said, the festivities are the latest in a concerted image-building effort that has included a tabloid publication about the refinery, bus tours of the facility and advertisements in local newspapers.

City officials learned of the party proposal in a July 25 letter from Mobil seeking city assistance for crowd and traffic control.

City Atty. Ken Nelson, whose staff is researching what permits Mobil will need for the event, said the idea of having thousands of people attend a party on refinery grounds “makes me very uncomfortable” because of safety concerns.

“We are looking at it very closely,” he said.

The refinery, he added, is “not exactly your local winery.”

The city’s lawsuit cites a host of troubles at the plant, including state and federal investigations into safety and health problems, as well as a series of explosions, fires, fatal accidents and gas releases.

Mayor Katy Geissert described Mobil’s party plans as “very strange.”

“They expect 10,000 to 12,000 at a facility under which the very best of conditions is a dangerous facility,” Geissert said, “and where extreme precautions need to be taken.

“I know they are putting out a great effort on their public relations,” she said, “but I’m not sure this is what I would have thought up. It sounds like something you would have for the opening of a mall.”

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Mobil spokesman Jim Carbonetti rejected suggestions that the party is ill-advised for safety reasons.

“We have 830 employees working here,” he said. “If we thought it was dangerous, we wouldn’t be working here. We don’t think we are endangering anybody’s life.”

The spokesman also said Mobil does not envision the party as a demonstration--to be used later in the city’s lawsuit--that thousands of people of all ages consider the refinery a safe place and not a public nuisance.

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