Stretching along either side of Marcus Hook's busy 10th
Street, nearly 800 acres of industrial machinery tower above the placid waters
of the Delaware River.
Inside the complex, hundreds of construction workers
bustle every day, their hammering and drilling echoing throughout the
otherwise-quiet town.
The sprawling facility in the tiny Delaware County
borough of 2,400 wasn't always this way: Just three years ago, the complex -
once the site of Sunoco Inc.'s oil refinery - sat largely vacant, its smokestacks
extinguished, and most of its more than 500 workers long laid off.
For as long as residents can remember, the refinery
grounds that long belonged to Sunoco were not just a presence in the borough.
They defined it. Dominating the municipality's one square mile of land, the
refinery shaped the lives of residents for generations.
So when Sunoco abruptly announced in 2011 that it was
shutting down after more than 100 years, thousands worried about the borough's
viability. Others worried about their own.
Gradually, owing to Sunoco Logistics, the sister company
of Sunoco, new life at the once-busy complex has begun.
Betting big on predictions of inexpensive and plentiful
natural gas liquids in the Marcellus Shale in Western Pennsylvania, the
facility that once made Marcus Hook an oil town is turning its attention to
gas. Close to 200 permanent jobs have returned. A floundering economy - slowly
- is forging ahead.
Marcus Hook's history is no different than that of Rust
Belt towns across the United States. Built on the tailwinds of the booming
industrial sector, the town was shaped by the oil industry - and then shattered
by it.
But as it moves toward rebuilding, this time, residents
say, they're being more cautious.
"When you build a town on a refinery, and that shuts
down, you have an identity crisis," said Marie Horn, 55, a longtime
resident. "I'm not sure a gas town is our identity yet."
'No money to spend'
At its height in the mid-1900s, Sunoco's Marcus Hook
refinery was processing 170,000 barrels of crude oil per day, the equivalent of
filling 250,000 cars with gas.
Entrenched along the Delaware River, the complex can be
accessed by ship, rail, and truck. Out of the river's berth, the location is a
straight shot to Europe, said Delaware County Council Chairman Mario Civera Jr.
Perfect for exports.
It was for this reason that the original Sun Oil company,
later to become Sunoco, chose the location in 1901 - and the reason for its
boom. During World War II, the Marcus Hook location processed more jet fuel for
the Allies than any other refinery.
Residents say the 1960s to the 1990s were unlike any
other. Street corners brimmed with theaters and department stores. Weekends
were filled with riverfront festivals.
At Sunoco, Christmas bonuses flowed freely, and sports
leagues for kids were abundant. Loyalty was everything.
"Every part of the Hook was thriving," said
John "Cowboy" Michulka, 59, an electrician and lifelong borough
resident.
Beyond Sunoco, a refinery owned by Sinclair Oil, later to
become ConocoPhillips, was also booming next door in Trainer Borough. Nearly
one-fifth of the facility sits on Marcus Hook land.
Marcus Hook, by all definitions, was an oil town.
"Overtime was available constantly," Michulka
said. "Guys were financing their homes on overtime alone."
When the 21st century began, more automation in the
complex and bad market conditions for East Coast refineries boded poorly for
the future. By the time the recession hit, Sunoco employees said they knew
times were bad.
In December 2011, Sunoco announced it was closing its
doors - effective immediately. Across town in Trainer, ConocoPhillips was doing
the same.
Suddenly, employees who financed homes on overtime lost
them altogether. Workers who built lives around the refinery found themselves
out of work - and with few transferable skills.
With 500 Sunoco employees, many from outside the town,
laid off, borough finances were reeling. About half of the borough's $2 million
budget at the time came from the earned-income tax, said Bruce Dorbian, borough
manager for 30 years until 2014.
And with Sunoco gone, so was half of that tax base.
"It was a ghost town," said Mario Giambrone,
owner of Italiano's, a staple restaurant in town. His lunch rush came from the
refinery, he said, so when employees lost work, he lost business.
"No money to spend," Giambrone said.
Renewed hope in gas
The financial effects tore through the borough and across
the state.
The Chichester School District, which includes Marcus
Hook, lost $500,000 in tax revenue after the complex's property value dropped.
The borough's police force shrunk 40 percent. Real estate taxes were raised in
back-to-back years.
On the brink of distress, Marcus Hook entered the state's
early intervention program for struggling municipalities.
One study from the state estimated that for each layoff
from both refineries, at least 18 other jobs would be lost. State and local
taxes stood to lose hundreds of millions of dollars.
But in 2013 - a little more than a year after the
refinery was idled - Sunoco's sister company Sunoco Logistics joined the shale
gas movement that was burgeoning. Pipeline infrastructure already existed
across the state, and a first-class refinery sat along the water.
Marcus Hook, after all, had a chance to be saved.
After purchasing the Sunoco refinery in early 2013 for
$60 million, Sunoco Logistics began moving forward with a plan, called Mariner
East 1, to use existing pipeline to transport natural gas liquids - propane and
ethane - from Western Pennsylvania to Marcus Hook, where it could then be
stored and shipped to domestic and export markets, said Jeff Shields, spokesman
for Sunoco Logistics.
Construction crews were brought in and - gradually - the
facility, renamed the Marcus Hook Industrial Complex, began to see vitality
that resembled the once-booming oil empire.
(All the while, next door at the old ConocoPhillips
refinery, Delta Air Lines Inc., through its subsidiary Monroe Energy, was
ramping up production of its own jet fuel.)
Since, Sunoco Logistics' ideas have grown. The
Philadelphia-based company is currently acquiring approvals for another
pipeline, called Mariner East 2, which will move propane, ethane, and butane
from eastern Ohio. The company is considering adding another pipeline to the
plan, and eventually, it hopes to build a propane cracker - a facility that
would take propane and make propylene, the building blocks of modern textiles and
plastics.
The Mariner East 1 pipeline, stretching 300 miles, is
already moving propane to the complex. Mariner East 2, which will stretch 350
miles, is to be finished by 2016.
In total, the $3 billion projects could add as many as
440 permanent jobs - both directly and indirectly related to the complex - and
have a one-time economic impact of $4.2 billion, according to a study by
consulting firm Econsult Solutions. Annually, ongoing operations could generate
as much as $150 million.
In the meantime, most of the construction jobs are
temporary.
Beyond the complex's chain-link gates, along borough
streets, activity has returned. On a typical weekday afternoon, dozens of
residents pass in and out of local restaurants and bars.
They're eager for the future, they say, and see that
things have improved.
"It's a good start," said Michael Pietrazak,
who helps manage Marcus Hook News & Tobacco. "I just don't want to see
anything bad happen to this place again."
Marcus Hook was once considered the cornerstone of
Pennsylvania, said Councilman Michael Manerchia, who was laid off by Sunoco but
now is a temporary worker at the complex. He's excited to see that happen
again.
But it will take more than a few hundred jobs, he said.
Without a definitive agreement that Sunoco will build a production facility
like the propane cracker, he said, the pipelines can do only so much.
"We supply the world with what we are,"
Manerchia said. "Now we just need them to know that."
BY THE NUMBERS
30,140 Jobs, direct and indirect, supported during the
construction period of the Marcus Hook Industrial Complex.
$33M Labor earnings annually from the 440 permanent jobs
supported.
345,000 Barrels of natural gas liquids to be transported
to Marcus Hook each day via Mariner East 1 and Mariner East 2.
$39,167 Median household income in Marcus Hook.
$86,100 Median home value in Marcus Hook.
Source: Philly.com
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