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Louisiana Oyster Industry Hit Hard By BP Oil Spill: P&J Oyster, Oyster Bars To Close (VIDEO)

First Posted: 06/10/10 04:14 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:45 PM ET

Louisiana Oysters Oil Spill
Workers shuck oysters at P&J Oyster Co. in New Orleans Thursday, June 10, 2010. Work is coming to a halt at the 134-year-old establishment after oyster beds were closed because of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- The pre-dawn shucking of small mountains of oysters that is an age-old workaday ritual in New Orleans is coming to an end at the 134-year-old P&J Oyster Co., because of the oil spilling ominously offshore.

Barring an unforeseen reopening of the oyster beds that supply P&J, Thursday was to be the final day of shucking at the family owned business in the city's French Quarter.

"I'm going to try and buy a few shucked oysters from some people in Alabama that are still processing oysters and once they stop, I'm done," said Al Sunseri, who along with his brother Sal has run the business that opened in 1876.

Sunseri isn't sure what will happen to P&J and its employees in the long haul. Other Louisiana oyster companies say their oyster supplies are also dwindling, prices are rising and the future of their business remains stark and uncertain.

"The same thing happening over at P&J is happening over here also," said John Tesvich, owner of Ameripure Oyster Co. in Franklin, La. His company sells pasteurized oysters to restaurants around the country.

Tesvich said Ameripure may be able to hold on a little longer because it cultivates and harvests its own oysters, supplemented by suppliers. "But they're on the point of depletion now," said Tesvich, adding he's hoping for "a few more good weeks."

Oyster growers and harvesters are facing a double threat.

On the one hand, oil gushing from the blown-out well off Louisiana could contaminate the beds, killing the oysters or rendering them unsafe to eat. On the other hand, a
method of fighting the encroaching oil by opening inland water diversion gates in hopes of pushing the oil back also could kill oysters. The fresh inland water dilutes saltier waters oysters need to thrive.

Complicating the problem is the fact that it's spawning season for young oysters that usually take 18 to 24 months to grow to market size.

Third-generation oyster farmer Wilbert Collins, 73, said it could take three years to replenish the stock on some of his leases where fresh water is encroaching.

Collins said he owns three boats. Two are idle, one is doing oil cleanup work. He's not sure what the future holds for his business -- or for his sons and grandson who work with him.

John Rotonti, owner of Felix's Oyster Bar and Restaurant, said recently he has yet to run out of oysters for the raw bar at his eatery just off Bourbon Street in the French Quarter tourist district. Still, he's having to absorb price hikes and uncertain supplies.

At some point, he said, he'll have to close the raw bar that is the trademark of his business and probably lay off a half-dozen shuckers.

Tesvich, Sunseri and Kevin Voisin -- an executive with family owned Houma oyster processor Motivatit Seafood -- all say they worry not just for themselves but for their workers. Some of their employees have been with the companies for years.

"There's 200 families that eat because Motovatit Seafood exists," Voisin said.

Nowadays, the owners of the companies said, they are at varying stages of filing claims for aid from the oil giant BP that has spent weeks trying to stop the oil spewing into the Gulf.

WATCH: P&J's Al Sunseri on why this may be the end

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NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- The pre-dawn shucking of small mountains of oysters that is an age-old workaday ritual in New Orleans is coming to an end at the 134-year-old P&J Oyster Co., because of the oil spil...
NEW ORLEANS (AP)-- The pre-dawn shucking of small mountains of oysters that is an age-old workaday ritual in New Orleans is coming to an end at the 134-year-old P&J Oyster Co., because of the oil spil...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
erinsf
Adjunct Pol Sci Professor, trying
08:32 PM on 06/14/2010
This brings me to tears too - there is nothing as delicious as an oyster from nola. it tastes salty like the ocean. ... and now my tears. I am so sad. People aren't considering all of the other industries that have been shut down because of the BP madness. They must pay. They must get the heck out. But, first they MUST FIX THE DARN THING. We need to rely on ourselves...not the British to take care of our coasts. They don't care. They stopped caring when we stopped being a colony. Dang.....so sad. Big hug to all you wonderful folks in Louisiana- we will return!
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05:10 PM on 06/16/2010
Americans own just as much of BP as the British, it is an international conglomerate. They still have to pay, but rather than seeing this as an attack by the "British", I think it is time we took a long hard at our consumption of oil. The vast fortunes made peddling this finite poison, need to pay for the new way, we need to save the world by intellect, not emotion and we need to do it now.
11:38 AM on 06/14/2010
It brings tears to my eyes to think of all of the fisherman and their families that have had their way of making a living devastated. It is horrible enough for those of us that have lost our jobs because of the economy. I spent 6 months waiting for the ax to fall at my last gig, and when it did, at least I wasn't shocked.
More people out of work through no fault of their own, and the devastation of their coastline and gulf waters on top of that. I almost can't think about it.
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01:17 PM on 06/17/2010
I love those oysters, It is heartbreaking a long list of great foods will be lost for a generation, Careers lost towns devastated.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EpicSarcastic
12:00 AM on 06/14/2010
What sort of retraining is appropriate for a career "shucker"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
estonesoaps
12:30 PM on 06/13/2010
P&J will not be the only one's to go-out of business, here in Alabama there are several business going under due to BP actions
11:28 AM on 06/13/2010
Bet you a dollar that BP never pays a dime to P&J or Motovatit Employers or employees or their families.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Retrofuturistic
see things as they really are
02:38 AM on 06/13/2010
These are the kinds of things that happen when every single thing in the country is deregulated for profit. It just keeps getting worse....
01:23 PM on 06/12/2010
When the brits complain about America's attititude towards BP as well as shrinking retirements funds, remember who the real losers are in the gulf. They're these kinds of businesses and families who have been here for generations and their way of life is vanishing before their very eyes. The politicians need to put pressure on the giant oil companies to keep paying the salaries of the employees during the moratorium not just start "drill, baby, drill"-ing again. Shame on Landrieu and Jindahl.
SirCoolBreeze
GOP'ers = Alleged Unindicted Co-conspirators
04:41 AM on 06/12/2010
Wonder where Cheney has been on all this? Wasn't it the Cheney Energy Task force of 2001 that led to Cheney's Katrina now?
12:37 AM on 06/12/2010
The people of the gulf are well and truly F**ked.
I hate to say it, but it's true.

Some of the fishermen will end up getting pennies on the dollar, the lawyers will get the big chunk and everyone else will get F**ked.

People like these oyster processors are the tip of the iceberg, every restaurant, bar, hotel, shopping center and everyone will suffer from loss of tourism and loss of other businesses.
All these "indirect" damages will not be paid and those people will never get any compensation.
Propery values will plunge and unemployment will soar.

Just like the financial crisis, the hard working honest people are the ones that suffer while the greedy corrupt companies get bailed out and nobody gets prosecuted.

If this goes on any longer the gulf will be a tar pit and they might as well "drill baby drill"
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
benji85
07:23 PM on 06/11/2010
And of course they wont get bailed out because they don't make enough money...
04:16 PM on 06/11/2010
I wonder how many ghost towns are going to appear because of this.

The jobs wont come back. The land will not heal in our lifetime.

Everything about this whole thing just keeps being more painful each new day.
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Bienville
Make levees, not war
09:18 AM on 06/12/2010
Not so many. The marsh those towns are built on will disappear in a few years and you'll never know they were there.
01:50 PM on 06/13/2010
I hope it isn't many as well.

I didn't mean to sound overly dramatic, but I figured that there could be enough of them to actually make a headline or two.
peowlemeow
Democrat,non-military,undereducated,overworked
02:26 PM on 06/11/2010
These guys need onshore aquaculture now.There have to be places in new Orleans that are barren and could have artificial beds in them.Oysters can be grown and these guys should try it with money from BP.
In the interim they should ship in oysters to stay in business and get the money from BP.If BP had any smarts at all they would keep prominent businesses like this open.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nomadrdw
Zen Druid
12:13 PM on 06/12/2010
actually, there is no where else on earth that grows oysters as clean as what used to be in the gulf. same thing with the shrimp. 95 % of imported shrimp is contaminated to some extent. Don't even get me started on the sea food imported from China. Also, oysters need fresh salt water 24 hours a day that is full of micro organisms which is what they eat. it would be totally impossible to even begin to grow enough on shore. no, it is time to face the fact that BP has destroyed ALL shellfish harvesting in the gulf at least for the next human generation, and possible even more.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MalteseTiger
"Faux News Lacks Objectivity" - Al-Qaeda
12:17 PM on 06/11/2010
BP's Response.. "Aww shucks"
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earto44
Defender of planet Erf.
10:52 AM on 06/11/2010
I wonder if this guy supports Sen. David Vitter? Sen David Vitter does not see a problem with allowing off shore drilling. President Obama wants to put a hold on this until BP can prove they know what to do if this ever happens again. Clearly BP does not know what to do. It would be criminal to allow off shore drilling to continue. Sen. David Vitter, better go eat your last oyster.
03:37 PM on 06/11/2010
Vitter has also taken a huge chunk of cash from oil companies. I hope Louisiana voters remember this, but I doubt they will.
10:41 AM on 06/11/2010
I would quietly suggest that US oyster businesses quietly request assistance from other countries with major uncontaminated oyster industries for support, like Australia. With literally tens of thousands of kilometres of unspoilt coastline and room for expansion of oyster beds at many locations.