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All Legitimate Claims: BP Has Paid Less Than 12% Of Claims So Far

Bp Claims

First Posted: 06/18/10 03:22 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 05:50 PM ET

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- BP has paid less than 12 percent of claims submitted by people and businesses harmed by the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the federal government said Friday, while the new chief of the independent payment office promised to speed the process up.

News of the slow pace of the claims process came hours after the Coast Guard said it was ramping up efforts to capture the crude closer to shore with the help of private boats. As of Friday morning, between 65 million and 121.6 million gallons of oil have gushed into the Gulf of Mexico, based on federal daily flow rate estimates.

The House Judiciary Committee said in a statement that data it collected showed only $71 million out of an estimated $600 million had been paid as of Tuesday. In addition, the panel said that BP didn't make any payments in the first two weeks following the April 20 explosion and oil spill, and that it hasn't made a single payment for bodily injury or diminished home property value.

Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers said he's concerned that BP "is stiffing too many victims and shortchanging others."

BP officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The chief of the new independent office to pay claims said a plan to handle the remaining damage claims will be in place in 30 to 45 days. Kenneth Feinberg, who's overseeing the Independent Claims Facility, said he also hopes to have a program going forward that would provide payment within 30 to 60 days of someone submitting a new claim.

"The challenge here is going to be to evaluate quickly, eligible claims, legitimate claims and get them paid," said Feinberg, who was chosen by President Barack Obama and BP for the role.

Feinberg, who was in Mississippi Friday to meet with Gov. Haley Barbour, reiterated that his office isn't a government program. The lawyer, who oversaw payouts to victims of the Sept. 11 attacks, said he will be paid by BP but didn't say how much.

Meanwhile, the Coast Guard signaled a shift in strategy to fight the oil, saying it was ramping up efforts to capture the crude closer to shore.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen said an estimated 2,000 private boats in the so-called "vessels of opportunity" program will be more closely linked through a tighter command and control structure to direct them to locations less than 50 miles offshore to skim the oil. Allen, the point man for the federal response to the spill, previously had said surface containment efforts would be concentrated much farther offshore.

Connie Bartenbach, owner of Rental Resources in Ocean Springs, Miss., said Friday that she's been unable to get her claims processed with BP. Her cancellation rates last month were six times higher than normal, and business is getting worse.

"They have somehow lost me in their system. I filed with them on May 18," she said. "I should have gotten a call back long before now.

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- BP has paid less than 12 percent of claims submitted by people and businesses harmed by the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the federal government said Friday, while the new chi...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- BP has paid less than 12 percent of claims submitted by people and businesses harmed by the massive Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the federal government said Friday, while the new chi...
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09:42 AM on 06/21/2010
The principle reason that claims have not been paid by BP is that the applicants do not submit the required tax information. Years ago, fishermen in the Hamptons made similar claims against GE which had polluted the spawning ground for Striped Bass. The majority of claims were denied because of inadequate tax information.

Legitimate claims must be backed up. If fishermen or business' can't back up their claims with tax information, they are probably tax cheats. I believe that any and all claim information should be submitted to the IRS for verification and for compliance.
11:38 AM on 06/19/2010
BP is simply using the Lie and Stall technique learned from Exxon and Alyeska in Valdez beginning in the 1960s. BP owned part of Alyeska too. Exxon made promises it never meant to keep, employed bastions of lawyers in federal (not state) courts, with a single friendly judge (BP is already on that one), spread out the tragedy for years, discounted all the science, bought its own scientists to make up damage figures, never did any real cleanup, and spent millions on PR campaigns of glitzy videos saying everything was fine now, when it is still not fine 20 years since the spill. BP cannot be trusted. Like the other Big Oil Giants, the richest corps on the planet (corps.e being a good word for them), they just lie, intimidate, and use tricks. (And they are not bothered by illegality apparently, if the Valdez tragedy is anything to do by.) Read Riki Ott's books! Sounds like today's Gulf disaster!
06:58 PM on 06/19/2010
Yet people like you still use their product. Talk about gross rationalization.
07:47 PM on 06/19/2010
Who are "people like me" and what are you talking about?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
10:23 AM on 06/19/2010
CNN and MSNBC, including Brian Williams, are covering these businesses and what's being lost throughout the Gulf.
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10:07 AM on 06/19/2010
Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers said he's concerned that BP "is stiffing too many victims and shortchanging others."

"stiffing too many victims and shortchanging others" makes the Republican Party that PROTECTS PROFITEERS PROUD!
09:45 AM on 06/19/2010
I hope that BP focuses on getting people in the Gulf region the money they need to survive instead of simply worrying on how to spin things, because the more frustrated the American people get, the more money BP will have to shell out.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
09:30 PM on 06/20/2010
BP is not interested in making lives normal again, unless it's their own CEOS.

That's why President Obama is insisting on a third-party arrangement to reimburse people for what they've lost financially.
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ojolsen
my micro-bio is empty
08:08 AM on 06/19/2010
Gulf coast residents had better be really greatful regarding the $20billion escrow, its going to save their butts. I am sure Anderson Cooper will find some folks who didn't get theirs but the resdients of Prudoe Bay would have loves something like this. Nice work by the admin.
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10:09 AM on 06/19/2010
The Republican Party PROTECTIONISTS of PROFITEERS would have INSISTED you WAIT at least as long (21 years & counting) as the victims of Exxon-Valdez.
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EatYourVeg
04:25 AM on 06/19/2010
Still, GOP apologizes to the Big Company, sure not to the "Small People".
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rockyroad
03:44 AM on 06/19/2010
No, the co-dud is a fly by night . . . just dropped by to criticise my demand for an end for the use of disbursants and anonymously beg for money before moving on to other blogs.

Alas, I thought for sure me and the dud had bonded . . .
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rockyroad
03:33 AM on 06/19/2010
If it's hard to remember . . . think dubya and co-dud.
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rockyroad
03:17 AM on 06/19/2010
Huffpo,

Check this guy out.
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rockyroad
01:44 AM on 06/19/2010
Word to Obama . . STOP the disbursants.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
09:27 PM on 06/20/2010
When did Obama become the CEO of BP?
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rockyroad
01:43 AM on 06/19/2010
BTW, spend a giant chunk of that change to save the wildlife and the reefs.

Get BP to stop with the disbursant . . . it't a killer.

No point in hiding the disaster . . . we all know . . . why allow BP to make it worse?

BP owns a major chunk of the disbursant provider . . . it's profiting from, not only the disaster, but from making the disaster one from which we can never recover. STOP the disbursants.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Archivist1000
Informed World Citizen
02:32 AM on 06/19/2010
disbursant?

I think you mean dispersants?
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rockyroad
02:45 AM on 06/19/2010
Wow, I recognize that my typing is bad, but you are quite the nerd to correct my spelling. In fact, it's spelled both ways . . . exercise your Google skills.
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rockyroad
02:46 AM on 06/19/2010
I mean what I say, and I will defend it until proven wrong ;>)
12:54 AM on 06/19/2010
Unfortunately, when BP has to put $20B aside for "legitimate" claims, it becomes imperative to determine what IS legitimate, and that takes more than a few days. If only those really harmed would make claims, it would be great. However, as we all know there will be many who will try to get money to which they have no right. Consequently, the process must take longer than it should or would. It is a sad commentary on our society.
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Jo SmithDromey
01:22 AM on 06/19/2010
Absolutely. Tragic. The way the world is. Exxon Valdez : 1989. Final settlement for damages: reduced from 4 billion to 2.2 billion; 2009. This will be in the courts for years. Smart, Smart Obama requiring a $20 billion escrow fund. Smart.
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rockyroad
01:54 AM on 06/19/2010
Exxon Valdez final settlement: $507.5 million NOT $2.2 billion. NOT the $5 Billion originally awarded.
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rockyroad
01:59 AM on 06/19/2010
I may never actually see a walrus, a polar bear or a giant sea turtle, but by God, my world is a better place because I know they're out there, frolicing on ice caps or turtling around in the mud.
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rockyroad
01:37 AM on 06/19/2010
First, let BP pay their own corporately commissioned hires with non-escrowed money.

Next, pay the living expenses of the families of the dead.

Third, pay the Deepwater Horizon's victims families their living and funeral expenses.

Fourth, pay the Deepwater Horizon's workers . . . they should have pay stubs.

Fifth, pay the local boat owners who have turned their boats from fishing rigs into recovery rigs . . . they should be out on the water and reporting hourly.

None of this should be hard . . .

Sixth, pay the localities that have had to respond . . .

Seventh, don't pay anyone who set up a retail business within 100 miles of the Coast that can't provide three years tax returns showing that they did reclamation business along the coast.. . . area's a little cagey . . . any corruption, stop payments. If residents know payments will end, they may have a little incentive to wistleblow.

I'm no genius, criminals have patterns.

Take care of those directly suffering first and figure out the rest later. Point is, some folks have been directly effected and obviously deserve help now. Pay them now.

Time will be required to sort the whole mess out, but some deserved needs can be met now.

Those folks can wait. Families first.
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madisonhack
I prefer not to......
07:22 AM on 06/19/2010
"Seventh, don't pay anyone who set up a retail business within 100 miles of the Coast that can't provide three years tax returns showing that they did reclamation business along the coast.. . . area's a little cagey . . . any corruption, stop payments."

I'm not sure I know what you mean by this statement. Are you implying that a person that set up a coastline business two years ago and hasn't been involved in oil reclamation doesn't deserve to be compensated for a lost business venture? A lot of businesses were set up in the aftermath of Katrina long before Deepwater Horizon was an issue.
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Jo SmithDromey
12:07 AM on 06/19/2010
The oil producers have totally insulated themselves and can barely be touched. They self insure, they collude on drilling plans, they don't retail sell anymore. The only thing you can do is try to convict them in criminal court. They are totally protected from boycott, civil suit, and federal regulation.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
11:41 PM on 06/18/2010
A 134 year old business, stops shucking oysters.
http://money.cnn.com/2010/06/12/smallbusiness/bp_oil_spill_oysters/index.htm
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madisonhack
I prefer not to......
07:23 AM on 06/19/2010
This is going to be a common story. Most of the stories won't hit the papers, though.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
10:25 AM on 06/19/2010
CNN and MSNBC, along with Brian Williams are covering these issues, and the extent of the losses.