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BP Turning Away Potential Volunteers

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BILL KACZOR   06/21/10 09:46 PM ET   AP

GULF BREEZE, Fla. — Debbie Gunnoe wanted to work as a volunteer cleaning tar balls and oil from the sugar white beaches of Florida Panhandle that she loves so much, but she's been rebuffed.

BP PLC has turned away Gunnoe and other would-be volunteers because the oil giant is using only paid and trained workers to clean up the mess caused by its oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Instead, the retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and nearly 70 other like-minded citizens are helping in a less direct way as visitor information volunteers at the Gulf Islands National Seashore. They are being stationed at various National Seashore areas to answer visitors' questions, report sightings of tar balls, oil or oil-soaked wildlife and offer safety tips - the oil is classified as a hazardous material.

"I'm quite concerned about our way of life and I'm frustrated with what's going on," said Gunnoe, 55, of nearby Navarre. "It's the first opportunity I've heard where the people who live in the area can actually get out and do something and make a difference."

Gunnoe is among 48 people who signed up after a pair of training sessions Sunday at the National Seashore's headquarters in this Pensacola suburb. They will join 20 others previously trained, including Tony Mitkevicious, 62, a retired civil service worker from Pensacola.

"It's beautiful out here," Mitkevicious said Monday at the National Seashore's Opal Beach area. "I see dolphins every day out in the gulf, sting rays, a lot of fish. I meet a lot of people from all over and they're really nice."

As Mitkevicious spoke a BP cleanup crew began looking for oil and tar balls, but he doubted they'd find any. He said he already had walked the beach and didn't see anything.

Each volunteer is committed to spending at least one three-hour shift each week for three months at beaches on a pair of barrier islands or the Seashore's campground.

"One of the biggest things for us is that the gulf has seen its share of disasters - natural - but this is something they haven't seen and there's a lot of questions and a lot of confusion," said park ranger Kirby Shedlowski, who is on loan from Fort McHenry in Baltimore. "By having volunteers out on the beaches talking to the public it's allowing that stream of information to get out."

The volunteers also can serve as a sounding board for visitors who are frustrated or angry about the spill and keep them from distracting BP cleanup crews, Shedlowski said. She told them, though, that they must keep their opinions to themselves.

Finally, the program is a response to the pent up frustration that Gunnoe and others have experienced about being shut out of the recovery effort.

"This is giving them an outlet, for them to feel like they are doing something, talking to the public, which is very important," said Sarah Codde, another ranger on temporary duty from Point Reyes National Seashore, Calif.

Pat Schlueter, 64, a mechanical engineer who retired to Navarre from Indianapolis, tried to volunteer with a local wildlife refuge, offering to help clean up birds and other creatures, but said he ran into a Catch 22.

"You've got to be licensed," Schlueter said. "You have to be experienced to be licensed, but you have to have a license to get experience."

He also took hazmat training for people seeking BP cleanup jobs in hopes that he could, instead, volunteer for that work. Again he was rebuffed, but he doesn't want to take a paid job he doesn't need.

"The pay is good and there are a lot of people out of work who can really use it," he said.

The volunteers include a Perdido Key couple who have had more free time lately due to the spill.

Michael Bounds, 62, is a sound engineer for bands that are having difficulty finding gigs because attendance at night clubs is down. His wife, Sue, 54, is a bookkeeper for an antique shop and other businesses.

"If they close, I close," she said.

It's more than just having more time, though, Michael Bounds said.

"I believe in public service; in this case it's almost a personal service because we live in Perdido Key," he said. "My wife has been so upset lately that we talked to one another and figured out something we could do to help, and this is what we could do."

Gunnoe said she's still frustrated she can't do more to protect what she considers her home.

"What are they going to do if I show up with a scooper and plastic bags or a bucket to put this in?" she asked. "They need to deal with people like me and not turn us away."

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GULF BREEZE, Fla. — Debbie Gunnoe wanted to work as a volunteer cleaning tar balls and oil from the sugar white beaches of Florida Panhandle that she loves so much, but she's been rebuffed. BP ...
GULF BREEZE, Fla. — Debbie Gunnoe wanted to work as a volunteer cleaning tar balls and oil from the sugar white beaches of Florida Panhandle that she loves so much, but she's been rebuffed. BP ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
02:48 PM on 06/28/2010
what's interesting is BP can get away with not accepting assistance but the Reichwingers get their panties in a knot at the false accusation that "Obama is rejecting help"! LOL.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Alexandra Mandelis
Occupy.
11:44 AM on 06/23/2010
Mr. Schlueter's comments warmed my heart. I wish more folks here in North America thought along these lines:

"The pay is good and there are a lot of people out of work who can really use it," he said.
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03:28 PM on 06/22/2010
Five years ago, in the midst of another crisis in the Gulf of Mexico, the Bush administration waived the Jones Act, easing the way for foreign vessels to move in U.S. waters and between ports. The decision came with the administration under duress for its handling of Hurricane Katrina.

Today the Obama administration faces a different set of challenges with the Gulf oil spill cleanup.

But unlike his predecessor, President Obama has declined to suspend the law, even temporarily.
Obama's decision has turned into a public relations headache for an administration already reeling from its oversight of the oil spill. European allies, longtime opponents of the Jones Act, have asserted they were turned away when making offers of assistance. The State Department acknowledges it has had 21 aid offers from 17 countries.

http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2010/06/21/robert-bluey-gulf-spill-katrina-jones-act-waive-obama/?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Heritage%2BHotsheet
03:30 PM on 06/22/2010
you know that your facts will be challenged huh FarOut? They'll say that they're not accurate because they come from Fox news, but will have no other evidence to the contrary.
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03:40 PM on 06/22/2010
"Even a blind pig stumbles across an acorn once in a while" is the answer for the ideologically blind. For inquiring minds, the facts in the story can be easily checked out.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
02:46 PM on 06/28/2010
and rightfully so. HP'ers generally don't accept things at face value and anything from GOP-TV/fox is suspect, for sure!
03:17 PM on 06/22/2010
ABC News' Luis Martinez reports:

As desperate efforts continue to stop the oil spewing from beneath the ocean floor into the Gulf of Mexico, 17 countries have offered to help in some way or another, but for now BP and officials coordinating the clean-up effort have accepted assistance from only two of those countries, Mexico and Norway


still waiting on you to prove where this has been "debunked" whitebeach...Are you having trouble swallowing that crow?
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
03:40 PM on 06/22/2010
The Dutch skimming booms arrived in Houston early in June:

http://dc.the-netherlands.org/News/Press_Releases/Dutch_to_Provide_Assistance_in_Clean_Up_of_Gulf_Oil_Spill

Crow probably goes down easier with a little oil. Have at it, dude.
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03:00 PM on 06/22/2010
PB is already going to get their butt sued off. Allowing untrained volunteers to join in the work just makes tort lawyers richer than they will be. Don't blame BP for not accepting this help, blame our litigious society.
02:53 PM on 06/22/2010
JUST stop the LEAK DAMN IT... I don't care about ANYTHING else...
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
03:10 PM on 06/22/2010
Wow, what a great idea! Wonder why nobody ever thought of it except you! And of course I'm sure you have an equally great idea for HOW to stop the leak.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seachange525
All will be well...I just don't know how yet :)
03:44 PM on 06/22/2010
I'm with you, ddDinah! As for you, whitebeach, I have a question. How many BP executives would we have to stuff in the hole to get it to stop leaking? That's the first step.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
05:29 PM on 06/22/2010
Gee, I dunno. It's sort of like the Beatles singing about how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall. But then my point was a little different. Yelling "Stop the leak!" is not an answer, it is not a solution, it is not thought, it is barely even speech. It is simply noise.
02:20 PM on 06/22/2010
A while back i managed a disaster relief program....At first there is a huge influx of people wanting to help...Then the ego/agendas raise thier heads.....It becomes a clog in the effort--more time spent managing than relief!

Thousands of ships in the Gulf---wanting to clean up---but in their area----Looks like a clusterf--k to me!
Who would be in charge of the waterways---the dumping and where---who would be corrdenating the on land efforts who manages the disputes!!!

Is this about slamming BP and the Coast Guard---they already have their hands full!
02:10 PM on 06/22/2010
Hilarious that you guys are so quick to jump on BP(who is indeed responsible) but say nothing about the oil skimming vessels and other equipment that we(this administration) turned away from the Dutch and other nations.

Dutch say: we have skimming ships to help you in this emergency.
US say: no thanks we got this...

60 days later, here we are, still waiting for landfall of the majority of the oil....
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
02:40 PM on 06/22/2010
Debunked BS, stop drinking the Beck's.
02:53 PM on 06/22/2010
tell me where has it been debunked that the president has turned down help from the Dutch?
02:56 PM on 06/22/2010
Obama claims he is enforcing the "jones act" by turning away help from several European nations and 13 countries who offered assistance. Tell me where it proves that this is NOT true. Deal in fact.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OleProfessor
"Ours is not a system based upon trust"
01:54 PM on 06/22/2010
BP BP Uber Alles...

They hold Sway over American State County and local government, it's unprecedented a foreign corporation I think it violates U.S. Constitution!

Also Obama is still allowing BP to prohibit Gulf workers from wearing Haz Mat Suits and Respirators they need, now what kind of guy is that..?
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
01:53 PM on 06/22/2010
I know this area very well, having visited it dozens and dozens of times since childhood. To me the most interesting and hopeful part of the article was the observation that there are in fact no tarballs on the beach. Of course that could change quickly according to winds and currents, but this is a completely exposed barrier island, and the fact that it is still unpolluted two months after the start of this spill leads me to think that maybe, just maybe, the skimming and other containment measures in the Gulf are going reasonably well. I certainly hope so.
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01:44 PM on 06/22/2010
well let's see, I will go sailing on my yacht BOB, and well so much for the people in the Gulf, Ig ot my life back. Hayward is a public relation nightmare
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lochnessmonster
01:22 PM on 06/22/2010
Go to C-SPAN.oorg for great footage on the parrishes in LA and what they need. The people who live there are the ones who should be cleaning it up. They know how fragile the swamps/werlands are and can best decide what is needed to clean up their areas. Those who are out of work can be paid to do the job to support their families.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
02:37 PM on 06/22/2010
As a Louisianian, I can tell you that you have too much faith in the skills and mindset of this state's people. The drill, baby, drill way of thinking is nowhere more prevalent than here. Louisiana has lost something like 2,300 square miles of its coastal wetlands to the Gulf over the past few decades, and not a thing has been done about it. Even the shrimpers, whose loss of employment everyone is now mourning, have resisted and detested virtually every environment-friendly measure (such as TEDs to keep sea turtles from being trapped and killed in their nets) from time immemorial. Even now, the state is suing in federal court to block the six-month moratorium on deep-water drilling. Yeah, sure, hire a local shrimper or charter boat fisherman to help you find the best place to spot a boom, but never think you're dealing with a green outlook in a pure red state.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
jeb50
Retired.
01:12 PM on 06/22/2010
Seems BP is more concerned with bad PR getting out than cleaning up the mess.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
seachange525
All will be well...I just don't know how yet :)
03:45 PM on 06/22/2010
Yep. Just what I've been thinking.
01:10 PM on 06/22/2010
Does BP plan on melting down the tar balls to extract the oil ?
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Haditup2here
8 Years of Insanity and now you're mad?
12:35 PM on 06/22/2010
Here is a petition to get gulf workers the proper equipment for the gulf clean-up. BP won't even let workers wear respirators because of what it does to their "public relations"

http://action.firedoglake.com/page/s/respirators?source=em62110