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Oil Spill: Lake Pontchartrain, North Of New Orleans, Latest Victim Of Contamination

First Posted: 07/07/10 09:38 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:00 PM ET

Gulf Oil Spill

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Oil from the ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico is seeping into Lake Pontchartrain north of New Orleans, threatening another environmental disaster for the huge body of water that was rescued from pollution in the 1990s.

The lake rebounded then to once again become a bountiful fishing ground and a popular spot for boating and swimming.

"Even the people involved in the restoration didn't believe it could be restored. It was completely written off. It was thought to be an impossible task," said John Lopez, a scientist with the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation, which led the restoration effort. "It has been a dramatic turnabout."

It is threatened again after a weekend when tar balls and an oil sheen pushed by strong winds from faraway Hurricane Alex slipped past lines of barges that were supposed to block the passes connecting the Gulf of Mexico to the lake.

"Our universe is getting very small," said Pete Gerica, president of the Lake Pontchartrain Fishermen's Association.

The oil could be the second setback in five years. Hurricane Katrina knocked out seafood docks and lakeside restaurants in 2005. The lake's water quality also took a hit when the Army Corps of Engineers drained New Orleans' contaminated floodwaters into the lake.

"So far, this stuff has been offshore for the majority of the population in the southeastern portion of Louisiana," Anne Rheams, executive director of the Lake Pontchartrain Basin Foundation, said of the oil spill. "This is bringing it closer to home."

State authorities closed the lake's eastern reaches to fishing Monday, though most of it remained open. Barges were lined up at bayous and passes to stop the oil from coming in, and cleanup crews Tuesday used nets to collect tar balls from marinas and docks.

They also planned to lay 9,000 feet of special permeable booms, but the lake was too choppy for skimmer vessels to operate.

About 1,700 pounds of oily waste has been collected, said Suzanne Parsons Stymiest, a spokeswoman for St. Tammany Parish.

The amount of oil infiltrating 600-square-mile Lake Pontchartrain (pronounced PAHN-chuh-trayn) appears small so far. And tests on seafood have not turned up any oil contamination, said Brian Lezina, a state biologist. But the pollution is distressing to the many people in Louisiana who have a deep attachment to the lake.

"You won't hear songs about a lot of the marshes in south Louisiana, but you will hear songs about Lake Pontchartrain," Lezina said.

Out in the Gulf, meanwhile, stormy weather kept skimmers from working offshore Tuesday for yet another day and delayed the hookup of a big new ship intended to suck more crude from the gushing blown-out well a mile underwater. Also, the arrival of a Navy blimp intended to hover above the relief effort was delayed until Friday.

Tar balls from the spill also washed up on Texas beaches over the holiday weekend, meaning the disaster now touches all five Gulf Coast states, spanning more than 500 miles of coastline.

Lake Pontchartrain, named for the French count of Pontchartrain during the reign of Louis XIV, is on the northern edge of the city. It is connected to the Gulf of Mexico by two main passes: the Rigolets, a winding passage of about 10 miles, and the Chef Menteur, around nine miles long.

For centuries, it has been a playground, a source of seafood and a backdoor route to New Orleans for invading British troops and hurricane storm surge.

Until the 1970s, its shores were a top destination for city folks who took streetcars and buses to the lake to swim and to dine at restaurants that cooked up the lake's crabs and other seafood. They played in penny arcades and rode the Zephyr roller coaster at the Pontchartrain Beach amusement park.

But pollution shut down the swimming and chased away marine life, and the amusement park closed in the early 1980s.

Slowly, the lake revived. In recent years, sightings of dolphins and manatees have delighted locals, and commercial and recreational fishing is thriving.

Anthony Montalbano Jr., the chef and owner of II Tony's, an Italian seafood restaurant next to the lake, said it has been a struggle to stay open. Katrina swamped his restaurant at Bucktown, a lakeside community in New Orleans that has the feel of a bayou town.

"This was going to be our best year since Katrina for sure, but not now," Montalbano said as the TV in the bar showed an ad for a law firm suing BP.

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Oil from the ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico is seeping into Lake Pontchartrain north of New Orleans, threatening another environmental disaster for the huge body of water tha...
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- Oil from the ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico is seeping into Lake Pontchartrain north of New Orleans, threatening another environmental disaster for the huge body of water tha...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
03:07 PM on 07/09/2010
Slidell Resident Reports Dead Fish In Lake (Pontchartrain)

SLIDELL, La. --
Darrin Johnson
Residents in Slidell say they are seeing dead fish floating ashore on Lake Pontchartrain, days after oil from the BP spill was first spotted in the lake.

Darrin Johnson lives on Carr Drive and said he has seen "thousands of dead fish and crabs" in the canals near his home.

The first oil was spotted this week in the Rigolets and Lake Pontchartrain in the form of tar balls, and response crews began working quickly to protect the lake.

http://www.wdsu.com/news/24198276/detail.html
01:06 PM on 07/09/2010
This is really bad for Louisiana fishermen and mom-and-pop seafood businesses. Want to know how these people are really doing, how much they're suffering because of the spill? Check out http://awgood.wordpress.com/2010/07/09/on-assignment-westwego/ and http://awgood.wordpress.com/2010/07/09/state-of-uncertainty-louisianas-post-oil-spill-economic-outlook/.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
avatar singh
10:23 PM on 07/08/2010
not long ago-only two weeks before -the british scintists were saying that gulf oil spill is not a big health hazard and is not very dangerous for gulf sea water envirnoment either. so much for corporate controleld british scince -all fake !
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
12:40 PM on 07/08/2010
OT:
BP Does Not Pay 500 Fishermen and Gives no Explanation

Source: New Orleans Hearst Television/WDSU-TV.

Over five hundred fisherman stretching from Lake Charles to Moss Point, Mississippi were very unhappy yesterday, as BP did not send them their promised payment for work they have done. They were supposed to receive checks from BP, but did not.

Wednesday night, their lawyer wanted answers.

Jeffrey Briet represents more than 500 fishermen, and he said the payment system he set up with BP required his clients to be paid every 30 days. Now that process has suddenly changed without warning, Briet said.

"Not only did they spring it on us that the process has changed, but the people I've been dealing with for six weeks who've done a good job said, 'We don't know what the process is going to be. We're not authorized to talk to you about it. Someone from BP will contact you,'" he said.

http://www.wdsu.com/mostpopular/24178322/detail.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lisa Clayton
12:20 PM on 07/08/2010
That book "Jennifer Government" by Max Barry does not seem so way out and far-fetched anymore. It seems inevitable.
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rbenjamin
Rule 5 rules
09:01 AM on 07/08/2010
Tar balls on top of the PCBs and heavy metals.
12:16 PM on 07/08/2010
Don't forget about the long-term effects. This oil is going to be around for a long time, no matter how hard we try to clean it. Brazil had a much smaller spill 10 years ago and the bay where it happened still has not recovered. Louisiana will have serious ecological and economic problems for a long time.

http://www.newslook.com/videos/226982-lessons-in-brazil-s-oil-spill-after-a-decade
06:22 AM on 07/08/2010
The toxic/acid rains that will come from the BP spill will finish it off (the lake and everything else)...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
05:46 AM on 07/08/2010
Humans and their insufferable arrogance that has them thinking that THEY are the dominant species on this planet. Most do not even realize that, at best, they are only 10% human and 90% bacteria.

http://whyfiles.org/shorties/count_bact.html

Why they are not even the most destructive when Mother Nature gets angry.
12:44 AM on 07/08/2010
I'm so happy for Mary Landrieu and Joe Barton. They now have their very own, Texas sized, reflecting pool!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
take10
07:21 PM on 07/07/2010
Refer all complaints to drill baby drill Bobby Jindal Bells! By the time the oil reaches Bourbon Street sewers, Bobby and the BP judge will be in Britain sipping Louis the 15th and sucking on Cuban cigars advising BP to file bankruptcy...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rougebaisers
05:47 AM on 07/08/2010
Hey, but they can carry firearms into church now, YEEEEEEHAWWWWW!
06:20 PM on 07/07/2010
But hey they're still screaming Drill Baby Drill, so it will all be OK (rolling my eyes), and don't forget one outrageous potentially ocean killing (river, lake,etc) accident every 30 years is an acceptable risk.......Sigh.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Netflyer
Tree Hugger!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
shirlyujest
03:56 PM on 07/07/2010
Just once I would like to hear/read/see the people in the gulf states, especially Louisiana, take some responsibility here for this disaster. Now calm down, not ALL of it. BP is the agent for sure but who voted for all the politicos in the oil industry's pocket? Who continues to be cheerleaders for oil drilling in the gulf? Who has their hands out for compensation?

There's a lot of responsibility to go around. Yes, I drive a car. I admit that. But I didn't vote for nor do I support off shore drilling so let's get that out of the way. Now, what about you gulf state residents? What have you done or not done in the past few years, months, weeks? Can you at least acknowledge some ownership of this huge catastrophe.

Take your guns in to your churches if you want...who cares? It's what you do when you're not in church that really matters.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
liberalOrgonian
04:17 PM on 07/07/2010
great comment shirlyujest
BUT take RESPONSIBILITY, when they can BLAME THE PRESIDENT FOR THEIR MISGIVINGS.
As for guns at church, I find this idea insane.
You will not catch me at church where guns are allowed.
Are they trying to empty churches of people?
Does anyone remember Jesus was nonviolent and a pacifist and preached such views?
Looks like the American inquisition has started.
Mysteryprincess
Liberal Libertarian
04:34 PM on 07/07/2010
I'm with you completely. They rabidly vote for the policies that lead to stuff like this. If I believed in karma, this would be it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
liberalOrgonian
03:39 PM on 07/07/2010
With oil still blowing out of the well, this is only the beginning of the destruction.
Good chance the entire gulf coast will be deemed unlivable for a generation or two.
Lucky these are rah rah oil loving politicians are running the gulf states.
We see first hand how they deal with disasters, and honestly I am not impressed.
Only Charlie Crist has been sensible and reasonable.
The others can bask in all the oil they wish. Like pigs at a troth, they just can't get enough of the stuff.

Jindal is in his glory slopping around in all the tar pits and yelling at the big bad feds for HELP, while screaming drill baby drill.
Personally, I think it time for the politicians to seriously consider the heath risk of the people of "their" states and start planning for the evacuation of the gulf residents.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
04:03 PM on 07/07/2010
More likely to be a century or two.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
liberalOrgonian
07:48 PM on 07/07/2010
correction excepted, Seamus.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
mrJJ
03:21 PM on 07/07/2010
OT:

July 7, 2010
Lawyers, Victims in 2005 Refinery Blast Want Investigation Reopened, Hope BP Execs See Jail Time

A 2005 accident at a BP refinery confined David Leining to a wheelchair for six months. It killed Ralph Dean's father-in-law and left his wife badly scarred and too sick to work.

Both men say someone should go to jail over what happened.

BP officials "didn't get in any trouble for killing people," said Dean, 49, a former engineering firm worker who, along with his wife and father-in-law, once contracted with BP. "They're still doing it... You're consumable if you're a blue-collar worker for BP. If you get hurt, they throw a little money at it and go on."

Five years before April's Gulf of Mexico oil rig explosion killed 11 workers, energy giant BP was grappling with another fatal explosion, this time at its refinery in Texas City, Texas. That explosion, in March, 2005, killed 15 people and injured many more, including Leining, 58, a retired BP construction adviser, and Dean's wife.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/bp-2005-texas-city-refinery-blast-victim-bp/story?id=11095640