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JJ Creppel stood in his baseball cap and white rubber boots and threw his small net into the muddy bayou. Pickups and cars zoomed nearby along Hwy 23, the only road connecting oil-wrecked lower Plaquemines Parish to the wealthier suburbs of New Orleans. Creppel hauled in the net and flung the small catch onto the boat launch. A few baby pogies flopped on the gravel, among them a few small shrimp.

“Not much here,” Creppel said as he picked them up and flung them into a bucket. “The small ones I can give to the cat and the rest I’ll use as bait to try to catch some bigger fish. A year ago before the spill I would get 15 to 20 shrimp per throw here, but now just 3 to 4 if I’m lucky.”

On his next throw, he got none.

At 57, Creppel, a member of the United Houma Tribe, is a veteran fisherman of these waters. He was born here in a small medical clinic by water tower of Buras, the former residential center of this area. But five years ago, Katrina paid a visit and 25 feet of water poured over the levies and tore through the town streets, ripping down houses, punching holes the size of fire trucks through brick buildings and flinging refrigerators and cars into treetops. Buras struggled to recover. But when the BP oil disaster struck in April, this famous fishing community was delivered a near mortal blow.

It nearly killed Creppel. After watching the BP oil well spew millions of gallons of Louisiana crude a day into his Gulf fishing grounds, Creppel says became so stressed out he had a heart attack and landed in the hospital. By the time he got out he was saddled with medical bills and couldn’t afford to get his boat fixed. That cut him off from the only real income he had. Now what fish he and his family eat comes from what he can catch along the banks. And it isn’t much.

 

All photos by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

 

Creppel and his fiancé live in a small 25 ft trailer on a large piece of property he rents for $100 a month. He laid a blue plastic tarp over the top of the trailer to plug the leaks. Cement blocks on top hold it in place. Halloween decorations already are up on the windows. He has 16 grandkids and now two of them are sleeping with them in the tiny trailer. They have a few goats, chickens and ducks that help provide milk and eggs and some meat, but the fishing they relied on for their steady diet and income is mostly gone.

Creppel says all of the $12,000 he’s received from BP so far was spent on his family and his medical bills. His fiancé no longer gets any BP money, even though she worked as a deck hand. He doesn’t know how much he will get from BP, but he knows until he gets his boat going he won’t be able to make ends meet. Even if he does get out on the water, the market for Gulf seafood has cratered. There’s not much demand for fish tainted by the worst US offshore oil spill in history. You can’t pay for boat fuel getting $2 a pound for large shrimp and 60 cents for the small. Creppel says he knows fishermen who’ve pulled up oil in shrimp and crabs. But he also knows some spots where the fishing is safe, areas that weren’t impacted by oil. Right now he can’t get to them without a boat, and no one is doing much to help.

Creppel never got cleanup work from BP and neither did many of his friends. He believes a lot of it has to do with politics, and he says BP didn’t want to hire locals who would complain about the way it handled things. Many fishermen claim oil was dropped to the bottom by chemical dispersants when it could have been cleaned up on the surface, and they’ve seen workers sitting idly in boats when tar ball rolled into the marshes.

Instead fishermen's livelihoods were shut down and they now wait anxiously for checks that sometimes fail to arrive. For independent men who live off the land and sea, it’s been a humiliating and frustrating experience, one that surely will get worse this winter as the cleanup shuts down and the fishing becomes even more limited. “I’ve been here all my life,” Creppel says, “and I know most of the fishing community here. I’d say out of 2,000 fishermen 60 to 70 percent are having a hard time getting by. We all try to help each other but it’s hard when we’re all in the same situation.”

Creppel stands in the yard in front of his trailer, mending rips and tears in fishing nets for extra income. In a normal year, he fixes 40 nets at up to $800 a pop. This year he’s gotten just two. He and his family have had to go to a food bank nearby to get handouts, but those have dwindled to nothing, he says. “They didn’t give out much anyway, and I know some of it ended up being sold to BP workers.”

 

 

Charities in the area report their food programs are already out of money trying to feed people in Plaquemines. Catholic Charities is trying to fundraise for food assistance, but it’s been a difficult task. Many foundations and most Americans believe BP is paying for all this. But it’s not and it’s under no obligation to. Emergency federal assistance programs such as FEMA are not involved in this disaster. Many fishermen, experts say, are living in poverty conditions and not getting the assistance they need. Some are functionally illiterate, making it harder to understand the complex claims process. Even getting access to food stamps is difficult.

Creppel knows all this. But right now he’s thinking about how to survive this winter. A friend said he’d give him a shotgun so he can shoot rabbits and birds, and he’s hoping the shark season will be a good one so he can haul in his 33 a day limit to help pull him out of debt. But he’s not sure the sharks will be there. He knows some his favorite catfishing areas near the mouth of the Mississippi have already been ruined by oil. Drum fish out in the Gulf are probably gone too, he believes.

It’s a gloomy situation and it probably will get worse, as most oil disasters show. Money will get tighter as BP pulls out of the cleanup and focuses its efforts on legal battles over fines and claims. No one here expects BP to shower non-profits and aid groups with money. They have other fish to fry. The only funding that will stay constant or go up, some say, is BP’s PR and advertising budget, now over $100 million after the blowout.

Moving is not an option now, Creppel says. “A lot of people here are older like me. We can’t just pick up and move. I have my roots here and my grandkids. We have to stay here and try to make it.”

 

As Creppel walks through his yard, a young puppy yaps from inside the trailer. Creppel retrieves the young pup and cradles him in his arms, his weathered face smiling in the Louisiana sunshine, forgetting his desperate situation. Most Americans have no idea families like his are struggling down here, living off the land battered by monstrous storms. He and generations before him are survivors. But for fishermen like Creppel, the oil industry is too powerful to fight. It’s poisoned his waters and forced self-reliant families like his to seek poverty assistance. The oil wells will be there forever, but what about the marshes and bounty of the sea?

 

 

That’s a question that worries men like Creppel. Because without a healthy Gulf, his grandkids may never know the life he’s lived. His seafaring lifestyle could be relegated to the family albums of time. And that will be a national tragedy for us all.

This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard blog

 
JJ Creppel stood in his baseball cap and white rubber boots and threw his small net into the muddy bayou. Pickups and cars zoomed nearby along Hwy 23, the only road connecting oil-wrecked lower Plaque...
JJ Creppel stood in his baseball cap and white rubber boots and threw his small net into the muddy bayou. Pickups and cars zoomed nearby along Hwy 23, the only road connecting oil-wrecked lower Plaque...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waterphoneman
artist, musician, inventor & mouth from the south
08:02 AM on 10/07/2010
I am sorry that the fishermen and shrimpers of the Gulf are suffering from no sales but I am more sorry for the people whose bodies are breaking out with sores and are sick from whatever it is in the Gulf water and/or the seafood. I believe that the health of the people come before money.
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ibsteve2u
Someone who cares - to his unending regret
10:39 PM on 10/06/2010
That money BP spent on advertising ticks me off. They COULD have spent it doing the charity work that this story reinforces the need for and then depended upon word of mouth and FREE press and TV coverage to polish their image...

Could have. Hope I don't ever find that the advertising they wasted money on has tax advantages that are superior to charitable works.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
capitaldysfunction
White male never voted Republican
05:57 AM on 10/07/2010
Exactly. How does BP expect a multi-million dollar PR campaign to answer for their horrendous mismanagement? Answer: By wasting money on media rather than helping people in the Gulf who need it.
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WOODSTOCKER51
HAVE A NICE DAY!
08:19 AM on 10/07/2010
......WELL..AS RETHUGS WILL SPEW ON A REGULAR BASISI......."NO FREE LUNCHES"...............FOR OUR AMERICANS!
03:37 PM on 10/06/2010
The raging pelican, "dispatches from the Louisiana Gulf War" has excellent analysis from locals about the oil spill that you won't hear from the big oil funded media or politicians:
http://ragingpelican.wordpress.com/2010/07/25/hello-world/

FREE LOUISIANA! END OIL NEO-COLONIALISM! we refuse to be a third world nation within the US any longer. we need a revolution down here!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
picard922
Read directions first.
10:51 PM on 10/04/2010
Our way of life in South Louisiana is gone. It will be a generation before the flora and fauna are restored, if they ever are. In that time, the way of life that has sustained our culture for 200 years is no more. You don’t get it in a restaurant or learn it from a history book. You get it from simple living, from being, family, friends and neighbors sharing the bountiful harvest outside your door. Gone. All gone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stella801
... --- ...
02:57 AM on 10/05/2010
I'm so sorry for you, the whole Gulf and all the sea life. I truly am sad......

Tears can't fix what has happened but that is all I have.
10:23 AM on 10/05/2010
Hardly. Our way of life is destroyed if we allow it to be destroyed.
However, this latest disaster to hit South Louisiana has made me question, why hasn't anyone complained before now about how our way of life is chipped away from all the chemicals and other pollutants that are dumped into the Mississippi River from other states and even our own state? Why hasn't anyone from Louisiana complained about all of the canals and dredging done by big oil through our bayous and marshes that contributed to our disappearing coast?
If our way of life is being taken away from us it is from the people that are supposed to protect us, our local governments that allow this type of stuff to happen. Our local governments that instead of immediately going out to clean and protect, first find a way to line the pockets of their friends - you hear me Billy Nungesser???
10:38 PM on 10/04/2010
It's obvious what BP is doing. Lots of PR spin (as per that guy they hired that did a "60 minutes" piece last Sunday) and giving out a few bucks to make fisherman barely get by and then hit them with a "lump sum" payment BUT force them to sign off so fisherman won't sue in future.

Very corporate "modus operandi." Starve 'em until they believe that crumbs are enough.

Call and email BP HQ and give 'em a piece of your mind.
Call your congressman and your senators.

Just google the phone numbers.
10:23 PM on 10/04/2010
At the time of the spill BP promised the public that anybody affected by the spill would be amply compensated. I don't call $10,000 from a mega-billion corporation more than token compensation: BP is treating their victims like chumps. Boycott ARCO stations in California. Hit them in their pocketbooks.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
12:44 AM on 10/06/2010
if the guy shows that as his income for the last 10 years, that is all he will get....a lot of the fishermen havent paid taxes in many years and work for cash......bp wants to see tax returns..
09:19 PM on 10/04/2010
Dear Friends,

His boat is broken, and he wants somebody to pay for it. This is silly, it is not BP fault his boat does not work, they did nothing to mess it up. His heart attack was not caused by BP, he has gotten money from BP that he never would have been able to get if not for the spill, his boat is broken, so without a boat it is hard to fish. Most likely based on what is said in this article the BP spill has given him 12K of money he would not of had. He has no money but is supporting two of his grand children. This the issue with stories like this, you can shoot holes through it, as it just does not add up. People ask yourself a question, how many hours a day do you want to work to take care of other people? This question is one you need to think about, our government is at he limit of what they can borrow, and very soon, we will be paying the money back, and we will also have a lot of people that need help. The question is we will work to pay this off, the wealthy will just move their assets out of this country, so how many hours a day do we want to work? 8, 10, 12 to pay taxes?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tarryd
10:14 PM on 10/04/2010
you make absolutely no sense.....just rambling....except apparently you think no one should help anyone else or should....oh, and that BP is not to blame for anything.
10:21 PM on 10/04/2010
Your post makes no sense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Hysterian68
bureaucrat/historian/ranter
07:35 PM on 10/04/2010
These worthy fisher people should apply to Bill and Melinda Gates for some help.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whyus
San Francisco native
07:16 PM on 10/04/2010
Where's the $20B??
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
06:15 PM on 10/04/2010
Rocky Kistner tends to fall for fishermen's stories in his writing about the Gulf, but he's not a bad photographer. Nice pix of the blue water and the two little unoiled shrimp. I particularly admired the shot of the flight of brown pelicans, considering that they're all obviously dead along with the rest of the Gulf.
06:20 PM on 10/04/2010
Really! Mr. Creppel is fishing in a canal that is not even connected to the Gulf of Mexico and is protected by bays, other canals and even a lock system. There's not a lot of shrimp in that little canal because there never was. I'd be more afraid of the sewerage and other "stuff" that is dumped in that canal than the oil, that will never reach that area.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
mogmaar
09:09 PM on 10/04/2010
Well I'll agree that the canal is probably polluted from sewerage and other 'stuff', which is part of the problem in the gulf. But really, you're making fun of some old guy who's trying to feed his grandkids as telling tall tales? That seems pretty low.
09:23 PM on 10/04/2010
Dear Thomas,

Yes, I lived on the Gulf coast for a year when I was in the Air Force, you could go down to a pier and get about 8 or 10 shrimp just throwing the net into the water. Being from Maine, I was amazed how easy getting shrimp was, it was insane. We used to dig clams, but that was hard work, shrimping was about an hour a day, and you have all the shrimp you could ate. We also went fishing, and you could get 20 to 30 fish in 4 hours, in Maine, you would be lucky to get 2 fish in four hours. I throught that no wonder these people lived like this, as you could get all the food you needed in just a couple of hours every day, in Maine, fishing, and farming is much harder work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waterphoneman
artist, musician, inventor & mouth from the south
05:55 PM on 10/04/2010
The people of the Gulf coast have been deceived by both BP and our government. BP promised a lot and delivered little while polluting then entire Gulf Coast region.
The government - both state and national - tried to get the money wheel rolling again by claiming that everything was clean and the seafood safe to eat and both of these were out and out lies.
Meanwhile people are suffering and the seafood remains in question. I like seafood above all else but am afraid to eat it.
06:02 PM on 10/04/2010
Like I said earlier, I live in Plaquemines Parish. I eat the seafood. Its tested, tested and tested again and again and again. The seafood is there, it is good. Not all of the waters of South Louisiana were polluted by the oil or the dispersants.

Also the article is a tad misleading, Mr. Creppel is fishing in a man-made canal right off the highway, that probably never, ever got a lot of fresh shrimp in that area. Once you get in a boat, the fish and shrimp are there and waiting to be caught.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waterphoneman
artist, musician, inventor & mouth from the south
06:27 PM on 10/04/2010
The government does the testing and cannot ever test all of the seafood in the Gulf. If you want to eat it then do so.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
06:07 PM on 10/04/2010
The only out and out lies in your post are from you. Nobody, absolutely nobody, claimed that "everything was clean." Portions of the Gulf remain closed to commercial fishing, and NOAA and other organizations are actively examining the sea floor and subsurface waters. Most of the Gulf was never touched by the oil, however, and the other fishing grounds that are now reopened have been heavily and repeatedly tested, as is fish from these waters, more heavily than at any time in history. You're of course free to be afraid, but you should understand that it's an unreasoning fear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Waterphoneman
artist, musician, inventor & mouth from the south
06:29 PM on 10/04/2010
I wish it were unreasonable but with 40 new carcinogens in the Gulf since the BP disaster anyone eating that seafood is playing a deadly roulette that most people that I know who live on the coast as I do, will not play.
04:57 PM on 10/04/2010
I live in Plaquemines Parish, the real problem? See the name on the man's shirt? Billy Nungesser, the newly re-elected parish president. He gave all the clean-up jobs to his friends and parish contractors that are not commercial fishermen, while the real fishermen are suffering. The starving fishermen in the parish have been bamboozled by Billy Nungesser as has the rest of the Country.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
05:31 PM on 10/04/2010
Fanned. It's weird, but on this site Nungesser has been kind of a darling of both ends of the political spectrum, because lots of people seem to think he's making some righteous stand against both BP and Obama. As a Louisiana native and resident, I've tried to tell them that he's the kind of parish politician who if he says the sun will come up tomorrow, you should go out and stock up on flashlights and candles. But then, you'll see some of the most amazing beliefs about south Louisiana and the rest of the Gulf Coast here.
05:49 PM on 10/04/2010
The only thing Nungesser is making is money!!! His private companies are reeling in the money in this spill. And if his private companies aren't making money, he is making sure BP hires contractors approved by him. Those contractors, friends of his who also have parish contracts.

Those same parish contractors/friends made sure to get the vote out for Nungesser on Oct. 2. The sad thing is in the article, Mr. Creppel stated he believed the reason he didn't get a cleanup job is because of politics, yet he wears a Team Nungesser shirt. Mr. Creppel is right, he didn't get a cleanup job because of Nungesser's politics. Sad.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
doodlebug2
06:35 PM on 10/04/2010
bet you 10bucks he is your next gov.
whitebeach
Hey, buddy, can you spare a micro-bio?
06:47 PM on 10/04/2010
You're on. I could name ten better bets right now. Like that line from the old musical says, "You gotta know the territory."
07:33 PM on 10/04/2010
I'll take that bet, in fact I'll triple that bet. Nungesser will be indicted before he'll get a chance to throw his hat in the race.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lasjazzman
Stress = perfectionist + lousy typist!
04:57 PM on 10/04/2010
This is now what happens in the achingly sad aftermath of BP's crime against humanity! Now that the inevitable has finally happened and the horrific spill has moved out of the day to day news cycle and out of our day to day thoughts, the damage remains real and catastrophic for people like this gentleman! BP continues to run its expensive and pathetic "we will be here until its over" ads, the media now reports that the oil and its damage do not seem evident and we all move on to the next crisis d'jour!!! The real truth is that the event was and is catastrophic and the damage it caused is permanent, both to the Gulf environmentally and to the many thousands of people who will never get enough help from BP or anyone else to be able to recover in any way!!!
AlPal3
Had Enough? Vote Democratic
03:30 PM on 10/04/2010
As a true conservative, I'm voting straight Democrat this fall, for the good of America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robmclaughjr
N.M.E. of G.O.P.
03:05 PM on 10/04/2010
I wonder how they're enjoying that GOP vision of no social safety net now?