iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Rocky Kistner

Rocky Kistner

GET UPDATES FROM Rocky Kistner

Grand Isle Businesses Battered by BP Oil Disaster

Posted: 02/ 5/11 01:10 PM ET

For more than 30 years, Sarah Rigaud and her daughter Annette Rigaud owned one of the most popular eateries on Grand Isle, LA. Sarah’s Restaurant is a cozy place filled with mementoes of sun-splashed beach vacations and fishing trips. It was a prosperous business, part of a proud family lineage that dates back to the colonial days of the 1700s here. The Rigauds have endured hurricanes, droughts, disease outbreaks and pirates that once roamed these marsh-filled ocean bayous.

Then the BP oil disaster washed ashore last summer.

After that, the Rigauds say business tanked by 75% as tourists who once flocked here abandoned the sandy beaches and rental cottages. In their place came legions of trash-bag carrying cleanup workers and giant yellow sand-combing machines that prowled the beaches scooping up oil. The Rigauds say their restaurant lost business because most of the cleanup workers had meals catered from out of town.

Sarah and Annette Rigaud, Grand Isle, LA. Photo by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Like everyone else on this historic island, Sarah and Annette applied for relief from BP right after the well blew last spring. They say they received two checks for $5,000 each. When Ken Feinberg was appointed head of BP’s $20 billion claims fund in August, they thought relief was in sight. But instead, they say, Feinberg’s operation has put them through a maze of paperwork shuffling that includes months long reviews that go nowhere. Now they, like other businesses here, are on the verge of bankruptcy.

“It’s been a nightmare,” Annette says. “We’ve filed for claims but don’t even know what to ask for because no one in the claims office has the right information. Things change every time we turn around. This is not a game to us.  We hope and pray that we’ll have money to pay to stay in business.”

The Rigauds say even big shots in Washington haven’t helped. Grand Isle mayor David Carmardelle spoke to congressional and White House staff about their case, but so far even they haven’t been able to help. “It’s crazy," Mayor Carmardelle says of the claims process. “Some people around here have gotten checks who never worked a day in their life, and others who have businesses here have received nothing.  Feinberg is starting to act more like FEMA did (during Katrina) these days. Seems like the ones who are being honest are having the hardest time getting their money.”

Money around here is hard to come by today. The vacationers are long gone, but the tar balls remain. Beach cleanup continues at a much slower pace.  People here say the oil is sunk on the bottom, coughing up pieces of hardened crude when the winds and the waves are right. No one here wants to think of what the hot summer will bring, when the water warms and onshore winds blow in any oil that floats to the top. Feinberg’s most recent claims report says Gulf fishing stocks will recover quickly, but other scientists question that (see NRDC’s David Newman’s blog on this here). The truth is no one knows what the oil’s impact will be on the wildlife and seafood in the years to come. But already there are signs it may not be good.

Karen Hopkins of Grand Isle’s Dean Blanchard Seafood, the largest shrimp buyer in Louisiana, says shrimp catches have been cut in half as many boats were unable to trawl through the oil last year. But what’s most worrisome may be what’s to come. Karen says no one has been catching a popular white shrimp people here call a “sea bob,” usually abundant this time of year. And no one knows why. “Normally we catch 200 to 300 thousand pounds of sea bob in the winter, but this year there’s been none. Even if we get shrimp this year, what will happen the next? It could take several generations for the oil to have an impact."

Karen Hopkins, Grand Isle, LA. Photo by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Dead pelican, Grand Isle beach littered with tar balls. Photo by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Warning sign, Grand Isle State Park. Photo by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

But fishermen aren’t the only ones worried. Small business contractors have been devastated by the drop in tourists, and many wonder if the tourists will ever come back. Take Betty Doud for instance. An experienced house painter, she said she used to have to turn down work in the summer in this usually bustling beach town. But no more. Business dried up for here right after the BP well blew, and the job she was working on was cancelled. Betty says after coming across dead turtles on the beach, she had to leave the area to collect her sanity. She returned last fall, hoping the beaches were clean and BP had really “made it right.” Instead she says she's come across oil, tar balls and giant waves of brownish foam on the beach that give her headaches. And adding insult to injury, Betty says, the claims office still hasn't paid her claim, losing paperwork and putting her in a seemingly permanent holding pattern.

A month ago Betty came across a fisherman on the beach who had oiled shrimp in his nets and who complained of burning rashes on his skin. Now she sees crews bringing in giant dump trucks of sand trying to bury the oiled sand on the beach. “They all want to bury it and say the coast is clear,” Betty says, “But the oils not going anywhere. We’re surrounded by it and it will just keep coming in with the tide.”

Betty Doud with tar balls, Grand Isle. Photo by Rocky Kistner/NRDC

Oil tainted shrimp caught on Grand Isle. Photo by Betty Doud

Places like Grand Isle are bearing the brunt of the environmental and economic impacts of this oil disaster. But it isn’t alone. From Panama City to Gulf Shores to Gulfport, businesses are teetering on the edge. Million-dollar advertising campaigns aren’t going to bring the tourists back. Pristine sand and oil-free waters will.

Business owners like Sarah and Annette Rigaud are praying for that this year. But when they look out at the offshore oil platforms in the distance, they are constantly reminded this disaster is not over. They know it could happen again. “We don’t want to bring our grandkids here,” Annette says. “We don’t know what we’re exposing them to.”

The Rigauds say they can handle disasters like hurricanes, just as generations before them. But a catastrophic oil spill is unchartered territory. They and many others are caught in a dangerous oil experiment in the Gulf. And no one knows how it will turn out.

 

Follow Rocky Kistner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rockyatnrdc

For more than 30 years, Sarah Rigaud and her daughter Annette Rigaud owned one of the most popular eateries on Grand Isle, LA. Sarah’s Restaurant is a cozy place filled with mementoes ...
For more than 30 years, Sarah Rigaud and her daughter Annette Rigaud owned one of the most popular eateries on Grand Isle, LA. Sarah’s Restaurant is a cozy place filled with mementoes ...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 26
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
02:04 PM on 02/08/2011
Had breakfast at Sarah's restaurant on Grand Isle this morning. Poor service, mediocre food, and a waitress that you have to seek out to get the second cup of coffee might explain why business is down. It sure is not worth a second visit!
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
07:43 PM on 02/06/2011
and still we have the Drill Baby Drill chants going on...destruction of the planet is nothing compared to money for them
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
01:26 AM on 02/06/2011
its surprising that they didnt cook for bp.....most restaurants were contracted to do catering for mass amounts of folks....grand isle isnt a big tourist destination for folks other than ones that own camps there.....maybe it was edited or maybe they never said it.....but there is no drilling going on in the gulf to speak of (contempt of court by the feds).....grand isle is a port that services this industry. with all that being said...its no surprise that the govt handling claims is taking forever.
11:31 AM on 02/06/2011
No drilling? I guess you don't get offshore much. Maybe no new deep water drilling, but still plenty of activity going on.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
03:16 PM on 02/06/2011
34 of 125 rigs working......with no deepwater...yes i am ill informed...that is plenty plenty of activity...we should be grateful for the 34 working....thank you govt for the opportunity to keep america going.
http://www.nola.com/news/gulf-oil-spill/index.ssf/2011/02/more_oil_drilling_rigs_are_in.html
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EuGeneTherapy
Local micro brew better than Belgium's Budweiser
01:13 AM on 02/06/2011
Considering the state of affairs, Irving Picard should be appointed to oversee the BP fund, as well as the bailout investigation. He seems to be the only one involved in the entire financial fiasco to be doing his job, and GETTING THE MONEY BACK FOR THOSE INJURED!!!

Shame on all the rest, and may they never have a good nights rest again!!!
07:17 PM on 02/05/2011
Ken Feinberg has NO BUSINESS being involved in the dispensing of these funds when he's also collecting $850,0900 per month from BP. In point of fact, I think he was put in place NOT to giveaway the money. I wouldn't doubt it if he's given a bonus for every dollar he denies someone.

The corruption of the country smells to the heavens......
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
erdoc53
07:15 PM on 02/05/2011
Yeah keep voting for the ceo's of haliburton et al...I fell bad that I don't feel bad for the people ther...voting for the likes of Bobby jindal, complaining about the drilling moratorium....you reap what you sow...I feel bad for the wildlife...the rest of them can move and get another job at least
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
08:34 PM on 02/05/2011
Well said. F&F
09:14 PM on 02/05/2011
You sure got that right. FF
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
04:30 PM on 02/05/2011
How come no one has done a follow-up on the lives of the families of the deceased oil rig workers? Everyone seems focused on dead pelicans.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
08:34 PM on 02/05/2011
Drill Baby Drill
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
10:30 PM on 02/05/2011
So are you blaming people for finding honest work that puts food on the table for their families. Not everyone can work in jobs that makes environmentalists happy.
04:29 PM on 02/05/2011
this is the results of thirty years voting for your 'freedom to deregulate' . be careful for what you vote for.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
12:23 AM on 02/07/2011
do you have a prius and solar panels on your home? windmill?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hopeforchangenow
03:03 PM on 02/05/2011
And BP will get away with killing our Gulf coast without so much as a slap on the hand.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:26 PM on 02/05/2011
Are you surprised?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
08:35 PM on 02/05/2011
Not at all. and The Residents will say drill Baby Drill and support people like Jindal
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
P51MUSTANG
HumeSkeptic might disagree, but...
08:02 PM on 02/05/2011
The people elected Bush twice, and adore Reagan. Both sought to undermine regulation of industry.

At some point stupid people deserve the consequences of their actions.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Turtlenewz
08:37 PM on 02/05/2011
all they know is Drill baby Drill and vote against their own interests . One generation of ignorance after another. The ones that break the cycle get out and do not return