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Vicky Collins

Vicky Collins

Posted: July 26, 2010 02:14 PM

Oil Spill: The Ripple Effects

What's Your Reaction:

I finally got to the Gulf coast to work on a story about the oil spill for PBS NewsHour. I didn't see any oil, but what I did witness was a a boatload of fear. Correspondent Tom Beardon and I visited Bayou La Batre, Alabama to attend a town hall meeting with Ken Feinberg, the Massachusetts lawyer who must decide how to allocate BP's $20 billion compensation fund. He has done this kind of work previously for victims of 9/11 and Virginia Tech. Feinberg was mostly reassuring people that help was on the way and was listening to the concerns among the folks who packed city hall at 7 a.m. on Saturday morning. What struck me was how far reaching this catastrophe is on the people who live in towns that dot the Gulf coast.

Bayou La Batre bills itself as the "Seafood Capital of Alabama." The oil spill has rippled through the whole community, disrupting the entire seafood chain. Obviously the fishermen have lost the season, then there are the people who store and process the seafood, like brothers Bruce and Delane Seaman who had to shut down their oyster shucking plant, putting about 40 people out of work. They don't expect to ever reopen. Their customers have gone elsewhere. Then there are folks like Patrick and Lillie Kraver, who own Kravers Seafood Restaurant in Daphne, on the other side of Mobile Bay, and have seen business tumble by about 40%. When Tom asked them if they could survive, they said, "God would provide." These are people whose families have worked in the seafood industry for generations.

And then there are the more indirect losses. The man who has a candy and gift store on the beach and has seen his tourist traffic dry up, another man who has watched his real estate property values tank, even the local minister who has seen his offerings cut almost in half. He reminded Ken Feinberg that when everyone leaves the area it will be the churches and faith-based organizations that care for fragile residents. People came from as far away as Pensacola, Florida. Everyone had a story of loss and hardship and a sense of skepticism deep as the Gulf about whether help was really coming or whether this was more PR. Most have felt jerked around by BP and are hoping Ken Feinberg is really here to help make them at least partially whole. He says he has received claims from 48 states, so he has a huge task trying to decide who will be eligible to receive money and who doesn't qualify. Unlike a hurricane, which comes and goes, this catastrophe and its impacts could crush the community for years -- and everyone needs help to weather the storm and stay afloat.

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11:27 PM on 07/28/2010
The human cost of the oil spill and BPs corruption is huge, not only with this oil spill disaster, but with many other losses of life on other BP rigs.

Everyone please take a look at the following tribute by Steve Joynt to the 11 men who died on the Deepwater Horizon, “Oil spill Day 100: The 11 men who died on the Deepwater Horizon”

http://blog.al.com/live/2010/07/oil_spill_day_100_the_11_men_w.html

We can never lose sight of the human cost of BP’s malfeasance.
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See bio on the Aesop Institute website
04:07 PM on 07/26/2010
The ripple effect may eventually touch every one of us!

400 parts per million of carbon has recently been found to be the Arctic Tipping Point, which could conceivably endanger us all. We are approaching 390 ppm and adding 2 ppm each year. The safe limit is 350 ppm.

According to one scientist, a very thin oil film on the surface of the Atlantic and Arctic oceans that could spread from the Gulf, threatens to raise temperatures toward the catastrophic Tipping Point.

It seems possible to effectively attack the problems we face only with a monumental effort on a wartime scale.

If the threat is real, renewable energy systems that can be deployed in time should rapidly be produced on a 24/7 basis. The White House, Congress and anyone concerned should check the facts without delay - and if confirmed, do whatever is necessary to make that possible.

See What to Do! at http://www.aesopinstitute.org It outlines: A 5 Step Emergency Program

Little known and hard to fathom breakthroughs involving radically new energy technologies can help to supersede petroleum much more rapidly than might be readily understood or readily believed.

See Moving Beyond Oil on the same Aesop Institute website.

If the threat is confirmed, Congress and the White House must initiate the action needed to prevent catastrophe and provide truly effective climate legislation.

See The Brooklyn Project on the Aesop Institute website for one suggested path to sound a wake-up call while there is still time.