Getting Screwed by BP and Soetoro in the Gulf

Lumi

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Whistleblower: Relief payments get slashed if fishermen refuse to work for BP

Any relief payment plan established in the wake of the worst environmental accident ever was bound to have its flaws, but this goes to a whole new level of wrong.
According to Gulf resident Kindra Arnesen, who turned whistleblower and full-time activist when she saw how many people were put out of work by the spill, BP will deduct money from individual payments on claims for lost income if the claimant refuses to work in assisting the spill response.
Reading from a letter she'd received from BP, Arnesen quoted the company's line:
"BP will continue its efforts to pay legitimate claims for losses incurred due to the Deepwater Horizon incident. However, federal law clearly provides for adjustments for all income resulting from the incident, all income from alternative employment or businesses undertaken [...] and potential income from alternative employment or businesses not undertaken but reasonably available."
In other words, if you are a fisherman who was put out of work by BP and you do not elect to work in their employ, but you still file a claim for losses over the Deepwater Horizon disaster, that claim could be significantly less than the actual damages incurred.



Arnesen, a fisherman's wife and longtime Louisiana resident, has been a true pitbull of an activist since she began popping up in area media. Finally, at the beginning of June, she gained enough notoriety that CNN picked up her story. She was one of the first to raise hell over reports of fishermen getting sick, allegedly from the oil and dispersant fumes coming off the Gulf.
Her husband David is one of thousands who opted to work for BP after the oil contaminated his usual fishing routes. She believes he was one of many who were sickened by BP's toxic vapors.
BP CEO Tony Hayward tried to pass off the multiple boats full of sick fishermen as "food poisoning." The company has since discouraged use of respirators because they don't want the task to appear dangerous. However, RFK Center President Kerry Kennedy traveled to the Gulf Coast to talk to cleanup workers and found that BP's active denial of proper safety equipment was having a serious health effect.
"In all three states that I've visited, fishermen said when they went out to work on the cleanup, that if they tried to bring respirators they were told it was unnecessary equipment and would only spread hysteria," Kennedy told Fox News.
"When I went out with eleven people, we had respirators on and within half an hour, all of our eyes were burning and our throats were closing and we all had headaches," she explained.
That got Kindra mad as hell.
In an amazing display of gusto, even with the possibility that she'd endanger his income by damaging their relationship with BP, Arnesen showed up absolutely livid to a citizens emergency summit on June 19. Her speech quickly gained traction in progressive media after she claimed BP's directors were eager to cut costs and merely put on a show every time a politician swings through, ushering cleanup crews out almost as fast as they're ushered in.
Visibly disturbed by BP's concise statement on relief payments, Arnesen jeered: "They summed it up in one paragraph: billions upon billions for coastal communities. One paragraph. One paragraph? This is what they think? That we're gonna clean up their toxic shit? For the same price that we're gonna pick up shrimp? Are they loony? Have they lost their minds?"
"Am I scared? Yes," Arnesen told CNN. "Anything that ever starts, starts with one. And if I have to be the one then I have to be the one."
The team that filmed her, Project Gulf Impact, also recently landed an interview with Dr. Chris Pincetich, a marine biologist, who claimed that the U.S. Coast Guard is involved in spraying Corexit oil dispersant and that the substance has made it ashore.
This video was published to YouTube by Project Gulf Impact on July 4, 2010.


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Lumi

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Oil found in Gulf crabs raises new food chain fears

Oil found in Gulf crabs raises new food chain fears

Oil found in Gulf crabs raises new food chain fears
Geoff Pender | Biloxi Sun Herald
last updated: July 06, 2010 02:15:21 PM



BILOXI, Miss. ? University scientists have spotted the first indications oil is entering the Gulf seafood chain ? in crab larvae ? and one expert warns the effect on fisheries could last "years, probably not a matter of months" and affect many species.

Scientists with the University of Southern Mississippi and Tulane University in New Orleans have found droplets of oil in the larvae of blue crabs and fiddler crabs sampled from Louisiana to Pensacola, Fla. The news comes as blobs of oil and tar continue to wash ashore in Mississippi in patches, with crews in chartreuse vests out cleaning beaches all along the coast on Thursday, and as state and federal fisheries from Louisiana to Florida are closed by the BP oil disaster.

"I think we will see this enter the food chain in a lot of ways ? for plankton feeders, like menhaden, they are going to just actively take it in," said Harriet Perry, director of the Center for Fisheries Research and Development at the Gulf Coast Research Laboratory. "Fish are going to feed on (crab larvae). We have also just started seeing it on the fins of small, larval fish ? their fins were encased in oil. That limits their mobility, so that makes them easy prey for other species. The oil's going to get into the food chain in a lot of ways."

Perry said researchers have not yet linked the hydrocarbons found in the crab larvae to the BP disaster, but she has little doubt it's the source. She said she has never seen such contamination in her 42 years of studying blue crab.

Richard Gollott is Mississippi's Department of Marine Resources commissioner for the commercial seafood industry and a seafood processing-plant owner from a family that's been in the business for generations. He said closure of Gulf fisheries "appears to have been the right thing to do."

?We are taking a beating with this,? Gollott said. ?But we would rather have our industry have a season closed down for a year or even two years rather than get a bad name. We have to take the long-term view. The worst thing in the world would be to take a short-term look at this and not be worried about the public, the consumers."

Gollott said he is still hopeful Gulf seafood can make a quick recovery, in ?months instead of years,? and be safe and plentiful. He said right now the only Gulf seafood he?s supplying is coming from Texas, where fisheries are still clear and open.

?You've got to be optimistic to be a fisherman,? Gollott said. ?As quick as we can get our scientific facts and ducks in order, get FDA to check everything from Florida to Texas and make sure it?s OK, I think we will get our market share back. But that will take some marketing and some work.?

DMR Director Bill Walker said Thursday he was unaware of the USM?Tulane findings. He said DMR biologists continue to test the meat of shrimp and other edible species and have ?not gotten any positive hits? for oil.

?But we are just testing the edible tissue, for public health,? Walker said. ?The more-academic research is looking at other parts of these critters. Sometimes materials will concentrate in the more oily tissue, but not make its way to the edible tissue.?

Perry said the oil found in the crab larvae appears to be trapped between the hard outer shell and the inner skin. Perry said, ?Shrimp, crab and oysters have a tough time with hydrocarbon metabolism.? She said fish that eat these smaller species can metabolize the oil, but their bodies also accumulate it with continued exposure and they can suffer reproductive problems ?added to a long list of other problems.?

BP-contracted crews cleaned tar balls and patches from mainland beaches on Thursday. Walker said there are reports of oil or tar on or near all the barrier islands, although still in relatively small, isolated patches ? "small in the sense of up to several hundred yards at a stretch,? Walker said.

Harrison County Emergency Manager Rupert Lacy said storms the last few days ?shook (tar pieces) up, shifted them around,? but cleanup workers ?are doing what they need to do,? and getting beaches cleaned.

?Until they can get that well capped off and they get those big skimmers out there and really get into the skimming operations, we?re going to see the remnants of this,? Lacy said. ?This is not a sprint; it?s a marathon.?

Perry said scientists are having to learn as they go along with the BP oil disaster.

?We can go to literature and get information on other spills,? Perry said. ?But this is not the same oil, this is not the same spill, this is not the same area and these are not the same species. Plus, the use of dispersant in the amounts they?ve used is totally unprecedented. So this is taking scientists a while to get up to speed and realize the enormity of it.?

As not only a marine scientist but a longtime Coast resident, Perry said the enormity of the disaster gets to her personally sometimes.

?I had a sort of breakdown last week,? Perry said. ?I?ve driven down the same road on East Beach in Ocean Springs for 42 years. As I was going to work, I saw the shrimp fleet going out, all going to try to work on the oil, and I realized the utter futility of that, and I just lost it for a minute and had to gather myself.

?When you think about it all, how this has changed everybody?s life and how life here revolves around the water and the beach and the seafood ? just even going to get a shrimp po-boy ? it?s just overwhelming. I think a hurricane is easy compared to this.

?Let?s just hope and pray first that they get the well capped, then secondly that they keep it from getting inshore into our marshes.?
 

Lumi

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Gulf business owners say BP is 'nickel and diming' them

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/07/01/96886/gulf-business-owners-say-bp-is.html#ixzz0t8H01N23


Are sea turtles burning alive? Groups to sue BP, Coast Guard

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/06/30/96822/burning-oil-from-spill-may-burn.html#ixzz0t8Jaq88K


EPA says more testing needed to know dispersants' impacts

Read more: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/06/30/96839/epa-says-more-testing-needed-to.html#ixzz0t8JuMpkR


Maybe Rusty can spend some time with this and try to disprove these articles?
 

Lumi

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Citizen Journalist Denied Access to Alabama Beach

Citizen Journalist Denied Access to Alabama Beach

Citizen Journalist Denied Access to Alabama Beach

BP Slick
July 9, 2010

A MoJo Video by Glynn Wilson
Videography by Stew Jones

GULF SHORES, Ala. ? While the Obama administration continues to say the national policy is that no American journalist can be restricted from access to oiled beaches along the Gulf of Mexico, contractors for the British Petroleum oil giant seem not to have gotten the word.

BP executives must be thinking that since they broke the Gulf, they now own it.

Will the press and the American people and the administration stand for it?

The employee for the BP Contractor Safe Harbor said the Baldwin County Sheriff?s Department arrested a member of the media on Tuesday, but a check with the sheriff?s department shows no such arrest.


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So who's over the top in these videos ? Are these Nutjob Libertarian Driven Pieces, or is the truth THE FUCKING TRUTH TOO MUCH TO HANDLE KOD, RUSTY, you can have an opinion once the others have attacked me. Go clean the garage.
 

Lumi

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Toxicologists: Corexit ?Ruptures Red Blood Cells, Causes Internal Bleeding?, "Allows

Toxicologists: Corexit ?Ruptures Red Blood Cells, Causes Internal Bleeding?, "Allows

Friday, July 9, 2010

Toxicologists: Corexit ?Ruptures Red Blood Cells, Causes Internal Bleeding?, "Allows Crude Oil To Penetrate ?Into The Cells? and ?Every Organ System"

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As I have previously noted, Corexit is toxic, is less effective than other dispersants, and is actually worsening the damage caused by the oil spill.

Now, two toxicologists are saying that Corexit is much more harmful to human health and marine life than we've been told.

Specifically Gulf toxicologist Dr. Susan Shaw - Founder and Director of the Marine Environmental Research Institute - dove into the oil spill to examine the chemicals present.

Dr. Shaw told CNN:




If I can tell you what happens ? because I was in the oil ? to people?
Shrimpers throwing their nets into water? [then] water from the nets splashed on his skin. ?
[He experienced a] headache that lasted 3 weeks? heart palpitations? muscle spasms? bleeding from the rectum?
And that?s what that Corexit does, it ruptures red blood cells, causes internal bleeding, and liver and kidney damage. ?
This stuff is so toxic combined? not the oil or dispersants alone. ?
Very, very toxic and goes right through skin.
***

The reason this is so toxic is because of these solvents [from dispersant] that penetrate the skin of anything that?s going through the dispersed oil takes the oil into the cells ? takes the oil into the organs? and this stuff is toxic to every organ system in the body. ?

Similarly, marine biologist and toxicologist Dr. Chris Pincetich - who has an extensive background in testing the affects of chemicals on fish - says that Corexit disrupts cell membranes.

He also explains that EPA toxicity testing for Corexit is woefully inadequate, since EPA testing for mortality usually only requires a 96-hour time frame. His doctoral research found that fish that were alive at 96 hours after exposure to pesticide were dead at two weeks, so the chemicals were considered non-lethal for the purposes of the test.



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Drs. Shaw and Pincetich are wildlife conservationists. But even industry scientists working for Exxon and the manufacturer of Corexit itself admit that the stuff is toxic
 

Lumi

LOKI
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BP to cut payments on 40,000 claims of individuals affected by oil spill, cites paper

BP to cut payments on 40,000 claims of individuals affected by oil spill, cites paper

BP to cut payments on 40,000 claims of individuals affected by oil spill, cites paperwork problems
BY Meena Hartenstein
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER



Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nat...by_oil_spill_cites_paperwo.html#ixzz0tZhzis1X


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