海角大神

BP oil spill victims: Obama offensive comes too late

The $20 billion escrow account is good news, but efforts to speed up the BP oil spill claims process are behind the curve, Louisiana business owners say.

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Tony Avelar / 海角大神
Shrimper Blem Do, 65, center, unloads his small shrimp catch at the boat harbor in Pass 海角大神, Miss., on June 6. The BP oil spill has meant smaller loads of shrimp, and $5,000 checks from BP may not arrive fast enough to save businesses, owners say.

The promise of $20 billion in recovery money for lives disrupted by the BP oil spill is meant to boost not just the financial health of affected businesses, but possibly the spirits of those who run them.

But to some people making a living in coastal communities along the Gulf of Mexico, Wednesday鈥檚 pledge from Washington did not arrive soon enough.

Eight weeks after oil started rushing out of a wrecked wellhead 40 miles off the Louisiana coast, many are already living month-to-month because business has dwindled so dramatically.

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There are doubts that whatever money businesses can claim will not arrive fast enough to save local businesses from closing their doors as early as next month.

鈥淚鈥檒l believe it when I see it,鈥 says Kirth Thibobeaux of the promised recovery money.

Mr. Thibobeaux, the owner of Jeep Seafood outside Houma, La., says that in a normal season he sells a daily bounty of freshly harvested oysters, crabs and shrimp. But ever since his suppliers were forced to earn new livings working for BP 鈥 his shrimper is laying boom and his crabber is cleaning oil-slicked animals 鈥 his stock is drained. For now, he is subsiding on the last few days of crawfish season, which started in March and runs though late June. 鈥淲hen that goes we鈥檙e in trouble,鈥 he says. He has filed two claims with BP and is waiting for payment on the second.

In 25 years of business, Thibobeaux says Wednesday marked the first day without a customer. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e getting worried and scared 鈥 whether the seafood has oil on it,鈥 he says, adding, 鈥渋t irks me to no end. I would never buy seafood that has oil on it.鈥

President Obama continues to emphasize the local impact of the disaster. In speaking to reporters Wednesday he said he took BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg aside to put the recovery money in context. 鈥淭his is not just a matter of dollars and cents 鈥 a lot of these folks don鈥檛 have a cushion,鈥 Mr. Obama said.

To date BP has paid claims totaling $81.3 million. But some say the payments, averaging $5,000, are not enough to survive for long.

At Captain Allen Seafood, a roadside bait shop that also sells fresh seafood, in Houma, La., owner Dee Dupree says she did not watch the president鈥檚 Oval Office address Tuesday because, by now, more talk about the oil spill is 鈥渄epressing.鈥

She filed a claim with BP but is still waiting on her check. She says she worries that the petition process is being flooded with fraudulent claims, which will clog efforts of legitimate businesses like her own from getting a fair hearing.

Her anger is directed not at BP, but at President Obama for his six-month moratorium on deepwater drilling in the Gulf.

"This is crazy. Yes, this is a catastrophe but you have planes that crash where 200 people die and you don鈥檛 stop planes from flying,鈥 she says. She worries that the region will soon empty as people move elsewhere to seek jobs. 鈥淢en need to work. Once they鈥檙e gone, they鈥檙e gone. They鈥檙e not coming back. I don鈥檛 think [the president] sees the whole picture.鈥

To shrimper Lance Nacio, the increase in recovery money 鈥渟ounded good,鈥 but he questions how much is going to filter down to businesses like his own. Federal fishing closures, which to date represent 33.4 percent of Gulf waters, shuttered Anna Marie Seafood, Mr. Nacio鈥檚 fishing and wholesale seafood operation in Dulac, La. He is now a temporary BP employee, running a two-person crew on his boat into oil-slicked waters and conducting controlled burns.

He too received $5,000 in recovery money, but says it will not be enough in the long-term.

If I wasn鈥檛 working for BP for this job I wouldn鈥檛 have any other source of income 鈥 They are cutting this one-time check and it鈥檚 not enough to sustain livelihoods down here,鈥 he says.

If there was an upside to Wednesday鈥檚 announcement of $20 billion in recovery funds, it was that it put an end to the fear that has been circulating since the spill鈥檚 early weeks: That BP would be hit so hard by claims and government fines it would be forced to declare bankruptcy.

"That鈥檚 one thing we are relieved about in South Louisiana,鈥 he says. With the newly-released money, Nacio says 鈥渁t least we have something to go to that will be there for us.鈥

IN PICTURES: Companies that have paid big for environmental disasters

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