Monday, June 14, 2010
Turtles and Other Wildlife Being Burned
Still I wonder why the criminal is still in charge of the crime scene.
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In other news, I made the trip to Grand Isle with the Nola Oil Spill Cleanup and Animal Rescue Meetup group. We are all trained either as emergency responders or hazwopers and are prepared to take cleanup efforts into our own hands if the response does not improve. Grand Isle has uncleaned oil and I can only imagine how bad it is on remote islands with no human inhabitants. If BP and the government are willing to respond this slowly on an inhabited island, they may be doing nothing at all offshore. It is sickening.
Monday, June 7, 2010
FAIL
Reports are coming in stating that there are barrier islands off Louisiana full of oiled pelicans with no responders in sight.
Tuesday, June 1, 2010
Volunteer Opp.
Beach Clean-Up in Cameron Parish
Saturday, June 5, 2010
8:30 am to 3:00 pm
This is to remove debris/garbage before the oil comes in. I am not 100% sure why this is necessary (isn't it good for debris to soak up oil before it is removed?), but if you want to participate:
Sign up here:
https://www.thedatabank.com/dpg/316/personal2.asp?formid=event&c=9710393
Saturday, May 29, 2010
More Nothing
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Volunteer with the Louisiana Bucket Brigade
Wednesday, June 2
5pm
City Park in front of the New Orleans Museum of Art
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Live Video Feed of Oil Flow
The New York Times reported on May 5, 2010, that BP plugged one of three "leaks."
Don't Help! You'll Only Get in the Way of the Professionals.
Our governments seldom create large armies of volunteers. They act in a bubble, in a vacuum and do not consider the people-power that they can tap at any time. It is another symptom of the government being less and less "we the people" and more and more a separate parent-like figure caring for its "kids" -- us.
The lack of urgency in Venice, Louisiana, is still surprising to me. I believe BP can be blamed for underestimating the problem from the start (or flat-out lying about the true scope of the disaster) and the government can be blamed for accepting BP's estimates. The media went ahead and repeated these estimates for so long that the true scope of the Deepwater Horizon disaster was grossly underestimated by our society for more than a month. Instead of preparing for battle, we sat back and watched BP try to fix the problem.
Venice -- and all coastal towns -- should be swarming with volunteers, federal agents, state experts, local captains and tons of boats. This is just not the case, and it is because of BP's public underestimations and lack of leadership in government. There is no shortage of privately-owned boats in Louisiana, and the people have a strong sense of community and determination without which living in coastal Louisiana would be impossible. It is time for people to put their boats in the water and to stop this oil from hitting the islands, marshes and estuaries. The "professionals" seem to always have trouble thinking outside the box and can't seem to act when time is running out.
If BP would have been honest from the start, the government and the media would have told the public the true seriousness of the situation and the public and the government would be more prepared to deal with this impending tragedy.
That being said, why are the Gulf islands not filled with people cleaning them? The government has had more than a month now to prepare for the inevitable, and it still looks grossly under-prepared.
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On Monday, I volunteered for Audubon in Venice. My job was to care for birds brought on boats and to load them onto trucks taking them to Fort Jackson, where Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research (the organization leading the bird cleanup) is stationed. No birds came in while I was there, from 10:30am to 5:00pm.
I am not sure if this is a good thing or a bad thing. Audubon says it's a good thing. But how many boats are out looking for oiled birds? Are people entering islands full of birds to save oiled birds or are they only looking for lone birds floating, unable to fly or swim? Judging by the response to the disaster so far, I have little faith that everything is being done to bring oiled birds to shore. As I sat in Venice, filling out a crossword puzzle with my phone right next to me, I felt helpless. If I had a boat I would be out with a GPS looking for oil and for oiled birds, dolphins, and other wildlife.
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In other news, Loyola chemistry professor Kurt Birdwhistell says the dispersant is nearly as toxic as the oil itself. In other words, BP is adding to the toxic mess with all of its dispersant use. And this dispersant is causing the toxic oil (and the toxic dispersant) to go underwater and affect fish and crabs.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Hair Booms Won't Be Used
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Hair and Hope
Support this Group's Benefit Concert for the Gulf!
Friday May 21st
7:30 p.m.
The Unitarian Church of Baton Rouge
8470 Goodwood Blvd.
Baton Rouge, LA
(map)
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Petitioning with Sierra Club
We found out at the last second that another ride was heading down to Venice to do more outreach on behalf of the Bucket Brigade (in our experience by far the most organized and motivated organization down here), though we were ultimately unable to get down there. It's lame not having transportation. So, after a morning of blogging and trying to figure out where the money for the Gulf Aid show was going, we headed out to the Sierra Club to do more work in town. This time, we'd be helping them with a letter writing campaign (essentially a petition) to try to get more federal resources down to the gulf and to get a moratorium on offshore drilling.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Gulf Aid -- Who Gets the Aid?
Stories from the Gulf

The shrimpers and oystermen docked in Venice's harbor were on stand-by Tuesday. Canary and robin-colored booms hung around their boats like tinsel, and engines idled as they waited for British Petroleum's OK-- not to fish, but to tote the booms into the gulf and wrangle oil.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Venice Report

Tuesday felt very much like we were chasing a ghost. Without a boat to get us on the water, we did not see any oil apart from the typical amount floating at marinas.
Most people I encountered on the Gulf coast did not share much information about what they have seen, smelled, or experienced.
When I asked a fisherman if he was going to deploy the boom on his boat, he replied with a “how you doin'?” that suggested he was not going to say anything further. He walked by me swiftly. I think this lack of information-sharing has something to do with contracts the fishermen signed with BP in order to work on the cleanup effort and their fear of losing the money BP is paying them. I know Jamie had better luck speaking to people and will probably share more info soon.
SUVs on the way to Venice, La., suggested that the federal government was responding to the pending disaster, but everything in Venice was calm -- almost eerily so. A few fishing boats had booms on board, but only one boat left the port in the hour or so that we were at the marina.
On our way back to New Orleans, WWL radio reported that petroleum was discovered inside the marshes of Plaquemines Parish, between Venice and New Orleans.
To the Gulf
Monday, May 17, 2010
The Bucket Brigade
Today our trio had an exciting meeting with the Bucket Brigade's volunteer coordinator, Clayton Shelvin. A performing arts major, he was thrown into the oil fiasco shortly after taking the job. He and the other Bucket Brigade members face the challenge of managing a flood of eager volunteers with a small staff team, and a newfound spotlight put on them from news sources around the country.
The Bucket Brigade started as a grassroots effort to monitor air quality near oil refineries through citizen reporting. Residents downwind of refineries are given special buckets to gather air samples to send in for testing. It gives communities a sense of power to be able to hold the companies populating "cancer alley" accountable for their emissions. It's one thing to say, "Our air isn't clean" - it's another thing entirely to lay a printout in front of a oil executive and point out that their emissions of Hydrogen Sulfide are twenty-five times higher than the legal limit.

Since the oil began flowing, the Bucket Brigade has switched gears and now uses that independent spirit and infrastructure to monitor the oil disaster's effects on the local eco-system and residents. As BP holds the reigns to most of the official data and cleanup efforts, many have expressed a sense of frustration at both the company's lack of direction and its unwillingness to share information, such as exactly how much oil is spewing from its pipeline.
To counter this, the Bucket Brigade is working on a crisis map documenting various aspects of the disaster's effects on the local people, with everything from oil sightings to fishermen out of work being reported by the local people and posted on an interactive map on the internet. You can even send a text message to post on the map. The information is so current that even the government has begun to use it to keep abreast of new developments.
We walked out of their office with a new sense of purpose: tomorrow, we're headed to Venice to document what's going on, specifically trying to talk to the out of work fishermen to show the human side of all that's going on down here.
--John
Gulf AId and Crawfish

Sunday, May 16, 2010
Human Hair and Pantyhose
John, Rene and I spent this Saturday stuffing hair -- human and otherwise -- into pantyhose. The idea? To create giant oil sponges that will be suspended from booms in the gulf.
The Goal
\That's the question thousands of people have been asking since British Petroleum's Deepwater Horizon oiling rig exploded on April 20, creating a pipeline rupture that is spewing something like 70,000 barrels of oil reach day into the Gulf of Mexico.
Not knowing the answer to that question, but finding ourselves with free time in between jobs, my fiance John and I headed to New Orleans to stay with a friend, Rene, and volunteer our help. That was Wednesday, May 14 -- nearly a month after the pipeline ruptured. And while it seems that an Exxon-Valdez oil spill is being spewed out every three days or so, there's few options for the thousands of people waiting to help.
Our volunteer trio has scoured the web, utilized Rene's local resources, and filled out countless volunteer applications -- to little avail. Most leads direct us back to a BP phone number or require a $350 dollar, two week hazardous materials training. We're not alone --everywhere we go, we encounter people who want to help - - but aren't exactly sure how.
With this blog we hope to provide a resource for others who want to do something. Stay tuned for news on the disaster, our personal attempt to help out, volunteer opportunities and more -- and please let us know if we're missing anything!
