Tag: Gulf of Mexico

BP is FAILING at Clean-up–Let’s Clean Our Own Beaches!

BP is FAILING at Clean-up–Let’s Clean Our Own Beaches!

I called in these oil blobs to the NWR staff and the toll free hotline for oiled shoreline from the beach at Bon Secour NWR just before 12 noon on Friday, June 4th. I waited until I was toasted by the coastal sun for somebody to show up to clean it but had to leave to rehydrate and cool off…literally and figuratively.

The synopsis: The NWR folks were there within 40 minutes of me calling them. They assured me someone was coming to clean it up. Over 1 1/2 hours later a scout crew from BP arrived. These two guys said they had to check it out and then their supervisor would check before sending a crew. When I asked about the length of time for anyone from BP to respond they said they had been at lunch. Oh…that explains it!

When I checked the beach again at 5.45pm NOBODY had cleaned up the large blobs of oil. NOBODY!

I chatted with local News 5 reporter and cameraman at Fort Morgan yesterday. They documented BP’s failure to send workers on the beach after waiting 6 hours for cleanup for the marsh grass at Ft. Morgan point. Did anybody catch the footage? I watched the news and never saw it. Are the local higher-ups squelching information? Why would they do that?

The mayor of Orange Beach gave a fluffy little speech yesterday morning at the First Friday gathering at Lulu’s on the Intracoastal Waterway. He said BP was doing a great job. LOOK IN YOUR BACKYARD MAN!! DO NOT BE AFRAID TO SPEAK AGAINST BP!! They have to give you your pittance.

So if BP is not going to do the cleanup that needs to be done, why the heck aren’t we out there cleaning our own beaches? We can research the safety precautions, take necessary environmental cautions and get the oil off the beach…at least now. Eventually I fear our beaches in Alabama will look like those in Louisiana….thick, huge mats of oil. But before then….we need to stand up and do this work! Every bit of oil that stays on the beach gives shorebirds, crabs and humans longer exposure to it. We need to be our own heroes!

Lessons from a Ghost Crab

Lessons from a Ghost Crab

Two days ago I sat on the beach and watched a ghost crab at the water’s edge digging a burrow. I warned him that oil would be on the beach soon, to run up into the dunes and live there. But he would have none of it. I took video of him and photographed him, all the while trying to persuade him to move.

As I sat there I realized there is a need for all of us to bear witness to the death that results from the oil spill/flow. One of the most difficult things we can do is force ourselves to view footage of birds covered in oil, dead animals on the beach. Who wants to see such heart-wrenching images? But if these animals die in vain, if there is nobody to witness their suffering and pain, their death will be meaningless.

Let us honor these beautiful, innocent creatures by bearing witness to their plight. And then, may we join together and create the change that must be made if we are to leave a world of beauty and wonder for our children, grandchildren and generations to come.

Oil Arrives at Fort Morgan, Alabama

Oil Arrives at Fort Morgan, Alabama

Oil arrives I have been walking the beach at Fort Morgan every day this week and this afternoon, as I watched a BP four-wheeler straddle and then drive over tar balls, I knew the beginning of the end of our beautiful, sugar-white beaches had come.

What made it almost unbearable for me was the fact that the workers sped down the beach on their usual patrol. I stopped a National Guard humvee and asked them if anyone had reported the oil…No, we didn’t know it was here, they said. They also reminded me they cannot clean it up. The very nice guy told me that each agency has a ‘lane’ to drive in and nobody can cross into another agency’s lane.

Whatever….Please get somebody here to clean the beach. Never mind about stepping into someone else’s lane.

Over an hour later I see the green shirts of BP workers in the distance. A lone four wheeler comes to where I had been. The same two guys I photographed earlier actually got out of their vehicle and when they saw me, started picking up tar balls. I think they got two. I turned away and began to walk…just to see what they would do. They got back in their vehicle and left. So much for BP being there to make right their mess.

I’ve never been so angry in my life. BP–if you are going to hire people, please make sure they are INVESTED in actually doing the work! Enough of this story….it is repeated over and over again here on the Alabama coast. You don’t want people to volunteer…probably because they’d make your employees look pretty bad. Get your act together!


Tony Hayward of BP Wants His Life Back…Coast Guard Clueless…What Next?

Tony Hayward of BP Wants His Life Back…Coast Guard Clueless…What Next?

My brother and I went to a public forum in Mobile last night. It was hosted by SeaGrant and consisted of various representatives from agencies involved in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill/flow/catastrophe. I came away with two major realizations.

One–The Coast Guard appears to be clueless. They sent a representative that didn’t even know Rear Admiral Mary Landry had been relieved of oil spill duty. It’s not Commander Brady’s fault. He is a reservist that has been recently activated to be a liason between the Coast Guard and the public. He could answer NOTHING that was asked of him. It was a slap in the face of those attending the forum, a big ‘we don’t have time for you’ from the agency that is supposed to be in charge.

Two–The EPA and FDA are also clueless. Stan Meiburg from the EPA touted dispersants as the answer to the oil flow. Has he been around Tony Hayward too much? Seems huffing the stuff can alter good judgment. On one hand he said, “Dispersants are the least bad trade-off,” and then said, “There is a lot we do not know about long-term use of dispersants.” The FDA representative, Robert Dickey was an even bigger joke. He said that dispersants are harmless to the public and they are safe and then says there is environmental concern. Which is it Bob?

The stand-out star, in my opinion, was Buck Sutter of NOAA. He actually made sense and did a much better job of directly answering questions. At least he didn’t dance around questions about PLUMES. BP is denying they exist. Buck said there are plumes and NOAA has two ships studying them now. He stated that the water in the plumes is clear but it is full of dispersed oil. He said because the oil is so dispersed it is very difficult to detect.

Finally….we see the value of dispersants. They make it very difficult to detect oil. Ah, so that’s why BP is adamant about using them. We wouldn’t want Tony Hayward to lose another night’s sleep would we? His company’s grand plan is unfolding–use unprecedented amounts of toxic dispersants so Tony can get his life back. At least we’re getting closer to the truth.

P.S. BP was supposed to be at the forum but didn’t show….are you surprised?

Coastal Defense — Crime Scene at the Fort

Coastal Defense — Crime Scene at the Fort

The guns and red brick walls of Ft Morgan once fortified the east side of the mouth of Mobile Bay during the Civil War. During subsequent wars and conflicts it was occupied by troops as coastline defense.

Today the fort is once again occupied with a force but this time they dress in white safety suits, wear rubber boots and are armed with tools used to clean up the invasion of sweet crude oil imminent in its arrival.

With each war humans invent new and more deadly ways to kill ourselves and each other. Now we can blame no other country, no other nation. We have inflicted this plague on ourselves by allowing corporate giants to exploit our home waters without requiring pre-tested measures in the event their fail-proof oil and gas rigs fail…by allowing them to rape and pillage our lands and waters unchecked.

Crime scene tape ropes off a historic bunker that National Guard troops were using as a path for their humvee’s to enter the beach. Workers at the fort put in a double row of yellow tape to stop their destruction of the bunker. I thought it was highly appropriate to line the entire coastal area of the Gulf of Mexico with crime scene tape. Make arrests, take the scoundrels to prison and then empower ourselves by taking responsibility for what happens in our backyards–by being aware and awake.

If only Fort Morgan could protect us from the oil….better yet, if it could protect us from ourselves.