LA Times: Oil cleanup workers report illness

Los Angeles Times
May 26, 2010

 http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-oil-workers-sick-20100526,0,4604887.story

Some fishermen hired by BP to mop up the gulf spill report nausea and breathing troubles after contact with oil and dispersant. A congressman calls for mobile health clinics to treat them.
By Nicole Santa Cruz and Julie Cart, Los Angeles Times
May 26, 2010
Reporting from Venice, La., and Los Angeles

Some fishermen who have been hired by BP to clean up the gulf oil spill say they have become ill after working long hours near waters fouled with oil and dispersant, prompting a Louisiana lawmaker to call on the federal government to open mobile clinics in rural areas to treat them.

The fishermen report severe headaches, dizziness, nausea and difficulty breathing. Concerned by the reports, Rep. Charlie Melancon (D-La.) wrote to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius asking the agency’s help providing medical treatment, especially in Plaquemines Parish, a southern region where many fishermen live.

Melancon said he expected BP to fund the clinics, but his spokeswoman said Tuesday the company had not responded to last week’s request for financial assistance.

George Jackson, 53, has been fishing since he was 12 and took a BP cleanup job after the massive oil spill forced the closure of fisheries and left him unemployed. As he was laying containment booms Sunday, he said, a dark substance floating on the water made his eyes burn.

“I ain’t never run on anything like this,” Jackson said. Within seconds, he said, his head started hurting and he became nauseated.

Like other cleanup workers, Jackson had attended a training class where he was told not to pick up oil-related waste. But he said he wasn’t provided with protective equipment and wore leather boots and regular clothes on his boat.

“They [BP officials] told us if we ran into oil, it wasn’t supposed to bother us,” Jackson said. “As far as gloves, no, we haven’t been wearing any gloves.”

David Michaels, U.S. assistant secretary of labor for occupational safety and health, reviewed the conditions for cleanup workers, pledging this month that the federal government would ensure workplace safety in a toxic environment.

The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality and Department of Health and Hospitals warned that oil cleanup workers “should avoid skin contact, and oral cavity or nasal passage exposure to oil spill products [by] using appropriate clothing, respiratory protection, gloves and boots.”

Meanwhile the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has been cautioning since the April 20 offshore leak began in the Gulf of Mexico that the oil spewing from the undersea well is harmful to human and animal health.

Even the EPA’s monitoring of air quality on the gulf shoreline, 50 miles from the oil leak, has detected petroleum odors strong enough to cause sickness. The agency’s website warns coastal residents: “Some of these chemicals may cause short-lived effects like headache, eye, nose and throat irritation, or nausea.”

BP spokesman Graham McEwen said Tuesday he was unaware of any health complaints among cleanup workers, noting that the company had taken hundreds of samples of so-called volatile organic carbons, such as benzene, and all the levels were well within federal safety standards.

McEwen said the fishermen the company is training are not being deployed into areas that require respirators or breathing apparatus. Those who are working for BP laying booms or skimming oil are issued protective coveralls and gloves, he said.

To Riki Ott, a marine toxicologist who studied the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill off Alaska, it’s “deja vu.”

“What we saw with Exxon Valdez was a parallel track  sick animals and sick people. Harbor seals were looking like they were drunk and dying  and autopsies showed brain lesions. What are we exposing these poor fishermen to?” Ott said.

Some fishermen suspect that health problems are going unreported because, with so much of the gulf closed to commercial fishing, unemployed shrimpers and oystermen are grateful for the cleanup jobs.

“It an unwritten rule, you don’t bite the hand that feeds you,” said George Barisich, president of the United Commercial Fishermen’s Assn. in St. Bernard Parish, who said many fishermen have told him about feeling ill.

Barisich says he won’t risk going out, especially after a crew told him of working around the Chandeleur Islands, a barrier chain hit by the slick. “All the birds were walking around like a bunch of zombies,” he said.

At a recent meeting fishermen complained to a BP representative about illness, Barisich said, but got little response. “BP has the opinion that they are not getting sick,” he said. Barisich said the company is not providing respirators because “if they give us that type of equipment then they admit there are health hazards.”

He acknowledged that it was difficult for fishermen to prove their ailments since they seemed to recover after leaving the water. “It becomes a matter of honor,” Barisich said. “You left in the morning, you were OK. Out on the water, you’ve got a pounding headache, throwing up.”

George Arnesen was congested and coughing the day after he went shrimping off California Point. His wife, Kindra, 32, made him see a doctor. The 42-year-old was given a shot of antibiotics, an anti-inflammatory and a prescription for three medications.

“My husband’s never had a breathing problem in his life,” Kindra Arnesen said.

nicole.santacruz@latimes.com
julie.cart@latimes.com
Santa Cruz reported from Venice and Cart from Los Angeles.

Special thanks to Richard Charter

Boston.com: Oil Reaches Louisiana Shore — More images from the BP blowout

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/05/oil_reaches_louisiana_shores.html

May 24, 2010

Oil reaches Louisiana shores

Over one month after the initial explosion and sinking of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, crude oil continues to flow into the Gulf of Mexico, and oil slicks have slowly reached as far as 12 miles into Louisiana’s marshes. According to Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, more than 65 miles of Louisiana’s shoreline has now been oiled. BP said it will be at least Wednesday before they will try using heavy mud and cement to plug the leak, a maneuver called a “top kill” that represents their best hope of stopping the oil after several failed attempts. Based on low estimates, at least 6 million gallons of crude have spewed into the Gulf so far – though some scientists have said they believe the spill already surpasses the 11 million-gallon 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill off Alaska as the worst in U.S. history. (39 photos total)
Special thanks to Richard Charter

Monkeyfister.blogspot.com: Major Change Down Below — videos of BP Blowout

http://monkeyfister.blogspot.com/2010/05/major-change-down-below.html

I’ve put everything back into proper chronological order, and have begun adding images and video for documentary purposes.  I’ve been watching the live Spillcam, and discussing it with folks, here all day long. About 5pm last night, we all started taking note of gas bubbling out of the seabed floor. It started earlier than that, actually– see pic a few posts down. About 1am this morning, the eruptions began to increase in spew volume.

Pretty scary what’s happening down there that doesn’t make the mainstream news….

Tallahassee Democrat: Salons will continue to collect trimmed hair despite rejection from BP

http://www.tallahassee.com/article/20100525/BREAKINGNEWS/100524025/Salons-will-continue-to-collect-trimmed-hair-despite-rejection-from-BP

Through Wednesday, a group of Tallahassee beauty salons and pet groomers will offer discounted hair/fur trimming services, in order to collect hair and fur to donate to oil spill boom-making efforts.

The collected hair or fur will be donated to The Sunshine And Shores Foundation and Matter of Trust by the Tallahassee Cuts for Crude participants.

Local organizers say they are continuing with the effort despite reports from BP and the U.S. Coast Guard saying that they don’t intend to use the hair in booms to help stop any oil as it reaches coastlines.

The hair-for-oil effort was organized by the San Francisco-based nonprofit Matter of Trust, which after repeated requests for comment by telephone and e-mail released a statement over the weekend saying there had been a misunderstanding with BP.

The hair was collected to make homespun oil boom to contain the ooze as it invades deeper into coastal marshland.

Engineers said they concluded that using the hair was not feasible, and the organizations collecting the hair were asked to stop doing so.

“We foresee a risk that widespread deployment of the hair boom could exacerbate the debris problem,” said Coast Guard spokesman Petty Officer Shawn Eggert in Robert, La., at the main command center.

But Tamara McShane, one of the organizers of the Tallahassee effort, said the drive will continue.

“We are aware of the comments from BP that they weren’t going to use hair,” McShane said Monday night. “But we’re continuing with our plan to collect the hair. We have heard from other local entities that there is still an interest. We’re thinking it’s going to be last-minute. This way, we are going to continue to collect it.”

People interested in the discounted hair cut need to call one of the designated salons to set an appointment for today or Wednesday. Just indicate the Cuts for Crude cause to receive a discount.

Participating businesses include: A Cut Above, 400 SE Capital Circle, 656-5556; Artisan Salon, 1305 Paul Russell Road, 878-7722; Bella Hair Design, 2748 NE Capital Circle, 523-0153; Canopy Lane & PMS Styling Salon, 2522 NE Capital Circle, 422-1907; Cheveux, 2522-16 NE Capital Circle, 656-9333; Creative Design Hair Salon, 4377 Crawfordville Road, 656-3185; Designer Cuts Inc., 4225 W. Pensacola St., 576-7174 or 576-6671; Fuel a salon, 3425 Thomasville Road, Suite 7, 894-3835; Hair on Earth, 741 N. Monroe St., 681-7733; Hair House, 2500 Apalachee Unit D, 878-1300; Hair Works, 1355 Market St., 893-3121; Impressions by Trena Inc., 3415 N. Monroe St., 514-1223; Mane Event, Kaley McRae, 1409 Maclay Commerce Drive, 893-4407; Randazzles, 113 W. College Ave., 681-0854; Reflection Hair & Nail Beauty Salon, 3203 Apalachee, 878-8366; Tallahassee Chic Salon, 1690 Raymond Diehl Road Plaza 10 Suite 2A, 297-2442.

Participating pet groomers: The Pet Place, 1626 Capital Circle NE, 656-1512.

Updates of additional salons can be found on the Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=122191621142645&ref=ts&__a=23
Or website: http://sites.google.com/site/tallycuts4crude/salonsandgroomers.

For further information, or to find out how your salon can be a part of this event, call Kim Ross at 766-1300 or kimross72@yahoo.com, Tamara McShane at 274-9204, and for updates on Twitter: http://twitter.com/tallycuts4crude.

"Be the change you want to see in the world." Mahatma Gandhi