From the rainforests of Papua New Guinea to Canada’s tar sands, Standing…
Black Tide: Voices from the Gulf
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
View on The Global Environmental Justice site
Curator:
This film was selected by Amity Doolittle, Senior Lecturer at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies
Why I selected this film
Even though coverage on the Deepwater Horizon oil spill eventually faded from national news media, local residents continue to feel the impact individually, economically, and environmentally one year later. The film highlights the need for local communities to continue fighting for justice through political action to continue the cleanup, revive the economy, mitigate damage to flora and fauna, and gather scientific information to better quantify the impact of future similar disasters. The film reminds viewers that disasters of this size and scale harm local communities in a multitude of ways that may not be visible, and that without sustained action to hold oil companies accountable, environmental justice is hard to achieve.
Teacher's guide  
Please see the teacher's guide for maps, background information, suggested subjects, questions and activities.
Synopsis 
One year after the Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, the coastal communities of Grand Isle, Louisiana had still not recovered from the devastating effects wrought by the 200 million gallons of oil spilled following the explosion. Documentary filmmaker Joe Berlinger traveled across the Louisiana coast interviewing local fishers, restaurant owners, marine scientists, and British Petroleum (BP) representatives to find out how they dealt with the cleanup. The departure of news media in the months after the initial explosion left coastal Louisianans to quietly rebuild their lives. Berlinger’s documentary provides critical insight into a story of recovery in the wake of the disaster.
The environmental justice focus of the film
The Louisiana fishers, business owners, and communities whose livelihoods depend on coastal resources like shellfish, bivalves, and fish were hit hard by an environmental disaster in which they played no part. Although they received some financial settlements, many aspects of their livelihoods, like the loss of fishing culture and community, were not accounted for. By focusing on the spill’s broad impact on the local communities, the film highlights the efforts of residents who are fighting for environmental justice in the wake of an environmental catastrophe.
Citation
Main credits
								Heyman, Jay (film producer)
Heyman, Jay (film director)
Berlinger, Joe (film director)
							
Other credits
Director of photography, Bob Richman; editor, Gabriel Rhodes; music, APM [and 7 others].
Distributor subjects
Food; Fishing; Habitat Loss; Human Rights; Labour Studies; North American Studies; Rivers; Water; Corporate Social Responsibility,North American Studies,Environmental Justice,Oceans and Coasts,Fishing,Public Health,Habitat Loss,Labor Studies,Activism,Pollution,Climate Change,Environmental Disasters,Non-renewable Resources,Mining & Resource Extraction,Energy Policy,Oceanography,marine science,Keywords
WEBVTT
 
 00:00:02.349 --> 00:00:03.624
 -This is paradise.
 
 00:00:03.689 --> 00:00:05.825
 You walk out your house,
 you walk half a mile,
 
 00:00:05.825 --> 00:00:07.488
 you can fish, you can crab.
 
 00:00:07.793 --> 00:00:09.947
 -When you do,
 you catch what we call big drags,
 
 00:00:09.995 --> 00:00:12.623
 and you that the shrimp,
 and it\'s not always about the money.
 
 00:00:12.623 --> 00:00:13.547
 It\'s about the rush.
 
 00:00:13.691 --> 00:00:15.742
 -We have taken the richness
 of what we had
 
 00:00:15.774 --> 00:00:17.074
 maybe too much for granted.
 
 00:00:17.074 --> 00:00:20.413
 We just drop a hook in the water
 and something\'s on the end of it.
 
 00:00:20.840 --> 00:00:24.463
 We just put a pipe in the ground
 and something comes up.
 
 00:00:25.365 --> 00:00:28.205
 -We had over a hundred days
 of oil coming up
 
 00:00:28.205 --> 00:00:28.894
 from the bottom of the gulf.
 
 00:00:29.723 --> 00:00:31.455
 Those images had been burned
 
 00:00:31.455 --> 00:00:33.483
 into the imaginations
 of the American public.
 
 00:00:33.507 --> 00:00:36.467
 -A lot of people refused
 to eat Louisiana seafood product
 
 00:00:36.467 --> 00:00:37.902
 because of the oil spill.
 
 00:00:38.059 --> 00:00:39.323
 -This is not typical.
 
 00:00:39.616 --> 00:00:41.797
 Usually this is full of oysters.
 
 00:00:41.839 --> 00:00:47.149
 -I hear it, the invective, the anger,
 the frustration, the disappointment.
 
 00:00:47.243 --> 00:00:48.471
 -It\'s all over the news.
 
 00:00:48.712 --> 00:00:49.992
 They cut corners.
 
 00:00:49.992 --> 00:00:53.692
 -This was a very beautiful,
 pristine, eco-environment.
 
 00:00:54.284 --> 00:00:57.791
 What it is now, will never be
 what it once was.
 
 00:00:58.217 --> 00:00:59.724
 -Is the seafood safe?
 
 00:00:59.812 --> 00:01:00.990
 Are the beaches safe?
 
 00:01:01.158 --> 00:01:02.838
 Yes, the water is safe.
 
 00:01:03.018 --> 00:01:04.949
 It is beautiful and pristine.
 
 00:01:05.285 --> 00:01:07.649
 -I\'ve never done a dive
 when I didn\'t see
 
 00:01:07.649 --> 00:01:09.520
 a lot of invertebrate fauna
 on the bottom.
 
 00:01:09.787 --> 00:01:10.907
 We saw a crab.
 
 00:01:11.681 --> 00:01:12.673
 One crab.
 
 00:01:12.983 --> 00:01:15.504
 People want to know
 where\'s the oil and gas.
 
 00:01:15.504 --> 00:01:18.414
 Just because you can\'t find
 it, doesn\'t mean it\'s not there.
 
 00:01:18.414 --> 00:01:20.095
 It means you\'re looking
 in the wrong place.
 
 00:01:20.164 --> 00:01:24.374
 -This is about helping to restore
 an environment and a way of life.
 
 00:01:24.374 --> 00:01:26.193
 We have stepped up as BP.
 
 00:01:26.361 --> 00:01:29.711
 People believe we\'re leaving,
 but we are here for the long-term.
 
 00:01:38.582 --> 00:01:45.481
 [music]
 
 00:02:08.423 --> 00:02:11.069
 -If I can have your attention,
 we\'re going to go ahead
 
 00:02:11.122 --> 00:02:14.249
 and get started
 with this prayer service.
 
 00:02:15.200 --> 00:02:17.327
 I always call Grand Isle home,
 
 00:02:17.591 --> 00:02:19.662
 and so it is a blessing
 for me to be able
 
 00:02:19.830 --> 00:02:22.338
 to encourage you tonight
 as we remember.
 
 00:02:23.004 --> 00:02:27.078
 I know that we grieve the loss
 of not only the 11 men
 
 00:02:27.152 --> 00:02:29.104
 who died that day, but I know
 
 00:02:29.272 --> 00:02:31.512
 that we grieve
 the loss of many things.
 
 00:02:41.643 --> 00:02:45.116
 -On the night of the incident,
 everything was business as usual.
 
 00:02:45.179 --> 00:02:49.863
 Beautiful weather, ideal conditions,
 we had some radio communications
 
 00:02:49.998 --> 00:02:53.318
 in the rig [?], and no indications
 of any issues at the time.
 
 00:02:53.925 --> 00:02:58.306
 Right before ten o\'clock
 is when the first incidents happened.
 
 00:02:58.620 --> 00:03:02.692
 -I was awoken from
 my sleep to the--
 
 00:03:05.428 --> 00:03:06.246
 -Breaking news.
 
 00:03:06.414 --> 00:03:09.962
 Emergency crews search for 11 workers
 missing after a powerful explosion
 
 00:03:10.130 --> 00:03:12.311
 of an oil rig
 off the coast of Louisiana.
 
 00:03:12.414 --> 00:03:14.820
 -I just went into autopilot,
 put on my coveralls,
 
 00:03:14.988 --> 00:03:16.022
 grabbed my life vest.
 
 00:03:16.190 --> 00:03:17.749
 -We had heavy
 smoke around the rig.
 
 00:03:17.884 --> 00:03:20.892
 The fire was
 200 to 300 hundred feet in the air.
 
 00:03:21.384 --> 00:03:23.330
 -When we arrived
 at the Damon Bankston,
 
 00:03:23.473 --> 00:03:27.489
 they lowered a rope ladder
 on the starboard side of the ship.
 
 00:03:27.657 --> 00:03:29.679
 -17 people injured
 in the initial blast
 
 00:03:29.847 --> 00:03:31.316
 have been airlifted to hospitals.
 
 00:03:31.484 --> 00:03:34.210
 About 100 survivors were taken
 to shore by boat overnight.
 
 00:03:34.378 --> 00:03:36.340
 -We got a headcount of 115.
 
 00:03:36.508 --> 00:03:41.708
 There was 126 on board,
 so we had lost that 11.
 
 00:03:41.947 --> 00:03:44.639
 -Emergency crews are racing
 to find out whether the collapse
 
 00:03:44.807 --> 00:03:48.246
 of that burning oil rig is causing
 crude oil to leak into the sea.
 
 00:03:48.414 --> 00:03:51.824
 -Amid the sadness, the first thing
 a lot of people thought about was,
 
 00:03:51.992 --> 00:03:55.031
 \"All that oil, this can\'t
 be good for the environment.\"
 
 00:03:58.563 --> 00:04:00.350
 -There\'s something special
 about the waters here.
 
 00:04:00.518 --> 00:04:03.436
 With the Mississippi,
 in the brackish waters that we have,
 
 00:04:03.604 --> 00:04:07.148
 our shrimp are sweeter,
 oysters are plumper and saltier.
 
 00:04:07.443 --> 00:04:10.419
 It\'s just the way God made it.
 
 00:04:10.587 --> 00:04:14.053
 -The Louisiana coast, and I think
 people have come to understand this,
 
 00:04:14.221 --> 00:04:16.116
 it\'s not a recreation place.
 
 00:04:16.284 --> 00:04:17.291
 People work there.
 
 00:04:17.459 --> 00:04:18.140
 Their lives are there.
 
 00:04:18.308 --> 00:04:19.085
 They\'re intertwined.
 
 00:04:19.196 --> 00:04:20.379
 It\'s part of our culture.
 
 00:04:24.260 --> 00:04:28.122
 [music]
 
 00:04:28.917 --> 00:04:30.520
 -30% percent of the oil and gas
 
 00:04:30.688 --> 00:04:33.346
 that goes to the nation
 comes from our state.
 
 00:04:33.514 --> 00:04:36.597
 -We have oyster men,
 then in the off-season,
 
 00:04:36.813 --> 00:04:40.180
 they go out on a rig
 and help with the production of oil.
 
 00:04:40.719 --> 00:04:43.733
 -In the case of methane
 and oil dynamics,
 
 00:04:44.071 --> 00:04:46.581
 the gulf is one of the best places
 in the world to work.
 
 00:04:53.332 --> 00:04:56.942
 I love being on the water,
 and the Gulf of Mexico, to me,
 
 00:04:57.110 --> 00:04:59.837
 is just one of the most special
 places on the planet.
 
 00:05:01.853 --> 00:05:05.442
 When I first heard
 about the explosion,
 
 00:05:05.585 --> 00:05:08.571
 I actually had some colleagues
 who were out on the water,
 
 00:05:08.791 --> 00:05:10.362
 and they saw smoke.
 
 00:05:10.993 --> 00:05:12.903
 There were so many unknowns
 in the beginning.
 
 00:05:13.081 --> 00:05:16.603
 All I could think of was,
 if there was a breach in that pipe,
 
 00:05:16.865 --> 00:05:18.897
 \"Wow, this was going to be bad.\"
 
 00:05:19.230 --> 00:05:21.445
 There\'s a lot of oil
 and gas in there,
 
 00:05:21.611 --> 00:05:25.004
 and the thought
 of just having an open tap
 
 00:05:25.172 --> 00:05:29.237
 on the bottom of that reservoir
 was simply terrifying to me.
 
 00:05:31.592 --> 00:05:33.182
 Then there was a week or two
 
 00:05:33.350 --> 00:05:34.927
 that went by where
 people were saying,
 
 00:05:35.095 --> 00:05:36.775
 \"Oh, nothing\'s leaking.
 Everything\'s fine.\"
 
 00:05:38.064 --> 00:05:41.124
 Yet, there\'s this slick
 that\'s expanding,
 
 00:05:41.292 --> 00:05:42.894
 so you know something\'s leaking.
 
 00:05:43.103 --> 00:05:46.088
 It\'s not a leak, it\'s a jet.
 
 00:05:47.024 --> 00:05:48.752
 It\'s a fire hose of oil and gas.
 
 00:05:58.662 --> 00:06:03.454
 One evening, one of the crew members
 spots an oiled bird.
 
 00:06:04.334 --> 00:06:08.194
 I have never seen a bird with a look
 of sheer terror in its eyes.
 
 00:06:08.677 --> 00:06:10.858
 Howard and a couple of the other guys
 
 00:06:11.167 --> 00:06:13.805
 spent an hour washing this thing
 down with Dawn,
 
 00:06:14.377 --> 00:06:20.281
 and that was when it went from
 looking at instrument data
 
 00:06:20.449 --> 00:06:22.670
 and chemistry data to seeing
 
 00:06:22.879 --> 00:06:26.917
 a living being impacted
 by the oil spill.
 
 00:06:30.187 --> 00:06:36.561
 [music]
 
 00:06:39.829 --> 00:06:43.068
 -Some people have asked us,
 \"Are there large concentrations
 
 00:06:43.179 --> 00:06:44.701
 of oil under the sea?\"
 
 00:06:44.869 --> 00:06:46.719
 Those have not been found
 so far by us
 
 00:06:46.887 --> 00:06:48.841
 or anyone else that\'s measuring this.
 
 00:06:51.412 --> 00:06:54.936
 -Back in 2000,
 there was a joint industry project,
 
 00:06:55.104 --> 00:06:56.428
 called Project Deep Spill,
 
 00:06:56.596 --> 00:07:00.052
 and they basically
 did a purposeful deep water spill.
 
 00:07:00.220 --> 00:07:03.188
 What they found was that
 there were plumes,
 
 00:07:03.356 --> 00:07:05.549
 and it didn\'t just bubble
 up to the surface.
 
 00:07:06.390 --> 00:07:12.340
 When this well exploded,
 I expected there to be plumes,
 
 00:07:12.410 --> 00:07:14.210
 because of what I had read.
 
 00:07:15.150 --> 00:07:16.202
 These plumes,
 
 00:07:16.434 --> 00:07:21.249
 you can think of them
 like you\'ve got a jet of oil and gas
 
 00:07:21.425 --> 00:07:23.639
 that\'s basically flying out
 of the bottom,
 
 00:07:23.837 --> 00:07:26.602
 and it\'s reaching a neutral density,
 
 00:07:26.770 --> 00:07:29.397
 somewhere between
 1,000 and 1,200 meters,
 
 00:07:29.581 --> 00:07:31.628
 and it\'s suspended there.
 -Actually,
 
 00:07:31.796 --> 00:07:33.737
 everyone\'s out there
 looking for these plumes.
 
 00:07:33.865 --> 00:07:35.396
 Haven\'t found them yet.
 
 00:07:36.985 --> 00:07:41.494
 The science of the plumes hanging
 in the water doesn\'t feel right.
 
 00:07:41.742 --> 00:07:44.580
 -We found those plumes
 of oil and gas.
 
 00:07:45.469 --> 00:07:47.217
 We did find something
 very interesting.
 
 00:07:47.431 --> 00:07:49.447
 We found probably
 the most intense plume
 
 00:07:49.615 --> 00:07:51.859
 that we\'ve seen out here
 so far during this trip.
 
 00:07:52.027 --> 00:07:55.943
 -Researchers say they found massive
 plumes of oil beneath the surface,
 
 00:07:56.111 --> 00:07:57.933
 some hundreds of feet deep.
 
 00:07:58.101 --> 00:08:02.110
 The largest is 10 miles long,
 and 4 miles wide.
 
 00:08:02.494 --> 00:08:06.329
 Oil clouds that are stealing oxygen
 and could be toxic.
 
 00:08:06.702 --> 00:08:07.464
 -We\'re talking about
 
 00:08:07.632 --> 00:08:10.460
 what should be a boring,
 straight profile,
 
 00:08:10.676 --> 00:08:12.001
 going like this,
 
 00:08:12.169 --> 00:08:17.372
 and then shifting like a rocket,
 and then staying out here,
 
 00:08:17.540 --> 00:08:20.243
 and then coming back down
 and being boring and flat again.
 
 00:08:20.499 --> 00:08:25.449
 What I thought the plume story
 would do was to motivate Noah
 
 00:08:25.617 --> 00:08:28.212
 and the response team
 to get more ships out there
 
 00:08:28.380 --> 00:08:31.416
 to really look and see
 how much of this oil and gas
 
 00:08:31.584 --> 00:08:32.794
 was in the deep water.
 
 00:08:32.956 --> 00:08:38.285
 It\'s a little to the south
 of where the Pelican crews found
 
 00:08:38.453 --> 00:08:39.866
 their plume two weeks ago.
 
 00:08:41.859 --> 00:08:43.524
 Okay, great.
 
 00:08:43.828 --> 00:08:45.391
 I\'ll talk to you tomorrow then.
 
 00:08:47.734 --> 00:08:49.414
 That was interesting.
 
 00:08:50.281 --> 00:08:53.131
 The response that we got
 was more like, \"You guys are crazy.
 
 00:08:53.377 --> 00:08:55.005
 There ain\'t plumes out there.
 
 00:08:55.173 --> 00:08:56.747
 It\'s all coming to the surface.
 
 00:08:56.915 --> 00:08:58.431
 Gas floats.
 Oil floats.
 
 00:08:58.599 --> 00:08:59.639
 End of story.\"
 
 00:09:08.783 --> 00:09:10.586
 I am the chief operating officer
 
 00:09:10.711 --> 00:09:13.621
 for BP\'s Gulf Coast Restoration
 organization.
 
 00:09:14.858 --> 00:09:19.765
 I was asked four days into this
 to come to Houma, Louisiana
 
 00:09:20.070 --> 00:09:22.959
 to be the incident commander
 representing BP\'s interests
 
 00:09:23.127 --> 00:09:26.363
 in that unified command effort
 and have been here ever since.
 
 00:09:27.112 --> 00:09:31.860
 It\'s hard to share the challenges
 that we faced as we\'ve gone
 
 00:09:32.036 --> 00:09:35.852
 from the early stages of the tragedy
 of this rig exploding,
 
 00:09:36.020 --> 00:09:37.749
 11 men losing their lives,
 
 00:09:37.923 --> 00:09:41.885
 to then the reality of oil coming out
 of this well at 5,000 feet.
 
 00:09:42.234 --> 00:09:46.994
 We brought together in those
 first days almost 48,000 people.
 
 00:09:47.745 --> 00:09:51.679
 We had 6,500 vessels
 on the water at its peak.
 
 00:09:52.070 --> 00:09:56.622
 It is a historic event,
 but it is also a historic response.
 
 00:09:57.763 --> 00:10:00.982
 This event did bring
 a very real impact
 
 00:10:01.205 --> 00:10:03.149
 to the fishing side of this
 
 00:10:03.317 --> 00:10:05.934
 when the federal waters
 and state waters were closed.
 
 00:10:06.615 --> 00:10:10.905
 At the end of the day, it also had
 very real impacts to the communities,
 
 00:10:11.073 --> 00:10:12.695
 to individuals, to businesses.
 
 00:10:13.185 --> 00:10:15.585
 It\'s changed forever
 our way of life.
 
 00:10:22.354 --> 00:10:29.093
 [music]
 
 00:10:32.578 --> 00:10:36.306
 -Grand Isle is 7 miles long
 with 3/4-mile-wide, it\'s paradise.
 
 00:10:36.736 --> 00:10:37.871
 All in one right here.
 
 00:10:38.062 --> 00:10:39.927
 You walk out your house,
 you walk half a mile,
 
 00:10:40.095 --> 00:10:41.713
 you can fish, you can crab.
 
 00:10:41.951 --> 00:10:44.053
 I\'m a fourth-generation
 commercial fisherman.
 
 00:10:44.478 --> 00:10:46.196
 I\'ve been doing it all my life.
 
 00:10:46.943 --> 00:10:49.474
 Usually, this time of the year,
 we\'ll catch a lot of sponge crabs.
 
 00:10:49.784 --> 00:10:51.331
 As the crab,
 they got the eggs at the bottom,
 
 00:10:51.499 --> 00:10:53.149
 they go lay their babies inland.
 
 00:10:53.317 --> 00:10:55.006
 I went out there five days
 and in five days,
 
 00:10:55.174 --> 00:10:57.067
 I haven\'t caught a sponge crab yet.
 
 00:10:57.609 --> 00:11:01.397
 The worst part about the whole thing
 is just what we can\'t do right now
 
 00:11:01.668 --> 00:11:03.045
 like we used to do freely.
 
 00:11:03.745 --> 00:11:05.955
 -Let\'s say there\'s
 a new marketable skill
 
 00:11:06.123 --> 00:11:08.223
 that could be taught
 through a vocational program,
 
 00:11:08.485 --> 00:11:10.564
 would anyone be interested
 in something like that?
 
 00:11:10.732 --> 00:11:12.572
 -I can\'t read or write at all.
 
 00:11:13.405 --> 00:11:15.384
 I can\'t read or write or spell.
 
 00:11:16.093 --> 00:11:17.664
 What do you think
 that\'s going to do with me?
 
 00:11:18.133 --> 00:11:21.071
 I tried a whole bunch,
 I just can\'t learn.
 
 00:11:21.239 --> 00:11:21.773
 I tried.
 
 00:11:21.941 --> 00:11:23.531
 Why should I have to leave right now?
 
 00:11:23.626 --> 00:11:24.546
 That\'s my point.
 
 00:11:24.689 --> 00:11:25.531
 Why?
 
 00:11:25.642 --> 00:11:26.952
 This is BP\'s fault.
 
 00:11:27.200 --> 00:11:29.672
 BP should pay me to stay here.
 
 00:11:30.257 --> 00:11:33.637
 I shouldn\'t have to leave
 to go work somewhere because BP\'s a--
 
 00:11:34.698 --> 00:11:36.704
 Excuse my language, that\'s the
 way I feel about it.
 
 00:11:37.115 --> 00:11:39.438
 We\'re just recuperating
 from Hurricane Katrina.
 
 00:11:39.606 --> 00:11:40.981
 Hurricane, I can fix my house.
 
 00:11:41.328 --> 00:11:42.928
 This, I can\'t go out there
 and fix that.
 
 00:11:43.196 --> 00:11:43.990
 This is our livelihood.
 
 00:11:44.156 --> 00:11:45.436
 This is all I want
 to do with my life.
 
 00:11:45.578 --> 00:11:47.825
 I want to be a commercial fisherman.
 
 00:11:56.382 --> 00:11:57.432
 -We\'re not shucking.
 
 00:11:57.921 --> 00:12:02.763
 We laid off 12 people,
 10 of them shuckers.
 
 00:12:03.533 --> 00:12:08.561
 We have been shut down
 since the spill, since the gusher.
 
 00:12:09.772 --> 00:12:13.772
 [music]
 
 00:12:14.375 --> 00:12:18.313
 -P&J Oyster Company
 is 134-year-old business
 
 00:12:18.481 --> 00:12:19.886
 in the city of New Orleans.
 
 00:12:20.489 --> 00:12:25.190
 Been a foothold
 in the French Quarter since 1921.
 
 00:12:25.551 --> 00:12:29.879
 I\'ve been here for 31 years,
 my brother about 28 years.
 
 00:12:30.729 --> 00:12:33.077
 I worked my way up
 through the business
 
 00:12:33.244 --> 00:12:34.569
 just like my dad did.
 
 00:12:34.842 --> 00:12:37.596
 -It\'s a fifth-generation
 family business.
 
 00:12:37.773 --> 00:12:39.531
 Louisiana Gulf Oyster
 
 00:12:39.886 --> 00:12:42.206
 is the most consumed oyster
 in America,
 
 00:12:42.374 --> 00:12:46.378
 we provide over 45%
 of consumption of oysters in America.
 
 00:12:46.670 --> 00:12:50.950
 -Now this particular map
 are the oyster growing areas
 
 00:12:51.118 --> 00:12:54.270
 and then between Areas 14, and 8,
 
 00:12:54.574 --> 00:12:57.257
 that\'s where we get most
 of our oysters from.
 
 00:12:57.620 --> 00:13:00.701
 This year, we actually lost
 our spring season.
 
 00:13:00.900 --> 00:13:05.287
 Areas 11, 12, 13
 and 14 remain closed.
 
 00:13:05.747 --> 00:13:08.311
 There\'s concerns about oiling,
 
 00:13:08.661 --> 00:13:11.194
 there\'s concerns
 about the dispersants.
 
 00:13:11.411 --> 00:13:13.508
 Then you also have areas
 
 00:13:13.676 --> 00:13:16.846
 that died
 from the freshwater diversions.
 
 00:13:17.140 --> 00:13:21.850
 Due to the oil disaster,
 the State determined
 
 00:13:22.018 --> 00:13:25.582
 that it would be best to turn on
 the freshwater diversions
 
 00:13:25.749 --> 00:13:28.245
 to allow for this freshwater
 
 00:13:28.413 --> 00:13:31.762
 try to hold the oil
 outside of the estuary.
 
 00:13:32.270 --> 00:13:35.970
 That actually killed
 a number of oysters.
 
 00:13:36.444 --> 00:13:42.474
 This is where we hold the big sacks
 and mini sacks and some gallons too.
 
 00:13:45.793 --> 00:13:47.393
 This is not typical.
 
 00:13:47.881 --> 00:13:49.979
 Obviously, it\'s empty.
 
 00:13:50.682 --> 00:13:55.422
 Usually, this is full oysters
 for shucking and for half shell.
 
 00:13:55.642 --> 00:13:57.222
 For an oyster to come back
 
 00:13:57.635 --> 00:14:00.568
 can take anywhere from two
 and a half to five years.
 
 00:14:01.030 --> 00:14:03.969
 Typically,
 we would have people lined up
 
 00:14:04.137 --> 00:14:07.281
 on both sides here shucking oysters.
 
 00:14:07.526 --> 00:14:10.344
 We have about 150 wholesale customers
 
 00:14:10.503 --> 00:14:13.506
 or had about 150 wholesale customers.
 
 00:14:13.683 --> 00:14:15.776
 We have about a quarter
 of those now.
 
 00:14:15.911 --> 00:14:21.241
 We usually shuck between about
 30,000 and 35,000 oysters a day.
 
 00:14:21.513 --> 00:14:23.584
 We don\'t have the ability
 to get the oysters
 
 00:14:23.752 --> 00:14:25.480
 we always have for so long,
 
 00:14:25.829 --> 00:14:30.559
 so we may be not able
 to process oysters for some time.
 
 00:14:30.792 --> 00:14:34.442
 A lot of activity in here is loud,
 a lot of clack, clack,
 
 00:14:34.593 --> 00:14:40.013
 clack of the oysters, and it\'s
 a sound of what we like to hear.
 
 00:14:40.302 --> 00:14:44.816
 If the doors closed here,
 it would be very emotional.
 
 00:14:45.419 --> 00:14:47.670
 I hope that\'s never the case.
 
 00:14:49.802 --> 00:14:56.511
 [music]
 
 00:15:01.322 --> 00:15:05.727
 -We began to evaluate the use
 of government approved dispersants.
 
 00:15:06.116 --> 00:15:07.888
 Our response was built around
 
 00:15:08.055 --> 00:15:11.583
 how to manage and mitigate
 the consequences of that oil
 
 00:15:11.710 --> 00:15:13.576
 on our fish and our wildlife.
 
 00:15:14.268 --> 00:15:15.928
 If you\'ve ever made spaghetti,
 
 00:15:16.326 --> 00:15:20.040
 and you put that bowl
 of spaghetti sauce in your sink,
 
 00:15:20.251 --> 00:15:24.921
 immediately you get this reflection
 of oil on the surface of the water.
 
 00:15:25.328 --> 00:15:30.154
 When you take your friendly,
 dishwashing detergent
 
 00:15:30.328 --> 00:15:33.008
 and you drop a drop in there,
 what happens to that oil?
 
 00:15:33.176 --> 00:15:34.455
 It actually breaks up.
 
 00:15:34.669 --> 00:15:36.469
 Dispersant is exactly that.
 
 00:15:36.649 --> 00:15:40.287
 It\'s nothing more than
 a soap-like product that separates
 
 00:15:40.455 --> 00:15:43.666
 the sheet of oil
 into individual droplets
 
 00:15:44.199 --> 00:15:46.492
 and causes those individual droplets
 
 00:15:46.660 --> 00:15:48.310
 to suspend themselves in water
 
 00:15:48.478 --> 00:15:50.768
 and being available then
 to be consumed
 
 00:15:50.936 --> 00:15:54.505
 by the ecosystem,
 as opposed to setting on the surface.
 
 00:15:54.743 --> 00:15:57.991
 -Louisiana\'s shrimpers worry
 the dispersant is not good for them
 
 00:15:58.159 --> 00:16:01.428
 or their catch,
 and they want BP to stop using it.
 
 00:16:01.674 --> 00:16:06.813
 -We\'re adding this toxic cocktail
 to the ocean with no knowledge
 
 00:16:06.989 --> 00:16:09.833
 of whether or not it even
 is going to make a difference.
 
 00:16:10.001 --> 00:16:14.411
 -BP says that it cannot find
 a less toxic substance
 
 00:16:14.579 --> 00:16:17.125
 than the one it\'s using
 in the quantities it needs.
 
 00:16:17.293 --> 00:16:19.561
 -This product was
 independently tested.
 
 00:16:19.820 --> 00:16:22.750
 It is a product
 that is found in household goods.
 
 00:16:22.909 --> 00:16:26.229
 Most importantly,
 it was an effective product.
 
 00:16:27.558 --> 00:16:30.291
 -The problem is these
 are toxic compounds.
 
 00:16:30.459 --> 00:16:34.793
 They contain hundreds
 of chemicals, including solvents.
 
 00:16:35.132 --> 00:16:38.544
 The research that needs
 to be done has not been done,
 
 00:16:38.686 --> 00:16:42.532
 so it\'s very hard to find out
 what those chemicals effects were.
 
 00:16:43.349 --> 00:16:46.684
 -Our issue was we were one team
 with one purpose
 
 00:16:46.851 --> 00:16:49.311
 and that was to prevent
 to the best of our abilities,
 
 00:16:49.589 --> 00:16:52.829
 and stop the flow of that oil
 coming from that well,
 
 00:16:52.997 --> 00:16:56.356
 and its impact to our environment
 and to our shorelines.
 
 00:16:57.740 --> 00:17:00.619
 [music]
 
 00:17:07.979 --> 00:17:10.826
 -When I went down
 to the Gulf of Mexico,
 
 00:17:10.994 --> 00:17:13.750
 the first time my primary mission
 
 00:17:13.918 --> 00:17:17.601
 was to look into the question
 of the dispersants.
 
 00:17:19.132 --> 00:17:22.960
 [music]
 
 00:17:29.192 --> 00:17:32.009
 -Today, we\'re going out
 into Barataria Bay
 
 00:17:32.177 --> 00:17:34.359
 where we have been sampling.
 
 00:17:34.849 --> 00:17:36.699
 We\'re going to visit
 the sample sites,
 
 00:17:37.262 --> 00:17:38.558
 collect some samples
 
 00:17:39.228 --> 00:17:42.807
 and generally look
 at the conditions there.
 
 00:17:42.964 --> 00:17:44.357
 -We\'re going to nose
 this boat in the marsh
 
 00:17:44.525 --> 00:17:45.856
 and then we\'ll get samples here.
 
 00:17:46.452 --> 00:17:48.752
 -Until some
 of these studies are done,
 
 00:17:49.198 --> 00:17:51.326
 we won\'t have hard data on it.
 
 00:17:51.730 --> 00:17:53.730
 We\'re still collecting samples.
 
 00:17:55.070 --> 00:17:59.015
 What we have here
 are two red fish from Barataria Bay.
 
 00:17:59.801 --> 00:18:02.326
 We\'re going to dissect the fish,
 
 00:18:02.494 --> 00:18:06.271
 and I\'m going to take certain tissues
 for contaminant analysis.
 
 00:18:06.731 --> 00:18:08.512
 The liver is the organ
 
 00:18:08.652 --> 00:18:12.702
 where the hydrocarbons
 are metabolized and concentrated.
 
 00:18:12.844 --> 00:18:17.615
 That\'s the target organ
 for this kind of analysis.
 
 00:18:17.822 --> 00:18:21.872
 The other thing
 that I want to do is get the gills.
 
 00:18:22.014 --> 00:18:25.509
 When we get through
 with the collection of samples,
 
 00:18:25.636 --> 00:18:29.088
 we\'ll start to analyze
 all those samples
 
 00:18:29.256 --> 00:18:33.216
 for the toxic metals
 that are components of the oil.
 
 00:18:33.672 --> 00:18:34.794
 I think the project
 
 00:18:34.962 --> 00:18:37.582
 will be one more solid
 bit of evidence
 
 00:18:37.731 --> 00:18:44.193
 that dispersing oil in an oil spill
 is risky and it does have impacts.
 
 00:18:44.605 --> 00:18:48.088
 I think we\'re going to be seeing
 impacts for decades.
 
 00:18:50.522 --> 00:18:52.823
 -In the beginning when they start
 using the dispersants,
 
 00:18:52.991 --> 00:18:54.351
 I was very upset.
 
 00:18:54.646 --> 00:18:57.706
 I didn\'t understand everything
 about the dispersants.
 
 00:18:58.515 --> 00:19:02.880
 As we met with EPA, the FDA,
 and the different agencies,
 
 00:19:03.024 --> 00:19:05.284
 we learned a lot about
 the oil business,
 
 00:19:06.362 --> 00:19:08.286
 and we learned
 a lot about dispersants.
 
 00:19:08.781 --> 00:19:11.258
 Dispersants did their job,
 they broke the oil down,
 
 00:19:11.362 --> 00:19:13.799
 and then the microbials come in
 and eat the oil.
 
 00:19:14.037 --> 00:19:17.992
 The dispersants have a life cycle
 that\'s just isn\'t that long.
 
 00:19:18.389 --> 00:19:20.817
 They, dissolve or just go away.
 
 00:19:21.825 --> 00:19:23.910
 The seafood source
 from the Gulf of Mexico
 
 00:19:24.078 --> 00:19:26.479
 is the most tested food source
 there is in the world right now.
 
 00:19:26.803 --> 00:19:29.569
 We have to reprogram people,
 educate people.
 
 00:19:29.907 --> 00:19:31.857
 BP put up $30 million for us.
 
 00:19:32.378 --> 00:19:34.579
 That gives us the
 ability to truly do
 
 00:19:34.747 --> 00:19:36.949
 a national outreach
 marketing campaign.
 
 00:19:38.937 --> 00:19:40.926
 I believe that they\'re
 trying to make it right
 
 00:19:41.094 --> 00:19:42.057
 to the best of their abilities
 
 00:19:42.225 --> 00:19:43.518
 concerning the magnitude
 of this thing.
 
 00:19:43.749 --> 00:19:45.249
 We needed those dollars
 
 00:19:45.803 --> 00:19:47.403
 to get our fishing communities
 up and running,
 
 00:19:47.569 --> 00:19:48.720
 so we can continue to feed
 
 00:19:48.888 --> 00:19:50.545
 the people of Louisiana
 and the nation.
 
 00:19:51.570 --> 00:19:55.393
 -There has been a strong coexistence
 between the oil and gas industry
 
 00:19:55.656 --> 00:19:57.934
 and commercial
 and recreational fishing
 
 00:19:58.171 --> 00:19:59.715
 for many, many, many years.
 
 00:19:59.865 --> 00:20:02.448
 In fact, as many
 of the locals would say,
 
 00:20:02.718 --> 00:20:05.568
 if you don\'t work
 in the oil industry, you\'re fishing.
 
 00:20:05.760 --> 00:20:07.084
 If you\'re not fishing,
 
 00:20:07.252 --> 00:20:09.562
 you\'re working in the
 oil and gas industry.
 
 00:20:12.432 --> 00:20:15.581
 -Port Fourchon is actually
 a natural resource
 
 00:20:15.749 --> 00:20:17.502
 that the people
 in this community
 
 00:20:17.670 --> 00:20:21.858
 have taken the opportunity to develop
 to support the oil and gas industry.
 
 00:20:22.510 --> 00:20:27.237
 Over the last 16 years,
 we\'ve grown as a seaport
 
 00:20:27.828 --> 00:20:31.981
 from 14 companies
 on about 200 acres of property
 
 00:20:32.149 --> 00:20:36.945
 to over 250 companies on over
 1,700 acres of development property.
 
 00:20:39.484 --> 00:20:44.674
 [music]
 
 00:20:48.739 --> 00:20:51.993
 We actually had an economist
 run a study for us.
 
 00:20:52.161 --> 00:20:55.995
 His findings were,
 three weeks shutdown of Port Fourchon
 
 00:20:56.153 --> 00:21:00.190
 would cost $3.9 billion
 to the nation,
 
 00:21:00.833 --> 00:21:04.713
 and I think the number was
 79,000 jobs.
 
 00:21:05.046 --> 00:21:07.704
 We really need the drilling industry
 to come back.
 
 00:21:09.031 --> 00:21:11.949
 -The Gulf of Mexico
 produces mostly natural gas
 
 00:21:12.116 --> 00:21:14.056
 for homes and everything else,
 
 00:21:14.739 --> 00:21:17.619
 but as they talk about batteries
 and electric cars,
 
 00:21:17.787 --> 00:21:19.269
 where do they generate
 that energy from?
 
 00:21:19.666 --> 00:21:22.745
 They would\'ve create
 the strength to charge a car up,
 
 00:21:23.284 --> 00:21:24.816
 something had to create that energy.
 
 00:21:24.984 --> 00:21:26.876
 -The simple reality
 is the Gulf of Mexico
 
 00:21:27.044 --> 00:21:30.464
 is a very rich
 fossil-fuel-potentialed environment.
 
 00:21:30.632 --> 00:21:33.707
 We need to continue
 to develop those resources.
 
 00:21:33.898 --> 00:21:36.528
 It\'s one
 of those essential commodities
 
 00:21:36.661 --> 00:21:41.429
 that each of us as human beings
 need and want every day.
 
 00:21:43.508 --> 00:21:46.709
 -The moratorium itself,
 we feel it was an overreaction.
 
 00:21:47.309 --> 00:21:49.032
 These communities
 and these peoples
 
 00:21:49.200 --> 00:21:51.881
 and these workers
 need the industry here.
 
 00:21:52.210 --> 00:21:55.170
 There were 30 something rigs
 in the Deepwater Gulf
 
 00:21:55.312 --> 00:21:56.924
 by the time of the incident.
 
 00:21:57.194 --> 00:22:00.970
 Those 30 something rigs leave
 and go elsewhere in the world.
 
 00:22:01.312 --> 00:22:03.312
 They sign five-year contracts.
 
 00:22:03.947 --> 00:22:06.407
 Even though we want
 and have permits,
 
 00:22:06.621 --> 00:22:10.235
 there may not be any rigs to drill
 those permitted areas.
 
 00:22:10.938 --> 00:22:12.318
 -You know what history
 has taught us,
 
 00:22:12.486 --> 00:22:15.698
 that these oil companies will do
 whatever they can get away with.
 
 00:22:16.151 --> 00:22:19.972
 In an RC, believe you me,
 they\'re regulated.
 
 00:22:20.139 --> 00:22:23.218
 The fatality rate
 is 1/4 what it is here.
 
 00:22:23.393 --> 00:22:24.223
 They don\'t have spills.
 
 00:22:24.364 --> 00:22:29.893
 These seas are as hostile
 as you can get.
 
 00:22:29.997 --> 00:22:31.225
 30, 40-foot seas.
 
 00:22:32.602 --> 00:22:33.642
 You know why?
 
 00:22:33.971 --> 00:22:37.280
 An idea that, \"If you do that,
 they won\'t come--\"
 
 00:22:37.514 --> 00:22:38.845
 They\'ll go anywhere the oil is.
 
 00:22:38.940 --> 00:22:39.630
 They don\'t care.
 
 00:22:40.027 --> 00:22:40.875
 I get it.
 
 00:22:41.043 --> 00:22:42.369
 They\'re motivated by something.
 
 00:22:42.537 --> 00:22:43.842
 Why are they in Norway?
 
 00:22:46.495 --> 00:22:52.005
 If we don\'t let them ravage and rape
 and pollute us, they may leave us.
 
 00:22:52.173 --> 00:22:53.973
 They\'re not going anywhere.
 
 00:22:56.444 --> 00:22:58.445
 [music]
 
 00:23:00.894 --> 00:23:02.709
 -A moratorium on
 drilling only accomplishes
 
 00:23:02.876 --> 00:23:04.013
 the loss of American jobs,
 
 00:23:04.871 --> 00:23:08.021
 the importing of more oil
 from unfriendly nations,
 
 00:23:08.538 --> 00:23:13.630
 and makes America less competitive
 in this global economy.
 
 00:23:13.798 --> 00:23:15.776
 Mr. President, this moratorium
 
 00:23:15.943 --> 00:23:18.529
 is not hurting
 the stockholders of BP,
 
 00:23:18.697 --> 00:23:21.277
 this moratorium
 is hurting the [?]
 
 00:23:21.445 --> 00:23:24.120
 and the [?]
 and the Duprés in the government
 
 00:23:28.770 --> 00:23:32.327
 -We don\'t want a BP check,
 we don\'t want an unemployment check.
 
 00:23:32.468 --> 00:23:34.148
 Let us go back to work.
 
 00:23:34.286 --> 00:23:35.966
 Let us go back to work.
 
 00:23:36.276 --> 00:23:38.339
 -Let us go back to work.
 
 00:23:38.467 --> 00:23:39.867
 Let us go back to work.
 
 00:23:40.713 --> 00:23:42.192
 -This is getting slimmer and slimmer.
 
 00:23:42.516 --> 00:23:44.593
 We see more boats leaving,
 going overseas.
 
 00:23:44.785 --> 00:23:46.226
 We have more layoffs coming.
 
 00:23:46.394 --> 00:23:48.262
 We hear other companies
 doing the same thing.
 
 00:23:48.675 --> 00:23:51.537
 It\'s a whole ripple effect
 through the industry,
 
 00:23:51.705 --> 00:23:54.804
 not just from our point of view,
 but from the community\'s.
 
 00:23:55.256 --> 00:23:57.214
 If there\'s not drilling,
 the boats aren\'t working.
 
 00:23:57.382 --> 00:23:59.159
 The boats aren\'t working,
 the truckers aren\'t driving.
 
 00:23:59.327 --> 00:24:02.579
 The truckers aren\'t driving,
 the restaurants aren\'t selling.
 
 00:24:05.410 --> 00:24:08.207
 -The name of the restaurant
 is called Sarah\'s Restaurant.
 
 00:24:08.375 --> 00:24:09.226
 That\'s me.
 
 00:24:09.778 --> 00:24:11.758
 I\'ve been here for 38 years.
 
 00:24:12.449 --> 00:24:15.449
 Now, I don\'t even barely make
 enough to survive.
 
 00:24:16.136 --> 00:24:19.790
 All of the motels,
 even the private homes
 
 00:24:20.013 --> 00:24:24.365
 that people owns that come down
 on weekends was all rented out to BP.
 
 00:24:24.883 --> 00:24:30.933
 The outsiders that usually came
 down had no place to stay,
 
 00:24:32.142 --> 00:24:33.822
 so they just didn\'t come.
 
 00:24:34.343 --> 00:24:37.305
 That knocked out all the
 restaurants around here
 
 00:24:37.530 --> 00:24:39.402
 or anybody that served food.
 
 00:24:39.953 --> 00:24:47.042
 I don\'t know if we\'ll ever be able
 to do what we did before the spill.
 
 00:24:49.867 --> 00:24:52.198
 -This is what BP still can\'t control,
 
 00:24:52.366 --> 00:24:54.843
 the oil leak roaring
 at the bottom of the Gulf.
 
 00:24:55.107 --> 00:24:57.753
 Engineers
 are now considering two options,
 
 00:24:57.921 --> 00:25:01.103
 the top hat containment dome
 or an insertion tube.
 
 00:25:01.181 --> 00:25:03.178
 -These two techniques,
 in theory, should work.
 
 00:25:03.305 --> 00:25:06.025
 We\'ve got the same challenge
 we\'ve had since the beginning,
 
 00:25:06.193 --> 00:25:08.383
 which is this 5,000 feet of water.
 
 00:25:08.519 --> 00:25:10.929
 -The third option is the top kill.
 
 00:25:11.097 --> 00:25:14.349
 -Now, they hear
 the top kill is not working.
 
 00:25:14.520 --> 00:25:17.186
 -It was very much waking up
 every morning,
 
 00:25:17.353 --> 00:25:19.670
 having worked nearly
 around the clock,
 
 00:25:19.838 --> 00:25:21.982
 knowing that a new spill
 was happening every day.
 
 00:25:22.647 --> 00:25:24.999
 Representatives
 from 13 different oil companies,
 
 00:25:25.286 --> 00:25:27.143
 from multiple universities
 
 00:25:27.421 --> 00:25:31.716
 from all over the world came together
 to work on stopping that flow
 
 00:25:31.884 --> 00:25:33.655
 from that well at 5, 000 feet.
 
 00:25:33.823 --> 00:25:35.423
 -We now believe it\'s time to move on
 
 00:25:35.591 --> 00:25:38.087
 to the Lower Marine Riser
 Package cap.
 
 00:25:38.228 --> 00:25:42.016
 -We had more than 123,000 ideas
 
 00:25:42.184 --> 00:25:45.417
 generated from a worldwide resource.
 
 00:25:45.585 --> 00:25:49.126
 That\'s the power of the media,
 the internet, email.
 
 00:25:49.294 --> 00:25:51.391
 Then, of course, after 88 days,
 
 00:25:51.559 --> 00:25:53.723
 we were successful
 in stopping the flow.
 
 00:26:01.711 --> 00:26:07.282
 -I\'m pleased to announce that BP has
 agreed to set aside $20 billion
 
 00:26:07.621 --> 00:26:10.885
 to pay claims for damages resulting
 from this spill.
 
 00:26:11.169 --> 00:26:13.831
 We\'ve mutually agreed
 that Ken Feinberg
 
 00:26:13.999 --> 00:26:16.302
 will run
 the independent claims process.
 
 00:26:16.445 --> 00:26:18.853
 Ken has long experience
 in such matters,
 
 00:26:18.988 --> 00:26:23.016
 including running the fund
 that compensated the victims of 9/11.
 
 00:26:25.606 --> 00:26:27.184
 [music]
 
 00:26:33.406 --> 00:26:36.156
 -How do you decide who to compensate?
 
 00:26:36.842 --> 00:26:38.816
 It\'s one thing to say,
 
 00:26:39.085 --> 00:26:42.883
 \"I will compensate the oyster harvester
 who can\'t oyster,\"
 
 00:26:44.157 --> 00:26:45.847
 but how much documentation,
 
 00:26:46.015 --> 00:26:49.298
 how much do you ask
 the oyster harvester to prove?
 
 00:26:49.566 --> 00:26:51.987
 -The services are closed right now,
 and the oyster season,
 
 00:26:52.155 --> 00:26:53.835
 they\'re open and stuck.
 
 00:26:54.448 --> 00:26:56.475
 Can\'t fish oysters, can\'t do nothing.
 
 00:26:56.968 --> 00:26:58.622
 Waiting for BP
 to take care of us
 
 00:26:58.790 --> 00:27:01.366
 because we ain\'t got
 no income coming in.
 
 00:27:01.804 --> 00:27:02.776
 They\'re not paying me.
 
 00:27:02.944 --> 00:27:05.166
 They\'re paying my crew,
 but not paying me nothing.
 
 00:27:07.244 --> 00:27:10.054
 -You were having a lot of trouble
 getting your claim paid.
 
 00:27:10.734 --> 00:27:12.538
 -I haven\'t gotten a paycheck.
 
 00:27:13.595 --> 00:27:18.004
 We\'ve been interviewed
 so many different times and nothing.
 
 00:27:18.674 --> 00:27:19.964
 Absolutely nothing.
 
 00:27:20.514 --> 00:27:21.847
 -I don\'t think Feinberg gets it.
 
 00:27:22.015 --> 00:27:22.751
 I\'ll give an example.
 
 00:27:22.919 --> 00:27:24.843
 One guy, he got a check for $1, 400,
 
 00:27:25.010 --> 00:27:27.117
 and they send him
 something back, saying,
 
 00:27:27.285 --> 00:27:31.431
 \"Look, you\'re going to have to get
 the captain of the boat to say
 
 00:27:31.599 --> 00:27:33.915
 that you\'re entitled to more money.\"
 
 00:27:34.066 --> 00:27:37.095
 The guy says, \"Hey, man,
 I am the captain of boat.
 
 00:27:37.361 --> 00:27:40.561
 Who do I get to tell you
 that I deserve more money?
 
 00:27:40.679 --> 00:27:43.169
 I am the guy.\"
 -I gave him my licenses.
 
 00:27:43.326 --> 00:27:44.871
 I gave him my trip tickets.
 
 00:27:45.559 --> 00:27:47.159
 I gave him my taxes.
 
 00:27:47.474 --> 00:27:51.107
 I gave him my oyster lease\'s number,
 the paper from [?] fishery.
 
 00:27:51.273 --> 00:27:53.378
 What more else he want than that?
 
 00:27:53.546 --> 00:27:56.627
 -They say that we\'re not giving them
 all the information they need.
 
 00:27:57.006 --> 00:28:00.072
 My poor bookkeeper, he doesn\'t
 even know what to do anymore.
 
 00:28:00.176 --> 00:28:02.703
 -We heard people in Walmart
 deli were getting paid
 
 00:28:02.878 --> 00:28:04.751
 because they lost hours.
 -Yes, that makes me angry.
 
 00:28:04.919 --> 00:28:08.433
 I\'ve been fishing all my life,
 and he would tell me I got no proof,
 
 00:28:08.601 --> 00:28:10.829
 but you\'re giving it to barrooms
 and everybody else.
 
 00:28:10.938 --> 00:28:13.353
 -It is a hard job.
 It is a thankless job.
 
 00:28:13.512 --> 00:28:14.642
 You get a lot of criticism.
 
 00:28:15.036 --> 00:28:19.994
 I don\'t think it requires a specialty
 other than sound judgment,
 
 00:28:20.162 --> 00:28:21.986
 strong backbone and a willingness
 
 00:28:22.154 --> 00:28:25.592
 to try and do the right thing,
 which is what I\'m trying to do.
 
 00:28:27.899 --> 00:28:29.019
 -It\'s the freedom I get.
 
 00:28:29.160 --> 00:28:31.027
 You\'re on your own,
 your own boss.
 
 00:28:31.787 --> 00:28:34.908
 Keep your rigging working
 as long as you\'re making money.
 
 00:28:35.527 --> 00:28:38.626
 -For the claimants down in the gulf,
 the shrimpers, the oyster people,
 
 00:28:38.794 --> 00:28:41.373
 the fishermen,
 who aren\'t sure about the future,
 
 00:28:41.493 --> 00:28:43.171
 I offered an interim payment.
 
 00:28:43.339 --> 00:28:45.564
 \"Every three months,
 document your damage,
 
 00:28:45.732 --> 00:28:46.993
 and we\'ll compensate you.\"
 
 00:28:47.199 --> 00:28:49.422
 If you\'ve already received
 an emergency payment,
 
 00:28:49.549 --> 00:28:51.304
 and you have no more documentation,
 
 00:28:51.472 --> 00:28:54.219
 you can get $5,000
 if you\'re an individual,
 
 00:28:54.458 --> 00:28:56.608
 $25,000 if you\'re a business.
 
 00:28:57.416 --> 00:29:02.772
 The quick payment in the last 6 weeks
 has been paid out to 90,000 people.
 
 00:29:03.090 --> 00:29:06.359
 -I don\'t want a final payment
 because once you settle
 
 00:29:06.527 --> 00:29:09.517
 with a final payment,
 if the oysters don\'t come back,
 
 00:29:10.195 --> 00:29:12.377
 if they don\'t come back in three,
 four years, you\'re screwed.
 
 00:29:12.693 --> 00:29:15.347
 -They\'re trying
 to give us like $20,000.
 
 00:29:15.634 --> 00:29:17.357
 -$25,000.
 -$25,000.
 
 00:29:17.525 --> 00:29:18.426
 It ain\'t nothing.
 
 00:29:18.601 --> 00:29:19.679
 That ain\'t no money.
 
 00:29:20.078 --> 00:29:21.968
 What you\'re going to do with $25,000?
 
 00:29:22.582 --> 00:29:26.209
 I just wanted to buy this motor here,
 that\'s $13,000, just for that motor.
 
 00:29:26.859 --> 00:29:28.861
 They\'re saying that it\'s
 going to be 10 years
 
 00:29:29.029 --> 00:29:30.860
 the oil is going to bother the crabs.
 
 00:29:31.510 --> 00:29:34.036
 $25,000 ain\'t going to last 10 years.
 
 00:29:34.544 --> 00:29:38.488
 -I had to go back to get food stamps
 because it had got us suffering.
 
 00:29:38.909 --> 00:29:43.422
 -The idea that the quick payment
 is some sort of incentive,
 
 00:29:43.590 --> 00:29:45.727
 people are economically deprived
 and therefore,
 
 00:29:45.895 --> 00:29:47.076
 they better just take the money.
 
 00:29:47.244 --> 00:29:49.280
 That may be so in a very few cases.
 
 00:29:49.496 --> 00:29:53.416
 When you\'ve got 90,000 people
 taking the quick payment.
 
 00:29:53.557 --> 00:29:56.100
 I suggest to you,
 it\'s one of two reasons,
 
 00:29:56.306 --> 00:29:58.398
 they\'ve been adequately compensated
 
 00:29:58.676 --> 00:30:03.024
 or they simply cannot prove
 any additional loss.
 
 00:30:03.207 --> 00:30:05.475
 -We\'re going to try
 to survive through this,
 
 00:30:06.476 --> 00:30:09.242
 and we\'re hoping everything gets back
 to normal where we can make a living.
 
 00:30:09.410 --> 00:30:13.778
 -If I could serve someone
 and cook for someone, I\'ll stay open.
 
 00:30:14.070 --> 00:30:17.040
 -I ain\'t worried about the money,
 they\'ve messed up our waters.
 
 00:30:17.278 --> 00:30:19.269
 They stopping me from doing
 what I love to do.
 
 00:30:19.499 --> 00:30:22.975
 -I cannot compensate you
 for the loss of lifestyle,
 
 00:30:23.126 --> 00:30:25.666
 the loss of culture,
 the loss of heritage,
 
 00:30:25.833 --> 00:30:27.506
 no money can do that.
 
 00:30:27.950 --> 00:30:30.948
 I can just try and ease
 the burden in one area
 
 00:30:31.115 --> 00:30:33.429
 and that is financial uncertainty.
 
 00:30:38.277 --> 00:30:42.499
 -In New Orleans
 or Lake Charles or Lafayette,
 
 00:30:43.119 --> 00:30:45.656
 everything is centered around food.
 
 00:30:46.165 --> 00:30:48.363
 At breakfast, we talk
 about what\'s for lunch, at lunch,
 
 00:30:48.458 --> 00:30:49.558
 we talk about what\'s for dinner.
 
 00:30:50.125 --> 00:30:51.839
 What\'s going to happen
 to our fishing communities?
 
 00:30:52.085 --> 00:30:53.952
 That\'s a big concern for us.
 
 00:30:55.398 --> 00:30:57.788
 -Shrimp, onion,
 bell pepper, tomato sauce.
 
 00:30:58.126 --> 00:31:00.308
 I usually make just brown gravy.
 
 00:31:00.523 --> 00:31:02.065
 I change over this time.
 
 00:31:02.870 --> 00:31:05.708
 change over this time.[French
 Language] It\'s good.
 
 00:31:06.272 --> 00:31:10.014
 -I love eating this food
 at conferences,
 
 00:31:10.657 --> 00:31:14.309
 but two weekends ago
 was the first time that I ate crabs.
 
 00:31:14.618 --> 00:31:17.946
 As I\'m eating it I\'m wondering,
 \"Is this really good?
 
 00:31:18.113 --> 00:31:21.787
 Am I going to get
 some ailment from eating this?\"
 
 00:31:21.955 --> 00:31:23.263
 The studies say no,
 
 00:31:23.430 --> 00:31:28.027
 but there\'s still that apprehension
 in putting that into our bodies.
 
 00:31:28.416 --> 00:31:30.666
 I think that upsets me the most.
 
 00:31:31.016 --> 00:31:33.462
 The fact that I\'m not comforted
 
 00:31:33.763 --> 00:31:36.733
 by the things
 that have always comforted me.
 
 00:31:36.971 --> 00:31:39.957
 -The new generation of seafood,
 the shrimp and the crab,
 
 00:31:40.125 --> 00:31:41.943
 I hope they can
 handle the dispersants.
 
 00:31:42.220 --> 00:31:45.349
 I hope that they can metabolize,
 and it can pass right on through.
 
 00:31:45.868 --> 00:31:48.969
 That\'s my main concern
 is the far-reaching effects
 
 00:31:49.137 --> 00:31:50.269
 of the dispersants
 
 00:31:50.436 --> 00:31:53.095
 and what it\'s doing to the next
 generation of marine life.
 
 00:31:53.177 --> 00:31:56.820
 -After the spill, my mother
 didn\'t want nothing in the freezer,
 
 00:31:56.988 --> 00:31:58.058
 no shrimp, no nothing.
 
 00:31:58.226 --> 00:31:59.290
 She didn\'t want to put
 nothing up in the freezer
 
 00:31:59.458 --> 00:32:00.741
 like we usually do every year.
 
 00:32:01.115 --> 00:32:03.814
 I usually get oysters,
 and go around to my friends
 
 00:32:03.982 --> 00:32:06.093
 and open arches in the back
 of the truck and drink beer.
 
 00:32:06.597 --> 00:32:08.405
 This year, I told them
 we\'re going to drink beer,
 
 00:32:08.675 --> 00:32:10.396
 but I\'m not going to mess
 with the oysters.
 
 00:32:10.802 --> 00:32:13.347
 I think the chemicals
 that they put in the oil
 
 00:32:13.490 --> 00:32:16.149
 is going to do more damage
 than the oil itself
 
 00:32:16.990 --> 00:32:19.995
 because I feel, like I said,
 put pollution in pollution
 
 00:32:20.163 --> 00:32:21.424
 is not the solution.
 
 00:32:23.328 --> 00:32:25.857
 [music]
 
 00:32:27.057 --> 00:32:29.738
 -We are right at the opening
 to the Mississippi Sound,
 
 00:32:29.929 --> 00:32:33.037
 and the Mississippi Sound
 is connected to the Gulf of Mexico.
 
 00:32:37.599 --> 00:32:42.059
 [music]
 
 00:32:44.325 --> 00:32:46.349
 -From here to the mouth of the river,
 
 00:32:46.531 --> 00:32:49.035
 we have what 3,000 to 5,000 dolphins.
 
 00:32:50.904 --> 00:32:52.837
 There\'s one right back here.
 
 00:32:53.337 --> 00:32:55.135
 It\'s a very large population.
 
 00:32:55.835 --> 00:32:58.440
 Many of them come
 to these shallow waters
 
 00:32:58.607 --> 00:33:00.137
 and bays to give birth.
 
 00:33:00.962 --> 00:33:02.990
 We\'ve been studying them
 for about 30 years now.
 
 00:33:03.410 --> 00:33:05.578
 We are able to get a lot of database.
 
 00:33:05.746 --> 00:33:09.080
 Anything that happens,
 like an oil spill or a hurricane,
 
 00:33:09.600 --> 00:33:12.724
 we are able to go back
 to the basic data
 
 00:33:12.924 --> 00:33:14.668
 and see what change has occurred.
 
 00:33:15.105 --> 00:33:18.565
 We have been following
 these changes after the BP oil spill.
 
 00:33:18.740 --> 00:33:21.978
 As time goes by, we\'ll be able
 to get a composite picture.
 
 00:33:22.154 --> 00:33:23.949
 There\'s the bird.
 There you go.
 
 00:33:24.338 --> 00:33:26.683
 The reasons dolphins
 are a valuable resource,
 
 00:33:26.851 --> 00:33:28.426
 they are on top of the food chain.
 
 00:33:28.594 --> 00:33:30.236
 They are the sentinels
 of the environment.
 
 00:33:30.603 --> 00:33:33.066
 Anything that happens to them
 will ultimately happen to us.
 
 00:33:33.585 --> 00:33:35.937
 It\'s going to take time
 for the answers.
 
 00:33:40.546 --> 00:33:44.386
 We also saw a large number
 of turtles after the BP oil spill.
 
 00:33:44.680 --> 00:33:45.748
 On a normal basis,
 
 00:33:45.915 --> 00:33:48.635
 we would respond
 to 10 to 12 dead turtles,
 
 00:33:48.802 --> 00:33:50.156
 1 to 3 sick turtles.
 
 00:33:50.552 --> 00:33:53.854
 This year we handled
 about 57 sick turtles.
 
 00:33:54.022 --> 00:33:57.186
 By studying them, we will be able
 to find out if indeed,
 
 00:33:57.448 --> 00:33:59.028
 the oil spill had a direct
 
 00:33:59.195 --> 00:34:02.164
 or indirect effect
 on the mortality of these animals.
 
 00:34:02.498 --> 00:34:06.021
 -This turtle came in oiled
 from Alabama during the oil spill
 
 00:34:06.180 --> 00:34:10.129
 and we decontaminated,
 and it\'s been here for a while.
 
 00:34:11.209 --> 00:34:13.278
 She\'s got two little ulcers,
 one right there
 
 00:34:13.492 --> 00:34:15.232
 and one on the very tip
 of her tongue.
 
 00:34:15.400 --> 00:34:18.144
 I\'m going to have her collect
 a swab for me,
 
 00:34:18.333 --> 00:34:19.412
 and we\'ll send it to a lab
 
 00:34:19.580 --> 00:34:21.458
 and do a culture
 and see what we find on it.
 
 00:34:21.720 --> 00:34:23.188
 The oil can be very dangerous.
 
 00:34:23.363 --> 00:34:26.960
 Initially, when the first contact
 with the oil with the hydrocarbons,
 
 00:34:27.110 --> 00:34:30.245
 you have to worry about irritation
 to the mucous membranes,
 
 00:34:30.396 --> 00:34:32.929
 breathing it,
 just the toxicity of oil.
 
 00:34:33.097 --> 00:34:35.263
 Now let\'s get
 a blood sample from her.
 
 00:34:37.374 --> 00:34:39.344
 Many turtles came
 in with pneumonias.
 
 00:34:39.854 --> 00:34:41.240
 That was one of the things
 
 00:34:41.407 --> 00:34:43.726
 that we were saying it might
 be related to the oil.
 
 00:34:43.917 --> 00:34:45.155
 I can\'t say for sure.
 
 00:34:45.323 --> 00:34:47.396
 All right, we\'re done with him.
 
 00:34:47.564 --> 00:34:49.100
 We got all the blood we need.
 
 00:34:58.165 --> 00:35:00.385
 -I\'ve never been
 on a cruise in the Gulf
 
 00:35:00.553 --> 00:35:02.761
 where I didn\'t learn something new,
 
 00:35:03.009 --> 00:35:04.625
 where I wasn\'t just shocked
 
 00:35:04.758 --> 00:35:07.097
 by something
 that I saw in a good way.
 
 00:35:07.431 --> 00:35:10.218
 I\'ve learned so much
 from working in that system,
 
 00:35:10.410 --> 00:35:13.078
 it\'s helped me grow
 so much as a scientist.
 
 00:35:13.276 --> 00:35:15.456
 -[?] Checks are good.
 
 00:35:15.800 --> 00:35:18.346
 You have permission
 to dive as soon as we\'re clear.
 
 00:35:23.733 --> 00:35:25.722
 -Natural seepage over these carbon
 
 00:35:25.890 --> 00:35:28.043
 from the sea floor occurs
 across the globe.
 
 00:35:29.491 --> 00:35:34.563
 Under natural seepage conditions,
 you take a submarine to the bottom,
 
 00:35:34.754 --> 00:35:36.798
 and what you see is typically,
 
 00:35:37.024 --> 00:35:39.693
 these structures
 called methane hydrates.
 
 00:35:39.942 --> 00:35:42.877
 The best analogy I can give you
 is a mogul on a ski slope,
 
 00:35:43.045 --> 00:35:45.646
 it\'s a big mound, except
 its frozen gas
 
 00:35:45.814 --> 00:35:46.983
 instead of frozen snow.
 
 00:35:47.216 --> 00:35:48.290
 On the side of this man,
 
 00:35:48.457 --> 00:35:49.923
 you\'ll have a little trickle of gas
 
 00:35:50.090 --> 00:35:51.830
 just seeping out
 into the water column,
 
 00:35:52.129 --> 00:35:55.469
 and it\'s literally bubbles
 the size of your fingernail.
 
 00:35:57.445 --> 00:35:58.852
 Oil is the same way.
 
 00:35:58.978 --> 00:36:01.191
 It seeps slowly out of the bottom.
 
 00:36:01.359 --> 00:36:05.146
 It doesn\'t gush, it\'s just
 trickling up out of the bottom.
 
 00:36:06.008 --> 00:36:10.450
 What that slow supply
 of reducing material does
 
 00:36:10.593 --> 00:36:13.395
 is it allows microorganisms
 to keep pace
 
 00:36:13.563 --> 00:36:16.383
 with the flux of the material
 that\'s coming out of the bottom.
 
 00:36:16.525 --> 00:36:20.715
 A lot of the oil and gas is basically
 eaten by microorganisms
 
 00:36:20.883 --> 00:36:25.061
 that are very well adapted to chewing
 and digesting this oil and gas.
 
 00:36:25.579 --> 00:36:27.277
 Then there are these
 foraging organisms
 
 00:36:27.445 --> 00:36:28.308
 that come into the seeps
 
 00:36:28.476 --> 00:36:30.037
 because there\'s just
 a lot of food there.
 
 00:36:30.371 --> 00:36:33.341
 The diversity
 that you see around a seep
 
 00:36:33.578 --> 00:36:35.862
 is like you would
 see on a coral reef,
 
 00:36:36.029 --> 00:36:37.354
 it\'s just tremendous.
 
 00:36:43.136 --> 00:36:47.743
 These organisms can handle
 the natural background flux,
 
 00:36:47.924 --> 00:36:50.899
 what they can\'t handle
 is having buckets
 
 00:36:51.138 --> 00:36:53.648
 of material dumped
 on their head essentially.
 
 00:36:53.816 --> 00:36:54.816
 That\'s what happened
 
 00:36:55.095 --> 00:36:58.426
 when oil sedimented out
 of the surface water to the bottom.
 
 00:36:59.006 --> 00:37:02.147
 It essentially suffocated
 the filter-feeding organism.
 
 00:37:10.897 --> 00:37:13.497
 We are now heading
 to the wellhead area.
 
 00:37:13.969 --> 00:37:16.140
 It\'s going to be amazing.
 
 00:37:16.308 --> 00:37:19.362
 We\'re the first people to see
 the bottom around the wellhead.
 
 00:37:20.403 --> 00:37:21.850
 I always try to be optimistic.
 
 00:37:21.992 --> 00:37:25.405
 I went down there thinking
 that I wanted it to be the site
 
 00:37:25.573 --> 00:37:28.392
 that I had gone to before,
 beautiful natural sea.
 
 00:37:30.683 --> 00:37:33.586
 I\'ve never done a dive
 in the Gulf of Mexico.
 
 00:37:33.754 --> 00:37:36.469
 When I didn\'t see a lot
 of invertebrate fauna on the bottom.
 
 00:37:36.596 --> 00:37:38.886
 At that site, we saw a crab.
 
 00:37:39.278 --> 00:37:41.674
 One crap that was alive.
 
 00:37:42.724 --> 00:37:47.612
 We saw sea fans that were
 just coated with oil and dead.
 
 00:37:47.929 --> 00:37:50.545
 These organisms,
 maybe 2, 3 feet high,
 
 00:37:50.713 --> 00:37:52.087
 but they\'re 500 years old.
 
 00:37:52.536 --> 00:37:54.469
 They\'re not going
 to recover in a week
 
 00:37:54.704 --> 00:37:57.186
 or a month or a year or a decade.
 
 00:37:57.750 --> 00:37:59.480
 They\'re 500 years old.
 
 00:38:02.008 --> 00:38:06.158
 Nothing like this has ever happened
 in a deep-water habitat before.
 
 00:38:06.808 --> 00:38:10.010
 You\'ve taken a system that
 was functioning very effectively,
 
 00:38:10.178 --> 00:38:12.946
 to cleanse itself
 of the small amount of oil and gas
 
 00:38:13.113 --> 00:38:14.764
 that was introduced naturally,
 
 00:38:15.082 --> 00:38:18.311
 and you\'ve injected into it
 in a very violent way.
 
 00:38:18.568 --> 00:38:20.976
 It\'s just a mind-boggling
 amount of carbon
 
 00:38:21.144 --> 00:38:23.105
 that\'s been injected
 into the system.
 
 00:38:24.817 --> 00:38:27.094
 -Today, there is no evidence of oil
 
 00:38:27.262 --> 00:38:29.550
 in the sediments from the deep water
 
 00:38:29.718 --> 00:38:30.471
 all the way through
 
 00:38:30.639 --> 00:38:33.026
 to the shoreline accepting
 in and around,
 
 00:38:33.194 --> 00:38:35.311
 right around the wellbore
 approximately two miles.
 
 00:38:36.160 --> 00:38:39.160
 There\'s still that perception
 that it\'s there,
 
 00:38:39.285 --> 00:38:42.408
 it\'s waiting and the first big storm
 is going to come
 
 00:38:42.576 --> 00:38:44.437
 and bring the sea of oil.
 
 00:38:44.784 --> 00:38:47.130
 BP saying it
 or the federal government
 
 00:38:47.298 --> 00:38:48.751
 saying it isn\'t enough,
 
 00:38:48.952 --> 00:38:51.327
 we\'ve got to get
 the local scientific communities
 
 00:38:51.666 --> 00:38:56.254
 and global academic communities
 supporting as they are
 
 00:38:56.422 --> 00:38:58.670
 that scientific assessment evaluation
 
 00:38:58.980 --> 00:39:00.713
 and demonstrating with confidence
 
 00:39:00.881 --> 00:39:04.383
 there isn\'t a big sea
 of oil coming our way.
 
 00:39:08.147 --> 00:39:10.123
 [music]
 
 00:39:12.474 --> 00:39:15.374
 -This week is nothing
 like what it used to be.
 
 00:39:15.752 --> 00:39:20.848
 Christmas in New Orleans
 since it\'s a really Catholic city,
 
 00:39:21.587 --> 00:39:27.257
 people have always abided
 by eating seafood during that week.
 
 00:39:27.923 --> 00:39:31.241
 It’s the first time
 in my 31 years here
 
 00:39:31.495 --> 00:39:33.075
 that we never sold oysters
 
 00:39:33.242 --> 00:39:36.240
 to anyone walking
 in during the holidays.
 
 00:39:39.637 --> 00:39:41.264
 [music]
 
 00:39:44.040 --> 00:39:47.022
 -Our concern is that how long
 
 00:39:47.213 --> 00:39:50.703
 this crisis is going
 to play itself out.
 
 00:39:50.871 --> 00:39:51.728
 Is it two years?
 
 00:39:51.863 --> 00:39:52.676
 Is it five years?
 
 00:39:52.844 --> 00:39:53.922
 Is it longer than that?
 
 00:39:54.105 --> 00:39:58.988
 -The oil spill has put us
 in a topsy-turvy situation.
 
 00:39:59.201 --> 00:40:04.378
 Typically, the farmers plant oysters
 from September and into January.
 
 00:40:05.051 --> 00:40:07.614
 This year,
 we were not even able to plant,
 
 00:40:07.845 --> 00:40:09.591
 first time ever
 since I\'ve been doing it.
 
 00:40:09.750 --> 00:40:11.272
 I\'ve been doing it 28 years.
 
 00:40:11.424 --> 00:40:12.803
 -What is long-term?
 
 00:40:12.971 --> 00:40:14.525
 I mean, when is the next-
 -What\'s the projection?
 
 00:40:14.693 --> 00:40:15.059
 --crisis?
 
 00:40:15.227 --> 00:40:16.805
 -Our oysters will take
 
 00:40:17.427 --> 00:40:20.085
 from this point two
 to three years to come back.
 
 00:40:20.403 --> 00:40:24.190
 There are producing areas outside
 of the Louisiana marshes,
 
 00:40:24.373 --> 00:40:28.066
 and P&J\'s going to make sure
 that you guys have product.
 
 00:40:28.693 --> 00:40:31.633
 If we have to draw from other states,
 we\'re going to do what it takes.
 
 00:40:32.401 --> 00:40:36.130
 -If I don\'t have oysters here,
 which probably is 60%
 
 00:40:36.298 --> 00:40:38.384
 of my appetizer sales, where do I go?
 
 00:40:38.557 --> 00:40:39.909
 What am I going
 to substitute it with?
 
 00:40:40.077 --> 00:40:46.210
 -We cannot lose the opportunity
 to continue this family tradition.
 
 00:40:46.701 --> 00:40:48.198
 Now, people do appreciate
 
 00:40:48.878 --> 00:40:51.740
 from something that has happened
 without our control,
 
 00:40:52.017 --> 00:40:54.924
 from the oil company
 that didn\'t do the right thing.
 
 00:40:56.819 --> 00:40:58.747
 [music]
 
 00:41:01.649 --> 00:41:03.172
 -My name is Henry Mayfield.
 
 00:41:03.330 --> 00:41:04.936
 I\'m from Lafitte, Louisiana.
 
 00:41:05.140 --> 00:41:06.957
 Commercial fisherman and trawler.
 
 00:41:08.861 --> 00:41:10.774
 I\'ve been working
 on my vessel to raise it,
 
 00:41:10.949 --> 00:41:12.989
 so that I can put more product
 on the boat
 
 00:41:13.157 --> 00:41:14.600
 and work a little rough
 weather maybe.
 
 00:41:14.768 --> 00:41:17.236
 I may have to work
 on the outside in the gulf.
 
 00:41:17.790 --> 00:41:20.419
 I\'m feeling what happened
 with the oil spill is going
 
 00:41:20.587 --> 00:41:22.553
 to affect a lot
 of the inshore fishing.
 
 00:41:22.914 --> 00:41:24.932
 Shrimp are a very delicate animal.
 
 00:41:25.100 --> 00:41:26.932
 They\'re not going
 to sit there and die.
 
 00:41:27.100 --> 00:41:27.821
 They\'re going to move.
 
 00:41:28.115 --> 00:41:30.015
 Hopefully, if that does happen,
 
 00:41:30.182 --> 00:41:31.851
 the preparation that I\'m making now
 
 00:41:32.019 --> 00:41:35.722
 and the expenses and money
 that we\'re spending into the vessel
 
 00:41:35.802 --> 00:41:37.080
 is going to keep me working
 
 00:41:37.248 --> 00:41:39.471
 and allow me to keep providing
 for my family.
 
 00:41:40.873 --> 00:41:43.501
 [music]
 
 00:41:48.391 --> 00:41:50.669
 -Jean Lafitte is mostly
 a fishing community.
 
 00:41:51.017 --> 00:41:52.113
 I say it\'s paradise.
 
 00:41:52.288 --> 00:41:55.713
 We\'ve had five major
 disasters in the last five years
 
 00:41:55.880 --> 00:41:57.281
 and nobody\'s leaving,
 
 00:41:57.449 --> 00:41:59.074
 that will to tell you something.
 
 00:42:00.037 --> 00:42:02.652
 While I was a commercial fisherman
 from when I was 18 years old.
 
 00:42:02.820 --> 00:42:04.264
 I\'ve done commercial fishing
 for five years,
 
 00:42:04.432 --> 00:42:06.157
 I grew up with these guys.
 
 00:42:06.325 --> 00:42:08.175
 I played football with these guys.
 
 00:42:08.276 --> 00:42:08.794
 I bought shrimp.
 
 00:42:08.962 --> 00:42:10.518
 I had a seafood dock.
 
 00:42:10.806 --> 00:42:13.319
 I know all these guys,
 their families personally.
 
 00:42:13.685 --> 00:42:15.810
 Right now, a lot
 of fisher people are suffering
 
 00:42:15.978 --> 00:42:18.654
 because they didn\'t make anything
 for the whole year.
 
 00:42:19.118 --> 00:42:20.678
 If they don\'t catch shrimp,
 they don\'t catch crab,
 
 00:42:20.846 --> 00:42:23.923
 they don\'t catch oysters or fish,
 they don\'t make any money.
 
 00:42:26.418 --> 00:42:29.580
 -Right now we ought to be catching
 a lot more than we catching.
 
 00:42:29.748 --> 00:42:31.615
 -Ain\'t no more crab right now.
 
 00:42:31.794 --> 00:42:33.335
 -Not at all.
 Not at all.
 
 00:42:33.573 --> 00:42:35.966
 -This is a crazy year.
 
 00:42:36.134 --> 00:42:37.808
 I ain\'t never saw nothing like this.
 
 00:42:38.310 --> 00:42:40.256
 I\'ve been doing this
 since I was about five years old.
 
 00:42:40.486 --> 00:42:41.756
 -It\'s been bad right now.
 
 00:42:42.212 --> 00:42:45.037
 -Little crab,
 barely makes amend, junk.
 
 00:42:45.205 --> 00:42:47.969
 They\'re 65¢ a pound,
 you can\'t make no money on that.
 
 00:42:48.800 --> 00:42:51.233
 A lot of them die
 before you even get in,
 
 00:42:51.469 --> 00:42:54.458
 you don\'t get paid for dead loss.
 -Usually, we get to trawl,
 
 00:42:54.626 --> 00:42:55.641
 come up by the water.
 
 00:42:55.809 --> 00:42:58.806
 Overnight, you get a dozen,
 dozen and a half you\'re lucky.
 
 00:42:58.974 --> 00:43:02.694
 After five days, you\'re lucky
 if you\'ve got six crabs in the trap.
 
 00:43:02.822 --> 00:43:04.262
 -I\'m 27 years old.
 
 00:43:04.644 --> 00:43:07.401
 I fish with my daddy all my life.
 
 00:43:07.569 --> 00:43:09.137
 That\'s all I know.
 
 00:43:10.331 --> 00:43:12.957
 I know how to catch crabs,
 and make babies that\'s it.
 
 00:43:13.125 --> 00:43:14.686
 I\'ve got three kids.
 -Family, three kids.
 
 00:43:14.854 --> 00:43:15.854
 -Both of us.
 
 00:43:16.187 --> 00:43:20.036
 -Our children won\'t be taking up
 the tradition in fishing.
 
 00:43:26.120 --> 00:43:27.465
 -I\'ve heard the same thing
 
 00:43:27.632 --> 00:43:30.408
 that they don\'t look healthy
 they\'re very lethargic.
 
 00:43:30.691 --> 00:43:35.080
 They\'re way smaller
 than usual suggesting mortality
 
 00:43:35.248 --> 00:43:37.134
 of the larger crabs, I don\'t know.
 
 00:43:38.050 --> 00:43:43.047
 This is a site, two nautical
 miles from the wellhead.
 
 00:43:43.355 --> 00:43:46.489
 On this dive, we did catch one crab.
 
 00:43:47.005 --> 00:43:49.133
 He has barnacles
 growing all over his body.
 
 00:43:49.479 --> 00:43:52.488
 It means it\'s not healthy because
 typically they don\'t have barnacles
 
 00:43:52.656 --> 00:43:53.735
 growing on their shells.
 
 00:43:54.163 --> 00:43:56.086
 Part of his body is healthy
 
 00:43:56.254 --> 00:43:58.527
 and the other part has been
 immunocompromised,
 
 00:43:58.695 --> 00:44:01.157
 and somehow he\'s not able
 to keep these barnacles
 
 00:44:01.325 --> 00:44:02.405
 from settling on his body.
 
 00:44:02.731 --> 00:44:05.035
 The crabs in the deep sea
 are being impacted,
 
 00:44:05.162 --> 00:44:06.642
 and if they\'re being impacted,
 
 00:44:06.810 --> 00:44:11.141
 then how can the ones near
 shore not be impacted?
 
 00:44:14.470 --> 00:44:17.635
 -One of the key issues that
 commercial fishing has faced
 
 00:44:17.803 --> 00:44:20.623
 from the Gulf of Mexico
 has been the safety of the seafood.
 
 00:44:20.851 --> 00:44:25.408
 Working together with the FDA,
 the EPA, and the five states,
 
 00:44:25.576 --> 00:44:28.817
 tremendous efforts
 have been put in place to sample
 
 00:44:28.985 --> 00:44:34.676
 and test all seafood to ensure
 that not only were they clean
 
 00:44:34.844 --> 00:44:37.212
 of hydrocarbon contamination,
 
 00:44:37.380 --> 00:44:40.250
 but also of dispersive impacts
 and consequences.
 
 00:44:41.165 --> 00:44:45.581
 Thousands and thousands of species
 tests have been completed
 
 00:44:45.749 --> 00:44:51.088
 and not a single fish has exhibited
 a concern associated
 
 00:44:51.256 --> 00:44:52.900
 with human health risks
 
 00:44:53.067 --> 00:44:56.179
 for either oil toxicity
 or for dispersive.
 
 00:44:58.798 --> 00:45:02.376
 [music]
 
 00:45:05.426 --> 00:45:06.691
 -These are all crab tanks.
 
 00:45:06.859 --> 00:45:07.699
 If you see there,
 
 00:45:08.030 --> 00:45:10.428
 I don\'t have them ready
 because there\'s no crabs.
 
 00:45:10.732 --> 00:45:13.683
 Box holds about eight dozen live,
 and they\'re swimming in here,
 
 00:45:13.851 --> 00:45:15.103
 so the people get to see their crabs.
 
 00:45:15.683 --> 00:45:17.471
 I got nine crabs
 today in the trap.
 
 00:45:17.630 --> 00:45:18.686
 I had 10 traps out.
 
 00:45:19.147 --> 00:45:22.352
 Nine crabs in two days,
 that\'s what I had today.
 
 00:45:27.264 --> 00:45:30.092
 My father wanted a grandson to be
 a commercial fisherman,
 
 00:45:30.346 --> 00:45:32.093
 because, like I said,
 we some of these oyster business,
 
 00:45:32.261 --> 00:45:33.773
 been in the family
 over a hundred years.
 
 00:45:34.010 --> 00:45:35.711
 -I\'ve been trawling
 since I was a kid.
 
 00:45:36.557 --> 00:45:40.077
 Got my own boat when I was 15,
 been doing it ever since.
 
 00:45:40.245 --> 00:45:40.999
 I love it.
 
 00:45:41.285 --> 00:45:42.463
 It\'s the only way of life.
 
 00:45:42.631 --> 00:45:44.237
 That\'s I know how to make a life.
 
 00:45:44.405 --> 00:45:46.597
 -This is really the only
 fifth-generation we have left.
 
 00:45:46.765 --> 00:45:49.675
 My father would like to see
 the generation go on and on.
 
 00:45:50.227 --> 00:45:51.627
 -I didn\'t finish school.
 
 00:45:51.795 --> 00:45:53.795
 I like doing what I was doing.
 
 00:45:54.617 --> 00:45:58.114
 I tried going to work on other jobs,
 but just kept on coming back.
 
 00:45:58.282 --> 00:46:00.216
 I wanted to go back trawling.
 
 00:46:01.212 --> 00:46:04.670
 I hope for sure I can keep on
 doing what I\'m doing.
 
 00:46:05.880 --> 00:46:07.509
 -When I finish my livelihood,
 
 00:46:07.676 --> 00:46:10.488
 there\'s going to be more
 more generation in life.
 
 00:46:10.881 --> 00:46:12.333
 The family going [?] go,
 
 00:46:12.500 --> 00:46:14.404
 and it\'s going to
 be a dying industry,
 
 00:46:14.532 --> 00:46:15.609
 and we don\'t want that.
 
 00:46:15.893 --> 00:46:17.710
 Mom and dad bought
 the property years ago.
 
 00:46:17.878 --> 00:46:20.125
 That way, we wanted all our kids
 in the same neighborhood.
 
 00:46:20.293 --> 00:46:22.085
 That way the grandkids
 just go walk across the street.
 
 00:46:22.253 --> 00:46:23.384
 When we didn\'t want
 them, they move,
 
 00:46:23.551 --> 00:46:24.890
 we can send them
 back across the street.
 
 00:46:25.149 --> 00:46:26.013
 We love each other.
 
 00:46:26.181 --> 00:46:27.056
 We love all of us.
 
 00:46:27.224 --> 00:46:31.947
 That\'s just the way we are, and just
 that\'s the way of life in Grand Isle.
 
 00:46:44.986 --> 00:46:49.694
 -What you do when you don\'t have
 funds coming in, you reduce.
 
 00:46:50.545 --> 00:46:52.331
 As much as I love the people
 
 00:46:52.498 --> 00:46:54.683
 that I grew up with
 here in the business,
 
 00:46:55.307 --> 00:46:56.587
 we had to let them go.
 
 00:46:56.755 --> 00:46:57.857
 We weren\'t getting
 any of the product
 
 00:46:58.025 --> 00:47:00.128
 that we normally would get.
 
 00:47:01.226 --> 00:47:03.829
 One of the guys
 that we had to lay off,
 
 00:47:03.997 --> 00:47:07.369
 I got him to go start picking up
 a few oysters in Texas
 
 00:47:07.536 --> 00:47:09.158
 from a friend of
 ours over there.
 
 00:47:09.967 --> 00:47:13.301
 I feel confident that
 they can come close
 
 00:47:13.468 --> 00:47:16.546
 to what we don\'t
 have for them here.
 
 00:47:18.602 --> 00:47:22.212
 We have to set ourselves apart since
 we\'re not processing oysters again,
 
 00:47:22.380 --> 00:47:23.684
 make sure that the oysters
 
 00:47:23.851 --> 00:47:26.278
 that we are getting
 are of the highest quality,
 
 00:47:26.524 --> 00:47:28.591
 even if it\'s in limited supply.
 
 00:47:28.759 --> 00:47:32.487
 Wayne, let\'s cut this open
 and see what we got here.
 
 00:47:34.230 --> 00:47:36.642
 If you look at these oysters
 right here,
 
 00:47:36.809 --> 00:47:38.518
 they\'re nice round oysters.
 
 00:47:38.919 --> 00:47:40.852
 They\'re all single and clean.
 
 00:47:42.498 --> 00:47:44.178
 You see this is nice.
 
 00:47:44.313 --> 00:47:46.349
 It\'s got a nice eye
 
 00:47:46.517 --> 00:47:51.137
 and fabulous.
 
 00:47:51.700 --> 00:47:55.741
 -We laid off 12 people,
 and the people that are working here
 
 00:47:55.909 --> 00:47:58.186
 that are left is very part-time.
 
 00:47:58.766 --> 00:48:02.826
 -I\'ve been here 23 years,
 man, it never got this bad.
 
 00:48:04.517 --> 00:48:06.033
 When you get to that age,
 
 00:48:06.470 --> 00:48:08.163
 ain\'t nothing
 you know how to do but this.
 
 00:48:08.639 --> 00:48:11.409
 They ain\'t going to hire
 a guy 50-something years old
 
 00:48:11.949 --> 00:48:13.163
 on any kind of job.
 
 00:48:13.331 --> 00:48:14.853
 You know what I\'m saying?
 
 00:48:14.981 --> 00:48:17.488
 Hopefully, I hope they get better,
 you know what I mean?
 
 00:48:18.097 --> 00:48:21.765
 Because I still got bills
 and I got young kids to care of.
 
 00:48:23.099 --> 00:48:25.189
 I never thought
 it was going to get this bad,
 
 00:48:25.357 --> 00:48:28.224
 but that\'s just something
 that just happens.
 
 00:48:38.068 --> 00:48:40.402
 -It\'s the next best thing basically.
 
 00:48:41.206 --> 00:48:43.285
 It\'s not our oysters,
 it\'s not Louisiana.
 
 00:48:43.453 --> 00:48:44.573
 -Good morning.
 
 00:48:44.825 --> 00:48:48.017
 How are doing--
 People enjoying the oysters?
 
 00:48:48.429 --> 00:48:49.429
 -Yes.
 
 00:48:49.597 --> 00:48:50.914
 -It\'s going to happen.
 
 00:48:51.086 --> 00:48:52.538
 I\'m optimistic.
 
 00:48:52.986 --> 00:48:54.666
 -How are you all doing?
 
 00:48:55.871 --> 00:48:57.772
 Yes, I got you oysters today.
 
 00:49:00.584 --> 00:49:02.423
 -I\'ve got what we call a trinity.
 
 00:49:02.852 --> 00:49:05.672
 That\'s some celery,
 onions, bell pepper,
 
 00:49:06.120 --> 00:49:09.300
 and I got some
 of Sal\'s beautiful oysters over here.
 
 00:49:09.890 --> 00:49:12.020
 All I can do is put my faith in P&J.
 
 00:49:12.370 --> 00:49:14.590
 I take their word that
 it\'s a great product.
 
 00:49:14.758 --> 00:49:17.433
 If they\'re going to put
 their name behind that product,
 
 00:49:17.601 --> 00:49:19.401
 I got all my faith in them.
 
 00:49:20.719 --> 00:49:22.894
 -This
 is the worst environmental disaster
 
 00:49:23.062 --> 00:49:23.902
 in the history of our country,
 
 00:49:24.070 --> 00:49:26.710
 and we have launched
 the largest response,
 
 00:49:26.878 --> 00:49:29.654
 almost 7,000 vessels,
 more than 40,000 people.
 
 00:49:29.822 --> 00:49:31.942
 I think what the scientists
 are telling us today
 
 00:49:32.110 --> 00:49:32.958
 is that made a difference.
 
 00:49:33.062 --> 00:49:34.333
 That almost 3/4 of the oil
 
 00:49:34.500 --> 00:49:36.710
 was actually captured,
 cleaned, and skimmed.
 
 00:49:37.028 --> 00:49:39.186
 -Everybody is just
 a little too anxious
 
 00:49:39.330 --> 00:49:41.460
 to pat themselves on the back
 
 00:49:41.768 --> 00:49:43.017
 and talk about a job well done.
 
 00:49:43.184 --> 00:49:46.300
 If 70% of it is gone,
 which there\'s still 30% left,
 
 00:49:46.467 --> 00:49:47.728
 that\'s a lot of oil.
 
 00:49:48.525 --> 00:49:51.358
 Did you watch that thing spewing
 that junk out throughout
 
 00:49:51.526 --> 00:49:52.615
 that period of time?
 
 00:49:55.641 --> 00:49:59.219
 [music]
 
 00:50:01.327 --> 00:50:04.398
 -What we\'re looking at here
 is an area called Chaland Beach,
 
 00:50:04.533 --> 00:50:07.583
 which is on the western side
 of the Mississippi Delta,
 
 00:50:07.733 --> 00:50:11.381
 where the Mississippi River
 pours into the Gulf of Mexico.
 
 00:50:11.663 --> 00:50:14.825
 This section serves
 as an important barrier to protect
 
 00:50:14.993 --> 00:50:17.534
 the sensitive marshes and wetlands.
 
 00:50:20.105 --> 00:50:21.999
 This beach is actually now clean.
 
 00:50:22.167 --> 00:50:25.677
 This has been completed in terms
 of its restoration and recovery,
 
 00:50:25.882 --> 00:50:29.946
 and you can see it looks like
 any normal beach covered with shells.
 
 00:50:30.114 --> 00:50:31.838
 You can see the tide zones on it.
 
 00:50:32.925 --> 00:50:36.370
 Out of 11,000 miles
 of Gulf Coast shoreline,
 
 00:50:36.538 --> 00:50:39.676
 we ultimately only had 1,000 miles
 that were impacted,
 
 00:50:39.844 --> 00:50:43.595
 and 400 of those miles actually
 requiring mechanical cleanup.
 
 00:50:44.812 --> 00:50:48.346
 At the same time, oil was being
 deposited on these beaches,
 
 00:50:48.514 --> 00:50:52.751
 sand is moving from offshore
 to onshore, which was burying it.
 
 00:50:54.012 --> 00:50:57.120
 You\'ve got this challenge
 that it leaves all of this material.
 
 00:50:57.850 --> 00:51:00.906
 What we would like to do
 is to mechanically clean
 
 00:51:01.136 --> 00:51:04.964
 down to the depth necessary
 to recover that buried oil.
 
 00:51:05.280 --> 00:51:06.060
 In some cases,
 
 00:51:06.227 --> 00:51:09.752
 there are environmental
 and-or ownership reasons
 
 00:51:09.920 --> 00:51:13.145
 that have limited our abilities
 to only do that manually.
 
 00:51:16.052 --> 00:51:22.795
 [music]
 
 00:51:36.481 --> 00:51:39.436
 -This is all of the cleanup effort,
 the workers are coming in now.
 
 00:51:39.604 --> 00:51:41.079
 It\'s time for them
 to break for lunch.
 
 00:51:41.246 --> 00:51:45.978
 They\'ll go up to the staging area
 where BP contractors feed them,
 
 00:51:46.160 --> 00:51:47.343
 and then they\'ll come back out
 
 00:51:47.511 --> 00:51:49.979
 and they\'ll start doing
 that work all over again.
 
 00:51:53.012 --> 00:51:54.994
 That\'s a tar ball.
 
 00:51:56.531 --> 00:51:57.982
 Now, that\'s a small one.
 
 00:51:58.150 --> 00:51:59.211
 It come in various sizes.
 
 00:51:59.362 --> 00:52:02.382
 If you break it open
 you bring it up to your nose,
 
 00:52:02.636 --> 00:52:05.614
 you have that very distinct
 bouquet of hydrocarbon.
 
 00:52:06.744 --> 00:52:08.326
 It\'s unmistakable.
 
 00:52:15.644 --> 00:52:18.865
 -This is an example
 of what we\'re finding,
 
 00:52:19.033 --> 00:52:22.997
 and this is an area that we were told
 that needed no further treatment.
 
 00:52:23.646 --> 00:52:25.796
 This is oil, as you can see.
 
 00:52:26.700 --> 00:52:31.757
 It\'s been exposed
 by constant changes on this beach.
 
 00:52:31.940 --> 00:52:33.674
 -It needs to be recovered.
 
 00:52:34.164 --> 00:52:35.742
 All of it needs to be recovered.
 
 00:52:37.523 --> 00:52:39.429
 See that dark line?
 That\'s oil.
 
 00:52:40.238 --> 00:52:41.448
 See how thick it is there?
 
 00:52:41.616 --> 00:52:43.302
 About an inch and a half,
 2 inches thick.
 
 00:52:43.443 --> 00:52:46.712
 The only way to retrieve it?
 
 00:52:47.127 --> 00:52:50.443
 Scrape down your topsoil
 to get at the oil,
 
 00:52:50.998 --> 00:52:53.971
 then scrape off the oil
 to get the clean sand.
 
 00:52:54.771 --> 00:52:56.392
 Laborious?
 Absolutely.
 
 00:52:56.560 --> 00:52:58.255
 Time consuming?
 Absolutely.
 
 00:52:58.788 --> 00:53:01.241
 Necessary?
 Absolutely.
 
 00:53:01.822 --> 00:53:04.422
 It\'s almost a battleground,
 if you will.
 
 00:53:05.075 --> 00:53:10.249
 You don\'t send your troops out
 into battle with a possible maybe,
 
 00:53:10.417 --> 00:53:13.611
 a trial and error, if you will,
 but we have here.
 
 00:53:14.274 --> 00:53:17.712
 -This beach was holding on
 by its fingernails,
 
 00:53:17.965 --> 00:53:20.334
 rapidly eroding
 into the Gulf of Mexico,
 
 00:53:20.502 --> 00:53:23.247
 and having maybe a quarter
 of the sand on our beach removed,
 
 00:53:23.564 --> 00:53:25.244
 it\'s devastating to us.
 
 00:53:27.976 --> 00:53:32.174
 -This was a very beautiful,
 pristine, eco environment,
 
 00:53:32.460 --> 00:53:33.772
 that\'s forever changing.
 
 00:53:34.944 --> 00:53:41.184
 Unfortunately, what it is now,
 we\'ll never be what it once was,
 
 00:53:41.564 --> 00:53:43.780
 because there is copious
 amounts of oil left.
 
 00:53:44.454 --> 00:53:48.153
 BP has done an awful lot,
 but my goodness gracious,
 
 00:53:48.488 --> 00:53:50.816
 there\'s an awful lot more
 that needs to be done.
 
 00:53:51.251 --> 00:53:57.091
 -We\'ve had to scream loudly and often
 to get the attention we need to try
 
 00:53:57.259 --> 00:54:00.932
 and maintain the pressure
 to get this done properly.
 
 00:54:01.463 --> 00:54:03.525
 -You want my very
 personal opinion?
 
 00:54:04.348 --> 00:54:08.247
 As you take the dadgum checkbook,
 you set it aside, you start thinking
 
 00:54:08.938 --> 00:54:11.864
 about the human factor
 and I think we\'ll find a solution.
 
 00:54:12.615 --> 00:54:14.600
 If we put it into perspective,
 
 00:54:14.767 --> 00:54:16.754
 it could be your son or daughter
 
 00:54:16.922 --> 00:54:18.080
 that\'s going to be affected,
 
 00:54:18.248 --> 00:54:20.836
 because we failed
 to do what we needed to do.
 
 00:54:32.235 --> 00:54:33.255
 -This is Bay Jimmy.
 
 00:54:33.423 --> 00:54:35.373
 As you can see,
 they\'re still all along the bank.
 
 00:54:35.937 --> 00:54:38.020
 Bay Jimmy is one
 of the best fishing areas.
 
 00:54:38.310 --> 00:54:41.195
 This is where the shrimp
 will lay eggs offshore,
 
 00:54:41.363 --> 00:54:42.325
 and they\'ll come in
 
 00:54:42.492 --> 00:54:44.445
 and this is where they actually grow.
 
 00:54:46.560 --> 00:54:47.971
 Without this marshland,
 
 00:54:48.353 --> 00:54:50.701
 you wouldn\'t have
 a brown shrimp season
 
 00:54:50.868 --> 00:54:52.336
 or a white shrimp season.
 
 00:54:53.371 --> 00:54:56.307
 For the last four or five months
 all you\'d have heard on TV
 
 00:54:56.459 --> 00:55:00.009
 is that everything\'s great,
 comeback, the oil\'s gone.
 
 00:55:00.951 --> 00:55:02.788
 I hate to say it, but all that’s BS.
 
 00:55:07.058 --> 00:55:08.482
 The minute the media left,
 
 00:55:08.926 --> 00:55:11.077
 they didn\'t care
 if they still had oil out there.
 
 00:55:11.245 --> 00:55:14.570
 What they did, they just
 started laying people off
 
 00:55:14.848 --> 00:55:15.926
 and getting people out of the area.
 
 00:55:16.241 --> 00:55:18.325
 I think they did
 it way too fast.
 
 00:55:19.413 --> 00:55:20.466
 It just tells me
 
 00:55:20.634 --> 00:55:25.553
 that a lot of what they did
 at the beginning was PR,
 
 00:55:26.791 --> 00:55:31.499
 and now that the cameras are gone,
 they\'re not showing
 
 00:55:31.667 --> 00:55:33.478
 that they really care a whole lot.
 
 00:55:35.902 --> 00:55:38.981
 -One of the real challenges we\'ve had
 from a public perspective
 
 00:55:39.149 --> 00:55:42.038
 is why is it taking us so long
 to clean these marshes?
 
 00:55:42.206 --> 00:55:45.121
 What we\'ve learned through
 our scientific evaluations
 
 00:55:45.289 --> 00:55:47.432
 is that your most successful
 
 00:55:47.599 --> 00:55:50.199
 in your abilities
 to help them recover
 
 00:55:50.367 --> 00:55:51.770
 by working when they\'re dormant.
 
 00:55:51.961 --> 00:55:54.533
 It\'s only been since late fall,
 early winter,
 
 00:55:54.975 --> 00:55:56.595
 that we\'ve actually been
 in a position
 
 00:55:56.763 --> 00:55:59.193
 to begin to work
 on the cleanup of the marshes.
 
 00:55:59.708 --> 00:56:01.597
 One of the things
 that we know is that
 
 00:56:01.764 --> 00:56:07.541
 if the oil bakes onto
 the Roseau Cane\'s stalk,
 
 00:56:07.771 --> 00:56:10.714
 that the stalk will shuck
 its outside layer
 
 00:56:11.119 --> 00:56:14.030
 and it will continue
 to grow and regenerate.
 
 00:56:14.581 --> 00:56:19.211
 If you actually try to come in
 and clean that stalk of that oil,
 
 00:56:19.379 --> 00:56:22.121
 you can actually again
 do more damage to the plant,
 
 00:56:22.289 --> 00:56:24.158
 because of its delicate nature.
 
 00:56:24.356 --> 00:56:28.483
 We have to be very careful
 in our efforts to try to not disturb
 
 00:56:28.762 --> 00:56:31.899
 the root systems
 of these Roseau Canes
 
 00:56:32.193 --> 00:56:34.958
 that are so critical
 to this ecosystem.
 
 00:56:41.157 --> 00:56:45.585
 [music]
 
 00:56:55.233 --> 00:56:58.280
 -This is a major event
 in terms of deaths
 
 00:56:58.448 --> 00:57:00.167
 of a particular class of animals.
 
 00:57:00.638 --> 00:57:03.247
 We\'re seeing a large number
 of baby dolphins dying.
 
 00:57:04.175 --> 00:57:06.578
 Usually in the month
 of January and February,
 
 00:57:06.745 --> 00:57:08.377
 we see about one or two animals.
 
 00:57:08.758 --> 00:57:12.938
 This year so far,
 we\'ve seen 36 baby dolphins
 
 00:57:14.427 --> 00:57:15.807
 -We\'re heading out to Long Beach
 
 00:57:15.978 --> 00:57:20.178
 to pick up a dolphin that was called
 in this morning at about 7:30.
 
 00:57:20.548 --> 00:57:22.322
 -The BP oil spill cannot be
 ruled out,
 
 00:57:22.490 --> 00:57:24.024
 because it was a major event.
 
 00:57:24.587 --> 00:57:27.784
 The oil spill covered tens
 of thousands of square miles
 
 00:57:27.994 --> 00:57:30.621
 of their habitat for several months.
 
 00:57:31.099 --> 00:57:34.672
 Apparently, these animals
 were conceived in March, April,
 
 00:57:34.840 --> 00:57:37.040
 May of last year
 prior to the oil spill.
 
 00:57:37.711 --> 00:57:39.897
 Gestation period being 12 months,
 
 00:57:40.257 --> 00:57:43.413
 this is the first
 offspring of animals
 
 00:57:43.580 --> 00:57:46.737
 that has come
 through the oil spill.
 
 00:57:46.975 --> 00:57:50.438
 -We have coordinates, we have
 landmarks that we usually go by.
 
 00:57:50.606 --> 00:57:52.463
 If it\'s on the beach,
 and it\'s a day like this,
 
 00:57:52.637 --> 00:57:54.065
 we should be able to see it.
 
 00:57:55.367 --> 00:57:57.696
 [music]
 
 00:58:09.750 --> 00:58:13.757
 -We have different teams of folks,
 and they go out there
 
 00:58:13.925 --> 00:58:16.363
 and they take whatever
 measurements readings,
 
 00:58:16.561 --> 00:58:20.109
 samples they can do, and they are
 sent to various laboratories.
 
 00:58:22.842 --> 00:58:24.296
 -It does get a little bit draining,
 
 00:58:24.464 --> 00:58:26.173
 especially when you\'re dealing
 with the babies.
 
 00:58:27.318 --> 00:58:28.956
 All of us obviously,
 are animal lovers.
 
 00:58:29.124 --> 00:58:30.218
 Nobody wants to see that.
 
 00:58:30.845 --> 00:58:33.505
 It\'s part of what happens
 and it\'s what we do.
 
 00:58:38.353 --> 00:58:39.952
 -We\'re about five minutes away
 
 00:58:40.119 --> 00:58:44.616
 from my friend\'s company
 called Motivatit Seafoods.
 
 00:58:45.926 --> 00:58:48.999
 It\'s owned by Mike and Steve Voisin.
 
 00:58:50.316 --> 00:58:55.151
 They\'re seventh generation oyster
 and seafood people.
 
 00:58:56.741 --> 00:59:01.487
 Mike and I have traveled all over
 the country protecting the interests
 
 00:59:01.655 --> 00:59:03.550
 of the Gulf oyster industry.
 
 00:59:05.680 --> 00:59:10.750
 -We have a farming operation,
 but we were down 60% this summer.
 
 00:59:10.940 --> 00:59:12.729
 We chose to stay open,
 
 00:59:12.897 --> 00:59:16.069
 because we were able
 to move our harvesting.
 
 00:59:16.237 --> 00:59:19.812
 We were one of four
 out of 44 in the State
 
 00:59:20.050 --> 00:59:23.186
 that decided to keep going,
 but it was a struggle.
 
 00:59:24.345 --> 00:59:27.123
 The different sizes come off
 of those four different belts.
 
 00:59:27.466 --> 00:59:31.242
 Then at the very end, what\'s left
 is what we shuck in there.
 
 00:59:32.873 --> 00:59:35.551
 Al is in the harvesting companies,
 a processing company.
 
 00:59:36.001 --> 00:59:40.033
 The areas that Al gets
 the predominant amount of his product
 
 00:59:40.201 --> 00:59:43.396
 got hit the hardest.
 It\'s the prime oyster grounds.
 
 00:59:43.764 --> 00:59:46.031
 P&J is known for that prime oyster.
 
 00:59:46.701 --> 00:59:48.250
 Once the oysters are shucked,
 
 00:59:48.418 --> 00:59:52.259
 they\'re brought in here
 and then put into small containers
 
 00:59:52.427 --> 00:59:55.598
 either for retail, sale
 or go to a restaurant
 
 00:59:55.766 --> 00:59:57.116
 in the larger gallon containers.
 
 00:59:57.466 --> 00:59:58.623
 -It\'s exciting.
 
 00:59:58.791 --> 01:00:01.062
 It really is a nice feeling
 to see that.
 
 01:00:01.553 --> 01:00:03.687
 That kind of thing
 gives me hope.
 
 01:00:05.386 --> 01:00:09.044
 All that sound in there,
 it\'s a nice sound.
 
 01:00:09.394 --> 01:00:13.874
 I look forward to the day where we\'re
 back up and running and doing it.
 
 01:00:16.594 --> 01:00:23.168
 [music]
 
 01:00:31.386 --> 01:00:33.603
 -Earlier today we\'ll be meeting
 
 01:00:33.770 --> 01:00:37.324
 with a number
 of administrative groups, commerce,
 
 01:00:37.776 --> 01:00:39.980
 and then we\'ll be meeting
 
 01:00:40.148 --> 01:00:43.156
 with the Food
 and Drug Administration officials.
 
 01:00:43.661 --> 01:00:47.341
 -We\'re up here trying to allay
 the fears that have been developed
 
 01:00:47.509 --> 01:00:49.985
 relating to seafood
 in the Gulf of Mexico
 
 01:00:50.152 --> 01:00:53.548
 as a result of the oil spill.
 
 01:00:53.993 --> 01:00:54.830
 Come on, team.
 
 01:00:54.998 --> 01:00:57.009
 Yesterday, we met
 with mostly House members,
 
 01:00:57.177 --> 01:00:58.421
 and we\'re talking to them
 
 01:00:58.589 --> 01:01:00.950
 about the challenges
 of our market, our brand.
 
 01:01:01.148 --> 01:01:03.168
 We talked about some
 regulatory issues.
 
 01:01:03.336 --> 01:01:04.781
 They asked what they
 could do to help.
 
 01:01:04.949 --> 01:01:08.238
 -They\'re going to work with us
 to help promote Gulf seafoods,
 
 01:01:08.406 --> 01:01:10.138
 especially oysters.
 -We got to run.
 
 01:01:10.306 --> 01:01:10.746
 We really do.
 
 01:01:10.914 --> 01:01:12.174
 We got to get
 to that next meeting.
 
 01:01:13.564 --> 01:01:18.092
 -We\'re going to NOAA right now
 and meeting with Dr. Jim Turner.
 
 01:01:18.433 --> 01:01:19.289
 -Jim Turner.
 
 01:01:19.457 --> 01:01:19.980
 -Morning.
 
 01:01:20.148 --> 01:01:22.122
 Al Sunseri -Jim Turner,
 how you doing?
 
 01:01:22.500 --> 01:01:23.778
 Thank you very much for coming.
 
 01:01:23.946 --> 01:01:25.397
 We have a person from Brussels
 
 01:01:25.565 --> 01:01:27.250
 and a person from Tokyo
 who are calling in.
 
 01:01:27.479 --> 01:01:28.256
 -Good.
 
 01:01:28.424 --> 01:01:31.003
 -He\'s got these international
 attachés all over the world
 
 01:01:31.171 --> 01:01:33.235
 that educate buyers
 in those countries
 
 01:01:33.403 --> 01:01:35.323
 about the United
 States products.
 
 01:01:35.928 --> 01:01:36.997
 -I\'m here.
 
 01:01:37.251 --> 01:01:39.467
 I\'m calling from Tokyo.
 
 01:01:39.650 --> 01:01:41.412
 -Kobanwa, genki desu ka?
 
 01:01:41.580 --> 01:01:42.377
 -All right.
 
 01:01:47.089 --> 01:01:49.220
 -Well, here,
 how can we help you?
 
 01:01:49.718 --> 01:01:54.391
 -Early on, the administration did
 a great job of messaging, NOAA, FDA,
 
 01:01:54.559 --> 01:01:58.658
 EPA, getting the message out
 and it helped us to calm the storm.
 
 01:01:58.998 --> 01:02:02.690
 But with the major medias
 all moved out of the communities,
 
 01:02:02.858 --> 01:02:04.595
 we need the agencies,
 
 01:02:04.762 --> 01:02:07.150
 the administration
 to step up once again,
 
 01:02:07.356 --> 01:02:09.085
 and send that message out
 
 01:02:09.253 --> 01:02:11.986
 that Gulf seafood
 and Gulf oysters are safe.
 
 01:02:13.066 --> 01:02:15.298
 -I think it was
 a very important, one,
 
 01:02:15.466 --> 01:02:21.534
 for us to hear them talk about
 
 01:02:21.788 --> 01:02:24.168
 the things that we can do to help.
 
 01:02:24.605 --> 01:02:27.619
 Again, we want to make sure
 that we have the proper perspective
 
 01:02:27.787 --> 01:02:30.657
 and perception of where we are.
 
 01:02:31.545 --> 01:02:36.460
 -We\'re meeting with Ken Feinberg,
 the Gulf Coast Claims Facility,
 
 01:02:37.150 --> 01:02:38.750
 the $20 Billion man.
 
 01:02:39.027 --> 01:02:41.930
 We\'ll be discussing with him
 the challenges that we\'re feeling
 
 01:02:42.098 --> 01:02:45.477
 relating to the efforts
 that he\'s put forward.
 
 01:02:52.485 --> 01:02:55.058
 -I\'m meeting with some
 of those in the Gulf who deal
 
 01:02:55.226 --> 01:02:59.663
 with oysters and the uncertainty
 surrounding oyster harvesting.
 
 01:03:00.443 --> 01:03:02.691
 I think I\'ll learn more
 about the unique problems
 
 01:03:02.859 --> 01:03:05.510
 governing the oyster harvesting
 and at the same time,
 
 01:03:05.678 --> 01:03:07.130
 they\'ll get some information from me
 
 01:03:07.298 --> 01:03:09.855
 about the future of the program
 and how we\'ll process the claims
 
 01:03:10.263 --> 01:03:11.459
 and how to deal with it.
 
 01:03:11.831 --> 01:03:18.147
 -I think that he still doesn\'t really
 understand the impacts
 
 01:03:18.743 --> 01:03:21.975
 that there has been
 on the people
 
 01:03:22.143 --> 01:03:25.260
 in the oyster business
 in the state of Louisiana,
 
 01:03:25.668 --> 01:03:29.431
 and how our market\'s going to be
 impacted for some time to come.
 
 01:03:29.540 --> 01:03:32.868
 -By the end of 2012,
 it is reasonable to anticipate
 
 01:03:33.036 --> 01:03:35.834
 a return to normalcy in the Gulf.
 
 01:03:36.520 --> 01:03:37.678
 I don\'t know for sure.
 
 01:03:37.846 --> 01:03:39.041
 Nobody knows for sure.
 
 01:03:39.273 --> 01:03:43.001
 My goal is to compensate people,
 try and make them whole.
 
 01:03:43.948 --> 01:03:49.204
 Try and work with people
 in the Gulf so that eventually,
 
 01:03:49.815 --> 01:03:52.627
 whether it be six months,
 a year, two years or longer,
 
 01:03:52.834 --> 01:03:55.778
 the Gulf will be returned
 to its former luster.
 
 01:03:56.093 --> 01:04:01.159
 -Hopefully things will work out
 for us and the people we represent,
 
 01:04:01.327 --> 01:04:04.677
 and make sure that
 the Gulf oyster people are
 
 01:04:04.845 --> 01:04:07.244
 taken care of and made whole.
 
 01:04:10.009 --> 01:04:14.572
 [music]
 
 01:04:19.700 --> 01:04:21.862
 -This is our annual
 Let The World Be Your Oyster event.
 
 01:04:22.030 --> 01:04:24.565
 This is a chance for the East Coast
 growers, the West Coast growers,
 
 01:04:24.725 --> 01:04:27.875
 and the Gulf Coast oyster growers
 around the nation to come together
 
 01:04:28.043 --> 01:04:30.753
 and showcase the oyster industry
 for the nation.
 
 01:04:34.741 --> 01:04:36.790
 -We brought up some
 of the best chefs from Louisiana too.
 
 01:04:36.958 --> 01:04:38.407
 We have good chef John Besh here.
 
 01:04:38.789 --> 01:04:40.843
 -This is
 the Louisiana oyster pot roast.
 
 01:04:41.518 --> 01:04:43.367
 It\'s a real traditional recipe.
 
 01:04:43.518 --> 01:04:46.318
 We\'ve taken it
 and put a modern spin on it.
 
 01:04:46.510 --> 01:04:48.490
 Oysters and bacon right on top.
 
 01:04:48.680 --> 01:04:50.549
 -We also have
 our famous oyster shuckers
 
 01:04:50.717 --> 01:04:51.793
 from ACME Oyster House.
 
 01:04:52.083 --> 01:04:54.123
 -The key to shucking oysters is
 not cutting your hands.
 
 01:04:54.417 --> 01:04:56.759
 The most important part about
 is it\'s all about presentation.
 
 01:04:57.105 --> 01:05:00.177
 Cut it, crack it, slide it,
 Make sure it\'s clean.
 
 01:05:00.768 --> 01:05:03.144
 Cut it on both sides,
 and take it to the top.
 
 01:05:05.401 --> 01:05:06.968
 Hate this job, hate this job.
 
 01:05:07.194 --> 01:05:10.157
 -The importance of tonight is really
 get out there and tell people that
 
 01:05:10.325 --> 01:05:14.252
 not only is our seafood safe to eat,
 not only does it taste good,
 
 01:05:14.420 --> 01:05:18.481
 but it\'s the most highly scrutinized
 foodstuff in the marketplace today.
 
 01:05:18.870 --> 01:05:21.892
 What makes it to the
 marketplace is unbelievably good
 
 01:05:22.059 --> 01:05:23.350
 and it\'s good for you.
 
 01:05:37.360 --> 01:05:39.960
 -I was invited to give
 a topical lecture
 
 01:05:40.552 --> 01:05:42.751
 at the American Association
 for the Advancement
 
 01:05:42.919 --> 01:05:44.449
 of Science Meeting
 in Washington.
 
 01:05:44.758 --> 01:05:47.946
 We\'re about to go in for a press
 briefing on the oil spill.
 
 01:05:48.145 --> 01:05:50.855
 It\'ll be myself
 and three other scientists.
 
 01:05:51.097 --> 01:05:52.885
 It should be really interesting.
 
 01:05:53.685 --> 01:05:57.355
 I go into these things
 with one goal, not losing my cool.
 
 01:05:58.708 --> 01:06:00.676
 Good morning,
 and thanks to everybody for coming.
 
 01:06:01.644 --> 01:06:04.350
 I\'m going to just touch
 on three basic topics
 
 01:06:04.525 --> 01:06:06.154
 and I\'m going to show you
 a couple of videos
 
 01:06:06.322 --> 01:06:09.841
 that we took on the seafloor
 in December from the Alvin.
 
 01:06:09.985 --> 01:06:11.345
 I\'m going to show you the first clip,
 
 01:06:11.678 --> 01:06:13.927
 it\'s from a natural oil seep.
 
 01:06:14.090 --> 01:06:18.632
 The second clip is from
 a site about 10 miles north
 
 01:06:18.800 --> 01:06:20.454
 of the Deepwater Horizon.
 
 01:06:20.616 --> 01:06:24.437
 It\'s a place where Macondo oil
 ended up on the bottom
 
 01:06:24.605 --> 01:06:26.852
 and we fingerprinted it to Macondo.
 
 01:06:27.020 --> 01:06:29.339
 I felt like it was
 really important
 
 01:06:29.507 --> 01:06:33.302
 to tell the story
 of the deep-sea ecosystem,
 
 01:06:33.470 --> 01:06:37.738
 in particular, because of this sense
 that\'s being pushed
 
 01:06:37.906 --> 01:06:39.701
 that everything\'s fine out there.
 
 01:06:39.869 --> 01:06:42.911
 When it in actuality,
 isn\'t fine at all.
 
 01:06:43.079 --> 01:06:45.016
 The fate of this material
 on the bottom,
 
 01:06:45.233 --> 01:06:48.531
 once it gets to the bottom
 on the beaches,
 
 01:06:49.011 --> 01:06:52.975
 you\'re talking years
 or decades to get rid of it.
 
 01:06:53.143 --> 01:06:55.555
 Some of it like
 the asphaltene fraction,
 
 01:06:56.015 --> 01:06:57.276
 does not biodegrade.
 
 01:06:57.554 --> 01:07:00.033
 -Well, the asphaltene
 does biodegrade.
 
 01:07:00.335 --> 01:07:02.144
 It just does it very, very slowly.
 
 01:07:03.812 --> 01:07:08.154
 There\'s no compound on demand
 that bacteria can\'t degrade,
 
 01:07:08.576 --> 01:07:11.137
 but you have to have
 the right conditions.
 
 01:07:12.427 --> 01:07:17.387
 We can\'t detect anything in
 the water column or at the surface,
 
 01:07:17.988 --> 01:07:21.076
 and that\'s both chemically
 and with instruments.
 
 01:07:21.750 --> 01:07:27.533
 -I think scientists disagree a lot
 and it\'s just never usually public.
 
 01:07:28.083 --> 01:07:31.555
 You have disagreements
 on the telephone
 
 01:07:31.711 --> 01:07:33.419
 or you walk down the hallway
 
 01:07:33.586 --> 01:07:36.831
 and have a conversation
 disagreeing about something.
 
 01:07:36.939 --> 01:07:42.152
 -Now you have to remember that
 400,000 to a Million barrels of oil
 
 01:07:42.320 --> 01:07:46.637
 go into the Gulf of Mexico
 for natural seeps every year.
 
 01:07:46.805 --> 01:07:48.434
 The bugs are adapted to it.
 
 01:07:49.287 --> 01:07:52.901
 If I had to look for bacteria
 that could degrade oil,
 
 01:07:53.069 --> 01:07:54.219
 this would have been the place.
 
 01:07:54.361 --> 01:07:57.521
 -I think in this case,
 the Million barrels of oil a year
 
 01:07:57.689 --> 01:08:00.037
 being released
 into the Gulf of Mexico,
 
 01:08:00.204 --> 01:08:01.887
 that\'s not in the NRC.
 
 01:08:02.055 --> 01:08:03.475
 That\'s not in any report.
 
 01:08:03.643 --> 01:08:05.786
 That\'s a big number,
 and it\'s just not right.
 
 01:08:05.954 --> 01:08:08.806
 I disagree with you a little bit
 on the natural seepage rate.
 
 01:08:08.984 --> 01:08:14.755
 The low-end estimate is 400 barrels
 per day over the entire ecosystem.
 
 01:08:15.154 --> 01:08:19.516
 If you compare Macondo to that,
 it\'s seven orders of magnitude higher
 
 01:08:19.684 --> 01:08:20.688
 on an areal basis.
 
 01:08:20.895 --> 01:08:27.713
 While these organisms do experience
 exposure to oil and gas, naturally,
 
 01:08:27.866 --> 01:08:31.075
 to suddenly ramp up seven
 orders of magnitude,
 
 01:08:31.243 --> 01:08:34.176
 that\'s just physiologically,
 in my opinion, impossible.
 
 01:08:34.379 --> 01:08:37.716
 Points like that,
 I did get my dander up,
 
 01:08:37.884 --> 01:08:41.527
 because I think it\'s a really
 critical thing to clarify.
 
 01:08:41.695 --> 01:08:45.727
 -There\'s that feeling in you
 especially pushed by the NOAA,
 
 01:08:45.881 --> 01:08:48.018
 that everything\'s going
 to be just fine.
 
 01:08:49.089 --> 01:08:50.389
 -I don\'t share that.
 
 01:08:50.557 --> 01:08:51.365
 -Why is that?
 
 01:08:51.541 --> 01:08:53.281
 Why do you think
 they\'re pushing that?
 
 01:08:53.449 --> 01:08:55.544
 -Everybody wants it to be fine.
 
 01:08:55.712 --> 01:08:56.824
 I want it to be fine.
 
 01:08:56.992 --> 01:08:58.349
 I wish I could sit here
 and stand
 
 01:08:58.517 --> 01:09:00.879
 and tell you that I thought
 everything was going to be wonderful,
 
 01:09:01.047 --> 01:09:02.912
 fine by 2012.
 
 01:09:03.460 --> 01:09:04.666
 I\'ve been to the bottom,
 
 01:09:04.834 --> 01:09:06.824
 I\'ve seen what it looks
 like with my own eyes.
 
 01:09:07.063 --> 01:09:09.141
 It\'s not going to be fine by 2012.
 
 01:09:09.441 --> 01:09:11.413
 -Do you find yourself more
 comfortable with things like
 
 01:09:11.581 --> 01:09:16.133
 what Wes Tunnel said when he goes,
 things will be okay in about a year?
 
 01:09:16.301 --> 01:09:19.140
 -Based upon our experience
 with the Ixtoc I blowout,
 
 01:09:19.308 --> 01:09:20.934
 which was actually
 in the Gulf of Mexico
 
 01:09:21.102 --> 01:09:22.464
 and were quite similar,
 
 01:09:22.689 --> 01:09:24.571
 we couldn\'t see any effects
 after two years.
 
 01:09:25.160 --> 01:09:29.947
 I was saying this right
 from the very beginning that, well,
 
 01:09:30.122 --> 01:09:35.788
 it may not be as devastating
 as some people are thinking.
 
 01:09:35.956 --> 01:09:38.957
 -Is it fair to say those who are
 optimistic things are getting better
 
 01:09:39.125 --> 01:09:42.822
 and things will be fine by 2012
 are looking in the wrong places?
 
 01:09:43.433 --> 01:09:45.150
 -Well, they\'re either
 looking at the wrong places
 
 01:09:45.318 --> 01:09:48.912
 or they\'re not considering
 the entire available dataset.
 
 01:09:49.127 --> 01:09:51.354
 -Now, I have to ask this,
 because others have raised this.
 
 01:09:51.808 --> 01:09:56.761
 You\'re working on grants from
 pre-Macondo still that are BP grants?
 
 01:09:56.929 --> 01:09:57.848
 -That\'s right.
 
 01:09:58.016 --> 01:10:00.563
 We are at the Lawrence Berkeley
 National Laboratory,
 
 01:10:00.731 --> 01:10:03.769
 which is the US Department
 of Energy National Laboratory.
 
 01:10:04.353 --> 01:10:08.585
 Very strict requirements, conflicts
 of interest, and that sort of thing.
 
 01:10:08.753 --> 01:10:10.590
 -It doesn\'t mean that
 you shouldn\'t be optimistic.
 
 01:10:10.758 --> 01:10:12.890
 I think you should be optimistic
 the Gulf is resilient.
 
 01:10:13.058 --> 01:10:15.880
 But just because it\'s a system
 that\'s rich in hydrocarbons
 
 01:10:16.048 --> 01:10:21.147
 doesn\'t mean it can digest,
 if you will, this amount of carbon
 
 01:10:21.315 --> 01:10:24.177
 on the timescale
 that we\'re talking about.
 
 01:10:24.370 --> 01:10:27.536
 We don\'t know all the answers,
 and that\'s going to be my conclusion.
 
 01:10:27.704 --> 01:10:29.782
 We need to do
 a lot more research.
 
 01:10:30.020 --> 01:10:35.100
 I think the $500 Million that BP
 has put on the table is a good start
 
 01:10:35.268 --> 01:10:39.658
 for getting the kinds of information
 that we need to answer the questions
 
 01:10:39.826 --> 01:10:41.919
 that need to be answered critically.
 
 01:10:42.919 --> 01:10:46.397
 -We\'re funding that research over
 the next 10 years, to the tune
 
 01:10:46.565 --> 01:10:49.082
 of an additional $500 Billion
 that we are funding.
 
 01:10:49.271 --> 01:10:53.397
 In addition to what independent
 research is being done to support our
 
 01:10:53.565 --> 01:10:55.529
 long term understandings of yes,
 
 01:10:55.696 --> 01:10:58.610
 the ecosystem has
 absorbed any suspended oils
 
 01:10:58.778 --> 01:11:01.514
 in the water to the best of our
 scientific knowledge today,
 
 01:11:01.698 --> 01:11:04.335
 but what\'s the long term consequences
 of that having occurred?
 
 01:11:04.788 --> 01:11:07.785
 I do remind you,
 that ecosystem is there,
 
 01:11:07.953 --> 01:11:09.789
 because of the natural seepage
 
 01:11:09.956 --> 01:11:12.881
 that is occurring every day
 of oils and gases.
 
 01:11:13.136 --> 01:11:14.738
 Whether it\'s naturally flowing,
 
 01:11:14.945 --> 01:11:18.595
 it\'s discharged from vessels
 or it\'s from, unfortunately,
 
 01:11:18.763 --> 01:11:20.443
 this type of incident.
 
 01:11:35.288 --> 01:11:38.638
 -We\'re going to bring
 the dolphin in here and take x-rays.
 
 01:11:39.164 --> 01:11:41.312
 Then once we get our x-rays,
 we\'ll take our measurements
 
 01:11:41.480 --> 01:11:43.441
 or morphometrics, they call them.
 
 01:11:44.453 --> 01:11:46.413
 It\'s going to be lined up
 with this line here.
 
 01:11:46.581 --> 01:11:49.040
 January, February,
 we make it one to two a month,
 
 01:11:49.208 --> 01:11:52.351
 and right now we\'re up to 37.
 
 01:11:53.801 --> 01:11:57.480
 First time with any forensic study
 is you try to make your list
 
 01:11:57.648 --> 01:11:59.544
 of any possibility that you may find.
 
 01:12:00.326 --> 01:12:02.186
 One could be the BP oil spill.
 
 01:12:02.354 --> 01:12:04.487
 Secondly, it could be dispersant.
 
 01:12:05.036 --> 01:12:06.520
 Then we start looking,
 is it a virus?
 
 01:12:06.688 --> 01:12:08.121
 Is bacterial?
 Is it fungal?
 
 01:12:08.488 --> 01:12:11.861
 Is it developmental?
 Is it temperature-related?
 
 01:12:12.099 --> 01:12:13.242
 Population-related?
 
 01:12:13.410 --> 01:12:15.948
 Do we have more dolphins in this area
 than we\'ve ever had before,
 
 01:12:16.116 --> 01:12:17.591
 and maybe they\'re having more babies?
 
 01:12:17.759 --> 01:12:18.971
 That looks like intestines.
 
 01:12:19.146 --> 01:12:20.012
 We\'ll see when we get in.
 
 01:12:20.180 --> 01:12:24.468
 It\'s also concerns us, because
 if we\'re getting this many animals
 
 01:12:24.616 --> 01:12:27.853
 at this time period, what are
 we going to get in March and April,
 
 01:12:28.128 --> 01:12:30.226
 which is our true stranding season?
 
 01:12:30.394 --> 01:12:31.869
 That\'s when it really gets busy.
 
 01:12:32.226 --> 01:12:36.578
 Right now, we\'re already 10 times,
 15 times what we normally have.
 
 01:12:37.977 --> 01:12:40.832
 -We ask people to pay
 attention to this issue,
 
 01:12:41.000 --> 01:12:42.735
 because it affects all of us.
 
 01:12:43.936 --> 01:12:48.160
 The changes in these animals also
 reflect the possible changes
 
 01:12:48.328 --> 01:12:51.272
 that might be going on
 in the entire ecosystem.
 
 01:12:56.497 --> 01:13:00.913
 -One of the biggest concerns
 that we\'re facing today is the health
 
 01:13:01.081 --> 01:13:03.022
 and wellbeing of the workforce
 
 01:13:03.189 --> 01:13:06.009
 who was in support
 of the response efforts,
 
 01:13:06.177 --> 01:13:08.812
 but also in the communities
 that are along the coast.
 
 01:13:09.400 --> 01:13:12.679
 Their safety, and the understanding
 of the risks that we expose them to
 
 01:13:12.847 --> 01:13:15.227
 were paramount in our
 everyday decision making.
 
 01:13:15.742 --> 01:13:19.981
 We gathered more than
 40,000 individual air monitors
 
 01:13:20.188 --> 01:13:22.716
 on individual workers to ascertain
 
 01:13:22.884 --> 01:13:26.224
 were they being exposed
 to potential harmful vapors
 
 01:13:26.566 --> 01:13:29.877
 from the oil
 or from the use of dispersants.
 
 01:13:30.186 --> 01:13:33.642
 Not a single individual
 out of those 40,000 plus
 
 01:13:33.810 --> 01:13:35.928
 were exposed to harmful levels.
 
 01:13:37.864 --> 01:13:42.882
 [music]
 
 01:13:48.627 --> 01:13:50.219
 -The reason we\'re here today
 
 01:13:50.759 --> 01:13:54.497
 is that we\'re talking to people
 here who are sick.
 
 01:13:54.863 --> 01:13:59.215
 Most of these people live in really
 close proximity to the beach,
 
 01:13:59.573 --> 01:14:01.207
 and during the hot months,
 
 01:14:01.375 --> 01:14:03.898
 the oil was volatilizing
 
 01:14:04.278 --> 01:14:07.021
 and there was a lot of vapor
 insolvent in the air.
 
 01:14:07.174 --> 01:14:09.974
 I was here in July,
 and I could smell that.
 
 01:14:10.523 --> 01:14:12.695
 -Hi, Jessica.
 -Hello.
 
 01:14:14.182 --> 01:14:18.319
 -I just want to talk to you about
 how you\'re feeling,
 
 01:14:18.495 --> 01:14:20.326
 and as a resident here
 in Grand Isle,
 
 01:14:20.502 --> 01:14:23.450
 when you first noticed
 that you felt sick?
 
 01:14:23.807 --> 01:14:28.773
 -Well, right after the oil spill,
 pretty much most of the students
 
 01:14:28.941 --> 01:14:31.674
 in the school got sick
 after maybe a week.
 
 01:14:32.154 --> 01:14:33.834
 I had a horrible cough.
 
 01:14:34.217 --> 01:14:35.989
 Then I had high fevers.
 
 01:14:36.141 --> 01:14:39.301
 I had fevers up to
 103.9 every night.
 
 01:14:40.488 --> 01:14:44.264
 -Once oil enters, the body
 gets toxic to every organ system.
 
 01:14:45.382 --> 01:14:49.459
 The reproductive system,
 the nervous system, the liver,
 
 01:14:49.627 --> 01:14:51.788
 kidneys, the skin.
 
 01:14:52.046 --> 01:14:53.656
 -I had severe bronchitis.
 
 01:14:53.824 --> 01:14:55.370
 I\'ve been having
 breathing problems.
 
 01:14:55.538 --> 01:14:57.727
 The doctor thought I had asthma,
 and I didn\'t
 
 01:14:57.895 --> 01:15:01.031
 -I ended up with two
 really fierce ear infections.
 
 01:15:01.199 --> 01:15:03.015
 I\'ve never had ear infections before.
 
 01:15:03.183 --> 01:15:06.993
 -I\'ve been having a constant
 cough, sinus problems.
 
 01:15:07.517 --> 01:15:09.651
 Bleeding out my nose, sometimes.
 
 01:15:10.073 --> 01:15:13.502
 -Oil readily enters the body
 when it\'s dispersed.
 
 01:15:13.908 --> 01:15:17.121
 That\'s why it\'s more toxic
 in a dispersed form.
 
 01:15:17.400 --> 01:15:20.862
 -I went to the doctor, and she
 diagnosed me with pneumonitis,
 
 01:15:21.030 --> 01:15:24.134
 which is chemical burning
 of the lining of my lungs.
 
 01:15:24.302 --> 01:15:27.844
 -I worked on the oil spill, and we
 worked out there for two months
 
 01:15:28.092 --> 01:15:30.159
 when I first started coming in.
 
 01:15:30.709 --> 01:15:33.838
 I just got my test results yesterday,
 the doctor called me up.
 
 01:15:34.687 --> 01:15:37.888
 I got all kinds of poisons
 in my blood and them toxins and all.
 
 01:15:38.056 --> 01:15:40.787
 -In the same way
 that the dispersant breaks down
 
 01:15:40.954 --> 01:15:42.905
 the lipid membrane of the oil,
 
 01:15:43.493 --> 01:15:48.680
 the dispersant also can break down
 the lipid wall of cells and organs.
 
 01:15:48.862 --> 01:15:51.855
 -I know another girl in my class
 whose ears bleed.
 
 01:15:52.331 --> 01:15:54.761
 You\'ll just be in class
 and you\'ll see a trickle of blood.
 
 01:15:54.989 --> 01:15:59.386
 -As a scientist, I\'m of course,
 skeptical of some of these stories
 
 01:15:59.554 --> 01:16:01.582
 of these high levels of chemicals,
 
 01:16:01.749 --> 01:16:07.598
 but I think certain people
 now have gone
 
 01:16:07.766 --> 01:16:12.185
 and gotten tested, and
 there are data that we can look at.
 
 01:16:12.431 --> 01:16:13.828
 It\'s not so anecdotal.
 
 01:16:14.065 --> 01:16:17.395
 -It\'s constant burn
 in my chest, nervousness,
 
 01:16:17.724 --> 01:16:20.384
 and I got a glop
 that\'s coming out on my eye.
 
 01:16:21.186 --> 01:16:22.596
 That started on the oil spill.
 
 01:16:22.764 --> 01:16:24.898
 -You just got your test results.
 
 01:16:25.056 --> 01:16:27.115
 Tell me what you remember of that?
 
 01:16:27.274 --> 01:16:30.900
 -I got an exime in my blood,
 ethanol poisoning.
 
 01:16:31.068 --> 01:16:33.347
 -Essentially,
 you have chemical poisoning?
 
 01:16:33.515 --> 01:16:34.639
 -Yes, ma\'a.
 -Right.
 
 01:16:34.813 --> 01:16:35.567
 Chemical poisoning.
 
 01:16:35.718 --> 01:16:38.518
 -You have very high levels
 of the chemical?
 
 01:16:38.744 --> 01:16:40.243
 This is heartbreaking.
 
 01:16:40.814 --> 01:16:43.321
 I am a scientist,
 I came here as a scientist,
 
 01:16:43.488 --> 01:16:45.230
 I\'m working on a project here.
 
 01:16:50.625 --> 01:16:52.850
 It\'s just hard to hear
 
 01:16:54.795 --> 01:16:58.745
 the incredible sadness and suffering.
 
 01:16:58.913 --> 01:17:02.680
 There are people
 that are not even on the edge,
 
 01:17:02.894 --> 01:17:04.029
 they\'re over the edge.
 
 01:17:04.577 --> 01:17:07.505
 There are animals out there
 that are over the edge,
 
 01:17:07.720 --> 01:17:11.496
 there\'s baby dolphins that are dying
 that are over the edge.
 
 01:17:11.722 --> 01:17:13.681
 There\'s only so much
 
 01:17:14.722 --> 01:17:19.471
 that we can pollute
 and still maintain the planet.
 
 01:17:19.777 --> 01:17:22.857
 We are pushing ourselves
 to the edge, I think.
 
 01:17:24.145 --> 01:17:25.992
 -We have continued to work
 
 01:17:26.159 --> 01:17:29.864
 and support the funding
 through a $10 Million grant
 
 01:17:30.031 --> 01:17:33.679
 to actually study the long-term
 exposures and consequences
 
 01:17:33.847 --> 01:17:36.590
 to the workforce
 who was in response.
 
 01:17:36.999 --> 01:17:40.414
 They\'re undertaking that study
 to ensure that factually,
 
 01:17:40.582 --> 01:17:44.029
 we can demonstrate that
 that workforce was not exposed
 
 01:17:44.374 --> 01:17:47.680
 in a way that created harm
 for their health and wellbeing.
 
 01:17:48.285 --> 01:17:51.282
 For anybody
 who is experiencing health issues,
 
 01:17:51.582 --> 01:17:54.828
 we\'re working to ensure
 that the local medical communities
 
 01:17:54.996 --> 01:17:58.252
 have the relevant
 and specific information
 
 01:17:58.698 --> 01:18:02.331
 as it relates to hydrocarbons
 and to the dispersants used
 
 01:18:02.499 --> 01:18:04.800
 so that those local doctors
 and physicians
 
 01:18:04.968 --> 01:18:09.180
 can make appropriate
 medical analysis
 
 01:18:09.442 --> 01:18:12.000
 and recommendations
 for their patients.
 
 01:18:13.580 --> 01:18:17.808
 [music]
 
 01:18:28.690 --> 01:18:34.060
 -We\'re looking at approximately
 a 7.5 to 9 mile facing stretch
 
 01:18:34.228 --> 01:18:37.027
 of marsh impact
 that we\'re dealing with
 
 01:18:37.195 --> 01:18:39.700
 here in the Barataria Bay Area.
 
 01:18:40.391 --> 01:18:42.668
 These two crane devices
 that you\'re seeing here
 
 01:18:42.836 --> 01:18:44.627
 were actually developed specifically
 
 01:18:44.795 --> 01:18:47.366
 with the devices
 on the end of them to be used
 
 01:18:47.534 --> 01:18:50.113
 to help us reach into the marsh
 
 01:18:50.425 --> 01:18:54.317
 to be able to rake
 and squeegee the oil
 
 01:18:54.485 --> 01:18:57.161
 that is been trapped
 under the grass as
 
 01:18:57.328 --> 01:19:00.004
 it was laid down
 during storm conditions.
 
 01:19:01.218 --> 01:19:05.804
 We\'re going in and removing
 that oil affected vegetation
 
 01:19:05.972 --> 01:19:11.230
 to allow for the roots that
 haven\'t been impacted to regenerate.
 
 01:19:12.160 --> 01:19:16.320
 You can see the new fresh green,
 that\'s all new growth coming back
 
 01:19:16.488 --> 01:19:18.688
 through an area
 that was impacted.
 
 01:19:19.528 --> 01:19:23.906
 -This vegetation is what\'s protecting
 the shoreline here from eroding.
 
 01:19:24.355 --> 01:19:28.846
 As storms come in, the waves
 beat against the shorelines.
 
 01:19:29.014 --> 01:19:30.997
 If there\'s no vegetation in place,
 
 01:19:31.164 --> 01:19:33.711
 then it just erodes away
 at the landmass.
 
 01:19:34.298 --> 01:19:35.673
 Once you erode this away,
 
 01:19:35.840 --> 01:19:38.925
 you\'re losing your
 estuaries for your fish.
 
 01:19:39.323 --> 01:19:43.752
 You\'re losing your hurricane
 protection for what\'s behind this.
 
 01:19:44.053 --> 01:19:46.732
 This is a very, very critical area.
 
 01:19:48.466 --> 01:19:50.905
 -We\'re approximately 30% complete.
 
 01:19:51.295 --> 01:19:54.001
 We expect that we will be able
 to complete this task
 
 01:19:54.135 --> 01:19:55.372
 by the end of June.
 
 01:19:56.026 --> 01:19:57.226
 It\'s very slow.
 
 01:19:57.376 --> 01:19:59.654
 It\'s very methodical work,
 as you can see.
 
 01:20:00.223 --> 01:20:03.107
 We\'ll continue that until
 we\'ve completed this process.
 
 01:20:04.394 --> 01:20:06.885
 [music]
 
 01:20:07.330 --> 01:20:10.620
 -I think they\'re just hanging out
 right between those two birds.
 
 01:20:10.772 --> 01:20:11.772
 [music]
 
 01:20:11.939 --> 01:20:15.962
 We\'re very optimistic
 that the region was very resilient
 
 01:20:16.130 --> 01:20:17.287
 and things would be coming back,
 
 01:20:17.455 --> 01:20:21.227
 until we hit
 this recent mortality with dolphins.
 
 01:20:22.686 --> 01:20:24.697
 -Actually, before the spill occurred,
 
 01:20:24.865 --> 01:20:28.961
 marine biologists declared
 an unusual mortality event
 
 01:20:29.317 --> 01:20:31.517
 in the Bottlenose Dolphin species.
 
 01:20:31.797 --> 01:20:34.597
 Then events of April 2010 occurred,
 
 01:20:34.907 --> 01:20:37.581
 and they\'re looking
 at potential multiple causes.
 
 01:20:37.756 --> 01:20:40.008
 Is it an influx of cold water,
 
 01:20:40.175 --> 01:20:43.128
 because of the
 extremely strong winters
 
 01:20:43.256 --> 01:20:46.236
 that we\'ve- cold winters that
 we\'ve had over the last two years?
 
 01:20:46.404 --> 01:20:50.572
 Is it biological in nature in term
 of some form of disease?
 
 01:20:50.874 --> 01:20:55.211
 Is it also a consequence
 of this event creating a stressor
 
 01:20:55.490 --> 01:20:57.757
 to the dolphin community?
 
 01:20:58.344 --> 01:20:59.816
 -Starting January or February,
 
 01:20:59.984 --> 01:21:03.169
 we saw a huge spike
 in the dolphin mortality,
 
 01:21:03.337 --> 01:21:06.637
 but the most unusual thing
 was that majority of them
 
 01:21:07.011 --> 01:21:08.451
 were young calves.
 
 01:21:10.254 --> 01:21:14.063
 [music]
 
 01:21:19.538 --> 01:21:22.324
 -The dead baby dolphins
 are the canary in the coal mine.
 
 01:21:22.520 --> 01:21:27.798
 They are telling us that we can\'t
 forget about the Deepwater Horizon.
 
 01:21:28.355 --> 01:21:29.494
 It remains to be proven
 
 01:21:29.661 --> 01:21:32.771
 that there is a link between
 the death of this baby dolphins
 
 01:21:33.201 --> 01:21:35.598
 and exposure
 to oil-derived compounds.
 
 01:21:35.766 --> 01:21:38.255
 But the timing of the spill
 and the timing
 
 01:21:42.750 --> 01:21:45.918
 of the fetuses washing
 up on the beaches
 
 01:21:46.086 --> 01:21:48.170
 is very suspicious to me.
 
 01:21:48.376 --> 01:21:51.266
 -To really get to the point,
 you have to do the testing.
 
 01:21:51.434 --> 01:21:54.842
 I believe it is
 the responsibility now
 
 01:21:55.010 --> 01:21:56.199
 of the Federal government
 to do that,
 
 01:21:56.367 --> 01:21:58.631
 because they have taken
 over all the samples.
 
 01:22:02.430 --> 01:22:04.533
 [music]
 
 01:22:08.346 --> 01:22:12.624
 -Everybody\'s favorite thing to do
 when you\'re at sea is to get up
 
 01:22:12.775 --> 01:22:15.603
 on the bow and watch the dolphins.
 
 01:22:16.954 --> 01:22:19.192
 The captain will announce
 it on the loud speaker,
 
 01:22:19.430 --> 01:22:23.440
 \"There are dolphins on the bow.\"
 Everybody stops what they\'re doing.
 
 01:22:24.300 --> 01:22:27.720
 They run up there,
 and watch the dolphins.
 
 01:22:30.758 --> 01:22:32.338
 Every time I\'ve done it,
 
 01:22:33.998 --> 01:22:39.390
 there\'s always been
 a few babies with the moms.
 
 01:22:40.631 --> 01:22:42.670
 It\'s just an amazing thing to see.
 
 01:22:43.069 --> 01:22:46.406
 The thought that
 you might not see that anymore--
 
 01:22:46.808 --> 01:22:48.777
 I\'m sure they\'re not all
 going to die,
 
 01:22:49.264 --> 01:22:51.391
 but the fact that any of them die,
 
 01:22:53.648 --> 01:22:56.380
 we have a long way to
 go to really understand
 
 01:22:56.547 --> 01:22:58.256
 what\'s happening out there.
 
 01:23:01.829 --> 01:23:04.258
 [music]
 
 01:23:07.717 --> 01:23:10.429
 -You guys have been toiling
 for a better of a year.
 
 01:23:12.717 --> 01:23:16.109
 Everybody\'s trying to put their hands
 to it to fix the problem,
 
 01:23:16.345 --> 01:23:17.773
 and they grow weary.
 
 01:23:18.005 --> 01:23:21.425
 My encouragement to you is
 do not let your hands grow weary.
 
 01:23:21.567 --> 01:23:22.635
 Let the Lord God--
 
 01:23:22.802 --> 01:23:24.205
 -You don\'t know
 what\'s out there.
 
 01:23:24.376 --> 01:23:28.984
 You don\'t know if the catch is going
 to be the same as in previous years.
 
 01:23:29.113 --> 01:23:31.065
 We don\'t know if we\'ll be
 pulling up tar balls.
 
 01:23:31.372 --> 01:23:32.241
 -I talked to the guy yesterday.
 
 01:23:32.409 --> 01:23:34.680
 He said, \"I don\'t want to eat
 no shrimp for another three years.\"
 
 01:23:34.884 --> 01:23:37.121
 I make sure that gulf is clean.
 
 01:23:38.020 --> 01:23:41.221
 -This is more than
 just my livelihood.
 
 01:23:41.407 --> 01:23:46.452
 This is what I am, who
 I am, what our family is,
 
 01:23:48.096 --> 01:23:49.782
 what we\'ve done for generations.
 
 01:23:51.095 --> 01:23:52.437
 -There\'s not in many places
 
 01:23:52.605 --> 01:23:55.704
 that can be considered
 a 135-year old business.
 
 01:23:57.320 --> 01:24:01.101
 It\'s actually an obligation
 to the city of New Orleans
 
 01:24:01.309 --> 01:24:06.414
 and something that
 if we can do it as a family,
 
 01:24:06.581 --> 01:24:08.528
 then let\'s do it.
 
 01:24:09.767 --> 01:24:11.145
 -This is the prize right here.
 
 01:24:11.478 --> 01:24:13.611
 Yes, I\'ve got this for 300 bucks.
 
 01:24:13.797 --> 01:24:16.347
 I used to get to change
 the headlights and stuff on it.
 
 01:24:16.513 --> 01:24:19.112
 A couple of knickknacks,
 I get about 2,500 bucks,
 
 01:24:19.520 --> 01:24:21.727
 but I got to keep the beans balling
 since I can\'t work,
 
 01:24:21.894 --> 01:24:23.229
 it don\'t mean I\'m going to stop.
 
 01:24:23.642 --> 01:24:25.706
 It ain\'t what I want to do,
 but it\'s what I got to do.
 
 01:24:25.865 --> 01:24:30.294
 -I\'m really hoping for a good summer,
 because we really do need it.
 
 01:24:30.742 --> 01:24:32.714
 If the beaches are clear enough
 
 01:24:32.881 --> 01:24:36.445
 that people can go
 and bring their children down there,
 
 01:24:36.874 --> 01:24:38.874
 maybe we can get a good summer.
 
 01:24:40.302 --> 01:24:41.518
 -Of course, it\'s all
 in those marshes.
 
 01:24:41.772 --> 01:24:43.358
 We don\'t know what the impact
 
 01:24:43.526 --> 01:24:45.231
 if it\'s going to be over
 a long period of time.
 
 01:24:45.549 --> 01:24:47.055
 We need a lot of research.
 
 01:24:47.505 --> 01:24:50.160
 Is it look like--
 Is there\'s some evidence
 
 01:24:50.328 --> 01:24:54.918
 that it\'s not as catastrophic
 as originally feared?
 
 01:24:55.619 --> 01:24:57.961
 Maybe, I\'m skeptical.
 
 01:24:58.302 --> 01:24:58.929
 -All right.
 
 01:24:59.033 --> 01:25:00.300
 What we\'re going to do here
 
 01:25:00.467 --> 01:25:02.285
 is we want to start
 over on this side,
 
 01:25:02.524 --> 01:25:06.294
 bow past, pay our respects as we go.
 
 01:25:06.532 --> 01:25:08.227
 -When you affect the person\'s life
 
 01:25:08.394 --> 01:25:12.957
 in the way we did,
 it\'s really gratifying.
 
 01:25:13.245 --> 01:25:15.185
 I\'m just wishing we could\'ve
 done more about this.
 
 01:25:15.885 --> 01:25:16.885
 -Adam Wise.
 
 01:25:19.690 --> 01:25:20.890
 Stephen Curtis.
 
 01:25:22.142 --> 01:25:23.662
 Aaron Dale Burkeen.
 
 01:25:24.618 --> 01:25:31.061
 -But you could tell,
 a lot of gratitude from those guys.
 
 01:25:32.780 --> 01:25:34.892
 I\'ll never forget
 the look in their eyes.
 
 01:25:35.755 --> 01:25:36.755
 [music]
 
 01:25:37.010 --> 01:25:38.037
 -This was a tragedy.
 
 01:25:38.205 --> 01:25:42.025
 11 men lost their lives
 as a result of this accident.
 
 01:25:42.280 --> 01:25:45.068
 It\'s something that always
 must be remembered.
 
 01:25:45.502 --> 01:25:49.530
 It must be learned from
 and it must not be forgotten.
 
 01:25:50.618 --> 01:25:57.610
 This year has been a reminder of just
 how fragile and how fallible
 
 01:25:57.748 --> 01:25:59.018
 both the human beings
 
 01:25:59.116 --> 01:26:01.670
 and the technology
 that we depend on really are.
 
 01:26:01.930 --> 01:26:03.554
 It\'s also been a year
 
 01:26:03.722 --> 01:26:08.042
 in which I\'ve had the opportunity
 to see the very best of people
 
 01:26:08.300 --> 01:26:12.990
 and the best of our ingenuity
 and creativity to tackle a problem,
 
 01:26:13.229 --> 01:26:15.059
 and together work solutions.
 
 01:26:16.476 --> 01:26:20.482
 What we\'re seeing out
 of the coast of Grand Isle
 
 01:26:20.929 --> 01:26:23.292
 is the opening
 of brown shrimping season,
 
 01:26:23.460 --> 01:26:24.721
 which opened May 2nd.
 
 01:26:24.889 --> 01:26:26.730
 We\'re only on day three
 of that season.
 
 01:26:26.905 --> 01:26:29.007
 Early indications are
 the catch is good,
 
 01:26:29.657 --> 01:26:32.386
 but it\'s still early stages
 associated with that.
 
 01:26:33.223 --> 01:26:35.605
 -I would have probably
 told you a year ago
 
 01:26:35.772 --> 01:26:38.696
 that one person couldn\'t
 really make a difference
 
 01:26:38.864 --> 01:26:40.850
 in the course
 of an event like an oil spill.
 
 01:26:41.720 --> 01:26:45.413
 But there are a lot of individuals
 who took a lot of punches
 
 01:26:45.581 --> 01:26:49.661
 for speaking up and telling
 the world what we saw.
 
 01:26:52.351 --> 01:26:56.062
 What I learned is that people
 appreciated it and they listened.
 
 01:26:56.400 --> 01:26:57.671
 They want to know more.
 
 01:26:58.084 --> 01:27:02.012
 It\'s made me realize that one person
 can make a difference.
 
 01:27:02.653 --> 01:27:04.351
 [music]
Distributor: Face to Face Media
Length: 87 minutes
Date: 2011
Genre: Expository
Language: English
		Color/BW: 
		 
	
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