Here's a graphic showing the jobs lost due to Obama's moratorium. Click on the graphic for a larger version.
Blogging from Slidell, Louisiana about loving life on the Gulf Coast despite BP and Katrina
Baby steps, but check it out here….the only thing you see is the dispersants being squirted out:
http://www.wwl.com/View-all-12---Spill-Cam---video-feeds/7381402
pray!
| Interactive Project Spotlights Lives Changed by Oil Spill ; Effort to culminate in customizable book "The Gulf and Me: A Storygathering Journey" has two components: a community-driven website where people affected by the spill can upload their stories and images to share with others, and an upcoming journey through the Gulf region by Atlanta-based writer, personal historian and custom book designer Michael Pearson to collect additional stories. The project will culminate with publication of "The Gulf and Me," a book of stories and photos chronicling the experiences of Gulf Coast residents affected by the spill. Individuals, organizations and communities will have an opportunity to customize the book to feature their own experiences, creating a unique memoir of an unprecedented disaster. Stories posted to the website, including those generated during the storygathering expedition, will remain freely available on the Web indefinitely. A portion of any proceeds will go to Gulf recovery efforts. "The Deepwater Horizon oil spill has disrupted untold thousands of lives and threatens to change life in the Gulf of Mexico for years to come," Pearson said. "It's important to tell the stories of everyday people affected by what's happened and to preserve those stories. We need to remember years from now that this disaster will have had not just enormous environmental and policy impacts, but significant personal impacts, as well." An integral part of "The Gulf and Me" is the opportunity for the people closest to the story, Gulf Coast residents, to help direct the expedition by nominating people and places to be profiled, according to Pearson, a former journalist with The Associated Press and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The trip is being designed to be detailed in near-real time on the website, with frequent image and video updates, journal entries and an active Twitter feed. Some interviews and tours may be streamed live, with visitors having an opportunity to participate by asking their own questions. To view the project, please visit www.thegulfandme.com. To submit profile nominations, visit "The Assignment Desk" http:// www.thegulfandme.com/the-assignment-desk. SOURCE The Gulf and Me Project |
Here's an email I got from the Gulf Restoration Network
Tell the Feds to Stop the Secrecy and Protect the Gulf!
Dear Judy,
Recently, we began receiving reports of inadequately trained BP contractors crushing bird eggs and disturbing tern nests in coastal areas. These disturbing reports were coming from independent monitors - citizens, journalists, and groups like GRN - who have been out in the impacted areas working to make sure that BP and federal officials do everything possible to clean up this mess.
Independent voices are essential for gathering the full knowledge of the disaster's impacts that is so desperately needed, but BP is working hard to stem the flow of information. Unfortunately, the federal government seems to be taking some pointers from BP's playbook.
Restrictions on air space over the impacted area continue to frustrate efforts to monitor the disaster and new rules limit on-the-ground access to cleanup operations - threatening independent monitors with felony charges and $40,000 penalties. What we need is more transparency, not more rules!
Tell the Feds to stop protecting BP, and start protecting Gulf wildlife, click here:
http://action.healthygulf.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=4314
It is essential that our leaders do everything necessary to protect Gulf communities, and wildlife. As this massive clean-up and recovery effort continues, increased transparency is vital to successfully restoring the Gulf, defending our communities, and making sure this never happens again. Please add your voice to the chorus of independent voices calling for more transparency, and better protection for Gulf wildlife.
For the future of the Gulf,
Aaron Viles
Campaign Director
The Gulf Restoration Network is a diverse network of local, regional, and national groups and individuals dedicated to protecting and restoring the valuable natural resources of the Gulf of Mexico. Don't worry, GRN will never sell or share your information. To unsubscribe, visit this site.