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Friday, May 21, 2010 2:52:03 PM
Wayne King to me
show details 1:24 PM (1 hour ago)
A perfect strategy!
Also here's the contact emails for
"Rachel Maddow" <rachel@msnbc.com>,
Keith Ohlberman "Countdown" <countdown@msnbc.com>,
Chris Matthews "Hardball" <hardball@msnbc.com>,
I think you'll have a lot of credibiltiy
- Show quoted text -
{Me to him}
Fantastic! Hope we make progress on major network coverage soon. I have noticed that Anderson Cooper on CNN is starting to get very involved in covering "the clean up". Should I try to contact him and refer him to you?
On idea # 2 : This guy is a must contact.
Idea # 2. Contact William Walker at Louisiana MDEQ who needs secondary boom, including absorbent boom.
Oil spill washes into Louisiana marshes; MDEQ head spots oil
By Jillian Kramer
May 21, 2010, 5:00AM
http://blog.gulflive.com/mississippi-press-news/2010/05/oil_spill_washes_into_louisian.html
(Press-Register/Harlan Kirgan)
Fiery trails of decomposing oil surrounded the Deepwater Horizon oil spill site in the Gulf of Mexico
on Thursday. William Walker, executive director of the Mississippi Department of Marine Resources, was with a group of reporters and photographers aboard a National Guard helicopter on a flyover of the spill site about 100 miles south of Mississippi. An oil sheen was seen about 69 miles south of Gulflport on the flight and it was the closest visible evidence of oil to the state's coast.
Oil well owner BP PLC said Thursday that more oil than was first estimated is gushing into the Gulf of Mexico at the same time the company was ordered to use a less-toxic form of chemical dispersant.
Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported that gooey, rust-colored oil washed into the marshes at the mouth of the Mississippi River and the wetlands of Louisiana for the first time.
According to the AP, up until now only tar balls and a sheen of oil had come ashore. But on Wednesday, chocolate brown and vivid orange globs, sheets and ribbons of foul-smelling oil the consistency of latex paint began coating the reeds and grasses of Louisiana's wetlands, home to rare birds, mammals and a rich variety of marine life.
The director flew about 100 miles over the sheen of oil. "It's still leaking fresh product," he said. "As long as that happens, we don't have a finite problem to get our arm around."
Mississippi's coast is fortified by boom, Walker said, but secondary boom, including absorbent boom, may have to be laid "to better protect areas."
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