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Stock Lobster

06/12/10 6:10 PM

#323551 RE: EZ2 #323550

>>PBS: On the Gulf Coast, Media Access Can Be Hard to Come

By: Spencer Michels

Updated 5:20pm ET

BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles issued this letter on media access Wednesday. In the statement, Suttles says "BP fully supports and defends all individuals rights to share their personal thoughts and experiences with journalists if they so choose."

Posted 1:30pm ET

I recently returned to my home base of San Francisco from Louisiana after a week covering the oil spill for the NewsHour. It was a fascinating and frustrating week. But trying to find out what was going on was sometimes impossible. The best example occurred on the first day.

Producer Joanne Elgart Jennings, cameraman Brian Gill and I were in Venice, La., that tiny outpost on the Gulf, more than two hours' drive south of New Orleans. We had heard BP was setting up a health center after several workers had become ill, possibly from oil fumes. We thought that might make a good story. Someone pointed us to a building, where we were told we couldn't get in without a pass. Well, where could we get a pass? Someone pointed to another building. When we got there, they kicked us out -- politely -- and gave me a BP pen. It was more than 90 degrees outside, and one of the folks who had denied us access did give us some cold bottled water, but no access. I still don't know what was going on in that building.

And nobody would talk to us either -- and not just at the supposed medical site. Wherever we went, the "word" seemed to be out: don't talk to the media. On a dock at Venice, where workers who had been hired by BP were coming back from cleanup duties, we couldn't get a comment from anyone. We saw them sitting around after their boat trip back, but we were told by coordinators on the dock not to talk with any of them.

Then, a couple of days later, we managed to get a helicopter ride out to an oil production platform. The oil executive who arranged our trip and went with us was happy to talk -- about how important the oil and gas industry was for Louisiana, and why the government shouldn't prohibit new drilling. But the owner of the platform -- not BP -- was uncomfortable with us talking with the six workers on the platform, since they didn't have any management people there.

When I traveled to Porte Lafourche -- also on the Gulf -- I interviewed a Coast Guard officer who was pleasant and somewhat helpful. The Coast Guard's job, he said, was to oversee what BP was doing to clean up the spill. But when I asked how it was working out, whether BP was doing its job, what grade he would give the company, he couldn't venture an opinion.

My experiences were admittedly limited, and I wasn't dealing with high-level people. We found others to talk with, and the NewsHour did get some access. But dozens of journalists experienced the same frustrations. The Society of Professional Journalists wrote to President Obama the other day, as did several individual reporters, complaining about lack of access to sites and to people.

Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen told ABC's Jack Tapper that he has ordered that oil spill operations be open to the media, except when it's a security or a safety problem. Allen said the government wants BP to have a similar policy -- and that he will "have a call with Tony Hayward," BP's CEO.

In response to the SPJ, the government has said it will move the primary location for news conferences to a more convenient site, and provide daily situation briefings. The Coast Guard has asked BP to do twice daily updates.

For its part, BP says it is not trying to restrict access. I talked with John Pack, who -- until two years ago --worked as a public relations officer in England with BP. He was called back and sent to Houston to help in the oil spill crisis. He said there is no dictate to employees not to talk to the media, although there are some clauses in contracts that require that press inquiries be referred to the press office.

"We're trying to give people as much information as they want," Pack said. He was unaware of the SPJ list of complaints, but he said the main reason for the appearance of restricted access is that the company is trying to fix a complicated problem, and it's not always practical to have camera crews around. Some journalists have been taken around BP's command center, but "it's difficult to do at the drop of a hat."

Whether the company is trying to improve its relations with the press -- or whether there's a corporate culture to keep the lid on -- remains to be seen. On the ground, it's hard to tell if things have improved. But since officials are saying the cleanup will last into the fall and beyond, there's plenty of time to evaluate whether the public is getting the full story.

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http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2010/06/on-the-gulf-coast-media-access.html

Stock Lobster

06/12/10 7:42 PM

#323556 RE: EZ2 #323550

>>Health Concerns Heighten as Oil Spill Spreads

The sobering images of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill are widely known: oil covered birds and sludge-choked coastal grasses. But ecosystems may not be the only ones to see negative effects -- what about the spill's possible health impact on humans?

BY TALEA MILLER
Posted: June 11, 2010, 12:00 a.m. ET

The full human impact of the Gulf oil spill remains an unknown, but a number of public health officials and experts are voicing concerns about possible human health consequences.

Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals said this week it has had 71 reported cases of oil spill-related illness, 50 of which were workers on oil rigs or those involved in cleanup efforts. Eight of those workers have been hospitalized.

"We are increasingly concerned about the provisions being made to protect the health and safety of those who are exposed to the oil and other elements associated with the spill," said Alan Levine, secretary of the Louisiana DHH and Peggy Hatch, secretary of the state's Department of Environmental Quality in an open letter to federal officials.

Thus far, federal agencies haven’t seen a spike in health problems from local residents. In a statement, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control said Friday: “Our surveillance reveals few complaints of respiratory symptoms, nausea, and headaches. Thus far, we have not discovered any public health concerns related to the oil spill.”

Workers have been instructed to wear protective gloves, clothing and goggles when working around the oil, and a filter mask if dealing with dispersants. Those workers that fell ill reported flu-like symptoms, throat irritation, shortness of breath, eye irritation, nausea, chest pain and headaches.

LuAnn White, director of the Tulane Center for Applied Environmental Health, said most of the symptoms being reported are readily reversible. Nausea, headache and even rash caused by direct contact from the oil should go away relatively quickly.

But, White warned, the risk is greater for workers if they come into contact with oil near the spill site, before it has "weathered" in the sun and elements and some of the volatile compounds evaporate off.

"Workers who are out there where there still may be some volatiles in the crude, that is different exposure than people on the coast or even workers on the coast," White said. "The risk is minimal to residents on the shore"

The 21 cases reported by the general public in Louisiana were mostly due to odors from the oil, and many were people with existing respiratory disorders. Louisiana Health Officer Dr. Jimmy Guidry said in an e-mail that the oil odor is not dangerous to residents, but that if symptoms do not subside after going indoors, they should seek medical care.

Gulf state health departments have also advised residents to stay out of the water if they see oil, but White says by the time the oil reaches the shore its composition has changed and it poses little risk, especially tar balls, which she compared to coming in contact with asphalt.

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius has said the agency will continue to monitor the health impact closely and has dispatched a mobile medical unit to Venice, La., to provide care for residents or responders.

Some experts on the issue are striking a concerned tone. Monitoring will be crucial in the coming months and years said Edward Trapido, the Wendell Gauthier Chair of Cancer Epidemiology at the Louisiana State University School of Public Health, because the long-term health effects of a spill like this remain an unknown.

No one has ever done a longitudinal study of health impacts on workers or residents after previous oil spills, he said.

More than 6,700 workers involved in the Exxon Valdez clean up in 1989 suffered respiratory problems, but the company attributed the illness to a virus, not chemical poisoning, according to the Associated Press.

Only one worker successfully settled with Exxon on health issues, but the company did not admit fault.

Trapido, who testified Thursday for a House Subcommittee on Energy and Environment hearing on the spill, is heading a research group at LSU that will look at a range of health effects, including psychiatric and behavioral effects, chronic diseases and cancers.

"Oil contains benzene … arsenic and other heavy metals, all of which are classified as class one carcinogens to humans by the International Agency for Research on Cancer," said Trapido.

With inherited susceptibility and under certain conditions, Trapido said "these exposures could hasten the onset of cancer," but that further long-term research is needed. The dispersants being used do not contain known carcinogens, Trapido said.

Miriam Rotkin-Ellman, a scientist with the health and environment program at the National Resource Defense Council, also warns that the chemicals can be incorporated into the food chain and be a long term threat in fish.

"They have the potential to accumulate in the food chain, so as you go higher and higher in the food chain, the amount of contanigen magnifies," Rotkin-Ellman said.

"It's almost two months from the spill, [and] we don’t have a solution in place that’s removed oil from the Gulf. So these are exposures that may occur over a long period of time."

The Environmental Protection Agency is monitoring soil and air along the coast for pollutant levels, but White says so far none of the levels have increased to a point where evacuation would need to be considered.

CDC spokesperson Bernadette Burden said citizens concerned about health risks should monitor information from their state’s health department.

"If a person has concerns related to any of these symptoms … we encourage them to seek the help of their local health care provider," Burden said.

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/updates/health/jan-june10/healthoil_06-11.html

Tuff-Stuff

06/13/10 7:10 AM

#323560 RE: EZ2 #323550

AND BS WALKS