Recently Kenneth
Feinberg, the lawyer overseeing the $20 billion Gulf Coast Claims Facility to
"make it right" for people harmed by the British Petroleum oil blowout disaster,
told a Louisiana House and Senate committee that he had not seen any claims, or
any scientific evidence, linking BP's oil and dispersant release to chemical
illnesses. Feinberg also stated that chemical illnesses take years to show up --
conveniently well after his tenure with the compensation fund.
Instead of
tossing the media a juicy bone, Feinberg tossed a red herring. He is wrong at
worst, or intentionally misleading at best, on all points.
The GCCF process
makes it difficult for people to be compensated for medical claims or even raise
illness claims, while making it easy to release claims and rights to future
medical care and benefits for chemical illnesses or other medically-proven
illness related to the BP blowout and disaster response.
In fact the GCCF
process is so blatantly egregious in terms of protecting corporate liability at
the expense of human rights and health that a bill was introduced in the
Louisiana state legislature, specifically targeting the BP oil disaster, to
declare such "contractual releases are invalid as against public policy" and the
release of claims to future medical care and related benefits null and void. In
Louisiana BP lobbyists are reportedly out in force, trying to gut the
legislation.
Further, the
pro-industry bias in the GCCF process turned thousands of people away. Over
130,000-plus claimants have filed lawsuits, now consolidated in
Feinberg's
downplay of chemical illnesses and other medical issues stemming from the BP oil
disaster -- with full knowledge of the parallel court proceedings -- shows that
he and his boss, BP, have no intention of "making it right" for people in the
Gulf.
"Not recognizing
that there is a problem -- that's the problem," said Joey Yerkes, a former
Unlike Joey
Yerkes, Monette Wynne has not filed medical claims through the GCCF. Her entire
family -- herself, husband, 4-year-old twins, and 6-year-old child -- all tested
positive for oil in their blood after spending last summer in their seaside home
in
"We were told
the levels of oil were of no concern," Wynne said. The federal scientists told
them their levels of oil in blood were typical of urban dwellers who breathe
traffic exhaust. Wynne didn't believe it -- her family's blood work shows they
have more oil in their blood than most people, and her family is all sick with
symptoms like those of Joey Yerkes -- symptoms that became widespread in Gulf
communities during summer 2010; symptoms that are not going away. Wynne is
considering borrowing money to treat her family. She and her husband had
exhausted their savings to buy their dream home, a home that is now for
sale.
Unfortunately
for Joey Yerkes and the Wynne family -- and the legions of other Gulf residents
and visitors with similar medical issues from summer 2010, British Petroleum is
the "responsible party" for its disaster, but BP is actually responsible, by
law, to its shareholders, not the injured people in the Gulf. This inherent
conflict of interest means Feinberg is nothing more than a well-paid sock puppet
for BP. He can be expected to act to minimize liability and financial damages
for the "responsible party" by covering up the chemical illness epidemic in the
Gulf.
Further, the
federal laws and regulations designed to protect public health, worker safety,
and the environment from oil and chemical poisoning are so riddled with
exemptions that they cannot deliver their promise of protection -- as people
near oil drilling and hydrologic fracturing ("fracking") operations have
discovered. Social documentaries such as Gaslands and Split Estate exposed
chemical illnesses and symptoms similar to the Gulf injuries and independent
studies documented groundwater contamination, but the federal government still
denies there is a problem.
Similarly, the
federal government is also in denial about the horrific-and-federally-sanctioned
poisoning of the Gulf people and wildlife, despite prior and post knowledge of
the extent of contamination and the health impacts of oil and chemicals used to
drill or disperse oil.
As Joey pointed
out, denial of the problem is the problem. At the root of the issue of oil and
chemical poisoning in the Gulf and elsewhere in
RS/SM/HJ