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In Louisiana Oil Town, Residents Ponder Their Future
04:17 AM - Thu, 13/10/05
Some Louisiana residents trying to recover from Hurricane Katrina found more than mud and debris in their houses: they also found an oil spill from a nearby refinery. Living on Earth's Jeff Young visits Chalmette, La., a town uncertain of its future and uneasy with the big oil companies next door.

In Louisiana Oil Town, Residents Ponder Their Future
CURWOOD: From the Jennifer and Ted Stanley Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, this is Living on Earth. I'm Steve Curwood.
As people in southern Louisiana start moving down the long road to
recovery from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, some places have to contend
with more than muck, mold and debris. There are also massive oil
spills. Officials say eight million gallons leaked at more than 50
sites in the region. That's more than two-thirds of what spilled in the
Exxon Valdez accident in Alaska in 1989.
The town of Chalmette, just outside of New Orleans, was hit
particularly hard. More than a million gallons of crude oil from a
nearby refinery spilled into neighborhoods. Living on Earth's Jeff
Young visited Chalmette and found a community uncertain of its future
and uneasy with the oil companies in its backyard.
[SLOPPING MUD SOUNDS]
YOUNG: This is Charles Liccardi's first trip back to his home and
office in Chalmette, in St. Bernard Parish, since his family fled
Hurricane Katrina.
LICCARDI: And it's not looking too good at all. I see a lot of oil all
over everything. I really don't even want to go in. (SIGHS)
[SOUND OF WALKING]
YOUNG: Liccardi is Justice of the Peace, and a lot of couples started new lives together in his home office.
LICCARDI: This is where I used to marry people. Some of my Mardi Gras
posters all over the place. Pretty much looks like somebody grabbed
this building, shook it up, and turned it upside down.
YOUNG: Liccardi officiated the wedding for the young couple next door.
They've just returned to salvage a few things. Mike Jurisich says his
76-year-old father rode out the storm in the house and was rescued from
the rooftop.
JURISICH: He just didn't want to leave his house. I guess I should have
been more forceful but if you knew my dad, and just the way he is. He's
an old oyster fisherman.

YOUNG: Jurisich finds a few things he can save: his grandmother's
jewelry, his first pair of shoes from childhood. Families in Chalmette
go back generations; neighbors know each other and value their
connections. The main industry was once fishing, then more people took
jobs with the oil refineries that grew up against the neighborhood's
fences and yards. Now the oil that brought jobs threatens more than a
thousand homes.
LICCARDI: I think the oil pretty much did us in.
[SOUND UNDER MUCKY BOOTS]
YOUNG: Liccardi points to the dark brown line about head high on his
house, and others, like bathtub rings, down to the mucky floor. It's
crude oil from the nearby Murphy refinery.
LICCARD: If we just had the water we could probably rebuild, but with
the oil I think that's gonna eliminate that possibility – which I lived
here my whole life, so I need another home. Huh!
[HIGHWAY SOUND, TRUCKS AT TANK FARM]
YOUNG: A few blocks away, Murphy Oil construction manager Kevin Roussel
inspects the giant tanks that each hold up to 250 thousand barrels of
oil – tanks that stood in the path of the massive storm surge from
Hurricane Katrina.
ROUSSEL: That's the tank that moved over. Moved over about 30 feet and
it actually, it floated, came over and dented the bottom of it, and
where the dent is is where the oil started leaking out.
YOUNG: Roussel says 35,000 barrels spilled. That's about one and a half
million gallons. A little more than half of it ended up in the
surrounding neighborhood, marsh and canals.
[OIL CLEANUP SOUNDS: HIGH PRESSURE WATER HOSES, HEAVY EQUIPMENT]
YOUNG: In a canal near the levee, dozens of workers try to move oil toward the vacuum hose of a tanker truck.
ROUSSEL: They have those rollers over there that actually skim the oil
on top. And it goes into those rollers and those vacuum trucks pick it
up out of the rollers.
[HOSES]

YOUNG: Murphy Oil pledged five million dollars in donations to St.
Bernard Parish to aid storm recovery and hired about 150 workers to
clean up the oil. The Coast Guard is keeping watch and says work in
canals and a marsh is progressing well. But cleaning an oil spill in a
residential area is new and tricky terrain. So far, the company has
removed oily sediment only from Parish property and city streets.
Roussel says government officials must determine the extent of damage
before the company can do much about private homes.
ROUSsELL: Murphy will do the right thing by these people. It's our
community, too. All our people live here just like they do. We've been
here 50 years and we gonna be here 50 more.
YOUNG: Several lawsuits are pending. Attorney Val Exnicios says the
company did not take adequate safeguards against predictable storm
damage. But that's not the only suit Exnicios has filed against the oil
companies. Another one – far more ambitious – would hold the oil and
gas industry in Louisiana largely responsible for Hurricane Katrina's
multi-billion dollar damage.
EXNICIOS: We're out for any and all damages sustained by the people of
the state of Louisiana directly attributable to oil and gas operations
in Southern Louisiana that destroyed natural protection mother nature
provided the city of New Orleans and further inland communities.
YOUNG: The argument goes like this: wetlands and coastline once
stretched many miles between the cities and the Gulf. But canals for
pipelines and drills contributed to coastal erosion, which cost
Louisiana more than twenty square miles of wetland a year over the past
decade.
EXNICIOS: The oil and gas industry destroyed that terra firma. Had that
ecosystem existed it would have absorbed the hurricane force winds and
storm surge.
YOUNG: The suit draws a predictably angry response from the industry.
Mike Lyons manages legal and environmental affairs for the Louisiana
Mid Continent Oil and Gas Association. Lyons says levees, navigation
channels and urban development also share blame for wetlands loss. And
he says the oil industry is working with the state to mitigate further
damage.
LYONS: And that's what's going to succeed. It's not going to be about
blame. It's not going to be about the critics. It's not going to be
about the trial lawyers. It's going to be about fixing a very sensitive
environmental area.
[MUCKY BOOTS AND TALKING]
MUSTACHIO: There's fish in here, too. Believe it or not, as you step you see 'em swimming around.
YOUNG: Back in Chalmette, Joseph Mustachio retrieves a few things from
what's left of his lawn care business. Small fish flop in the oily
slime coating tools and equipment. Like other businesspeople here,
Mustachio had mixed feelings about Murphy Oil and the other refineries.
There were the occasional accidents that forced midnight evacuations,
and persistent questions about air quality. But then, there were also
the jobs.
MUSTACHIO: They generated money for this Parish. And generated
sustained life while taking it away from us, in a sense, because it
polluted so badly. But we depended on it. Right now, I can't see them
doing anything for us, but we'll see. I don't know. All I can hope they
can do is buy my property and have me move on, you know, because I
don't want to be here. And I think a lot of people are the same way now.
YOUNG: Mustachio and his neighbors guess Murphy Oil will buy their
homes, then use the land to expand the refinery. They hope for a
settlement that can replace what's been lost, but they know the thing
they most treasured in Chalmette can never be replaced. For Living on
Earth, I'm Jeff Young in St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana.
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