Gulf Coast Small Businesses Worried About Their Futures - Black Enterprise
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Gulf Coast Small Businesses Worried About Their Futures

by  Joyce Jones
July 13, 2010
In a four-part series, Black Enterprise.com is looking at how the oil spill is affecting small businesses, the environment, tourism and the future of offshore drilling on the region. In today’s installment: small business.

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It could be five years until a decent crop of oysters can be harvested, suggests Byron Encalade, president of the Louisiana Oysters Association.

In a four-part series, Black Enterprise.com is looking at how the BP oil spill is affecting small businesses, the environment, tourism, and the future of offshore drilling in the region. In today’s installment: small business.

The water means everything to the black fishermen who make their living harvesting shrimp and oysters along the Louisiana Gulf Coast. It not only supports their families, but also provides a primary staple of their diet. This was going to be the year, many believed, that would enable them to fully recover from Hurricane Katrina, which severely dwindled their numbers. But in the aftermath of the BP’s April Deepwater Horizon spill, their present as well as their future is as murky as the oil’s greasy residue.

“The oysters and shrimp had come back 100% good with the catch and the price, so I was looking at a very, very good season,” said Roland Phillips, 60, whose family has been fishing for four generations. At the start of the season, he was earning about $12,000 per week and poised to do even better. Since the spill, he and his two sons have each received two $5,000 payments from BP and an offer to participate in the cleanup, which he prays will come to fruition.

– Related reading: How to File a Claim Against BP for Oil Spill Damages

“Fishing is something I hope to do till I die, but in our situation if there’s a chance where BP says it will see to it that we can make a living and some money, I’d be stupid to not take it,” said Phillips.

Byron Encalade, 56, president of the Louisiana Oysters Association, thinks it could be five years before a decent crop of oysters can be harvested and that a heavy investment in limestone will be required to achieve the proper level of salinity.

Interaction with BP has been an exercise in frustration, said Encalade, who was particularly angry that the corporation hired out-of-town contractors and workers to cleanup the spill rather than seeking out the fishermen who have a far more intimate understanding of the area. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-California) and Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) had to intervene on their behalf so that they could be compensated and participate in the cleanup.

“I think our misery would be compounded 30 times. Without them, I don’t know what situation we’d be in,” Encalade said. “They saw people starting to suffer, as with The Road Home, and put pressure on BP.” In addition, thanks to the aid of his parish president, 25 boats and 50 people in the community recently became part of the Vessels of Opportunity program.

Still, Encalade remains skeptical, and rightly so. BP has decided it will no longer fully pay 40,000 people who’ve filed payment claims because their claims files were allegedly incomplete, improperly filled out or missing corroborating state records deemed acceptable to BP. Nichols also outlined other problems, such as the fact that at the end of June, the number of claims reported was double the number of payments made, and called for greater transparency.

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