Thursday, February 3, 2011

Latest Obama finger in the eye of Gulf workers who still have no work thanks to Obama--a buyout claiming 'economy' will return...BBC

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It sounds like Obama is offering buyouts to desperate, displaced workers in the Gulf based on a fantastic theory that their jobs will all be back by next year. Feldman says payments are based on that theory. Seven rigs have left the Gulf, no deep water permits have been issued, so this is just another sign of Obama's deep affection for people with Southern accents. "Louisiana resident Mike Helmer, a fishing guide, described the proposed offer as "a joke".
  • "He's asking people to sign away their rights for basically peanuts. I don't see anyone accepting this," he said . "This is an insult. This is unbelievable.""...
2/2/11, "Gulf of Mexico 'to recover from BP spill by end 2012'," BBC

"The Gulf of Mexico will have largely recovered from the BP oil spill by the end of 2012, the administrator of the $20bn (£12bn) pay-outs fund has said.

Attorney Kenneth Feinberg said that compensation to those who lost revenue from the disaster

  • would be based on this prediction.

Meanwhile, a judge has ruled that Mr Feinberg make clear to claimants that

  • he is not independent from BP....

The fund was set up by BP in August to compensate those affected by the spill, and has so far paid out about $3.3bn to 168,000 people.

Mr Feinberg said experts have determined that most of the

  • oil would have dispersed
  • and the economy picked up

by the end of next year. There will be a 30% recovery in 2011, he added.

But he also noted that the recovery of oyster harvesting may take longer.

The assessment was based mainly on reports from a Texas professor

  • and a consulting firm.

Based on the predictions, Mr Feinberg has proposed that claimants receive twice the amount they lost in 2010,

  • apart from oyster harvesters, who will be offered four times as much.

Florida Attorney General Pamela Bondi, however, questioned the experts' predictions.

  • "While this office had hoped that the methodology would finally provide some transparency,

this document provides no useful information to claimants beyond a simplistic multiplier and is based on very optimistic assumptions

  • about unknown environmental and economic conditions," she said in a court filing.

A federal judge meanwhile said Mr Feinberg was not independent from BP and

  • should not tell claimants that he is.

US District Judge Carl Barbier ordered that he clearly disclose in communications that he is acting for and on behalf of BP.

"The court finds that BP has created a hybrid entity, rather than one that is fully independent of BP," he said.

  • Mr Feinberg, who was appointed by BP and the White House,

has faced repeated criticism about the time it is taking to pay out compensation, as well as the amount being handed out.

  • About half of the total 485,000 claims filed have been denied because of ineligibility or lack of documentation.

Louisiana resident Mike Helmer, a fishing guide, described the proposed offer as

  • "a joke".

"He's asking people to sign away their rights for basically peanuts. I don't see anyone accepting this," he said .

  • "This is an insult. This is unbelievable.""...
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Reference: 1/26/11, "Ongoing Disaster in the Gulf," American Thinker, George Skaggs

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