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‘Not everything is perfect’: BP brass meets Destin business leaders as city struggles to protect pass (PHOTOS) 1

Posted on July 04, 2010 by bp complaints

‘Not everything is perfect’: BP brass meets Destin business leaders as city struggles to protect pass (PHOTOS)
After a closed door meeting with BP Chief Operating Officer Doug Suttles, local business owners left Wednesday’s meeting with mixed reactions. “I think they did a good job of listening to the local businesses and addressing their concerns as best…
Read more on The Destin Log

World Leaders Vow To Trim Deficits 0

Posted on June 29, 2010 by bp complaints

World Leaders Vow To Trim Deficits
Wary of slamming on the stimulus brakes too quickly but shaken by the European debt crisis, leaders at the G-20 summit in Canada pledged to slash government deficits in the most industrialized nations in half by 2013, with wiggle room to meet the goal.
Read more on NPR

World leaders walk economic tightrope in Canada 0

Posted on June 28, 2010 by bp complaints

World leaders walk economic tightrope in Canada
Wary of slamming on the stimulus brakes too quickly but shaken by the European debt crisis, world leaders pledged Sunday to reduce government deficits in richer countries in half by 2013, with wiggle room to meet the goal.
Read more on AP via Yahoo! News

Alert: Obama Warns World Leaders Millions Could Die From Gulf Oil Disaster – Before It’s News 0

Posted on June 27, 2010 by bp complaints

Sydney Morning Herald

Alert: Obama Warns World Leaders Millions Could Die From Gulf Oil Disaster
Before It’s News
Even worse is Arnesen's incredibly reporting that even as this oil disaster grows BP is being allowed the US government to begin cutting costs in their
Gulf oil spill demands ranking long-term sustainability above short-term gainKnoxville News Sentinel
GULF OIL SPILLDallas Morning News
Gulf Oil Disaster: Not War but CancerHuffington Post (blog)
NOLA.com –San Jose Mercury News –CBS 5 – Green Bay
all 11,644 news articles »

gulf oil disaster updates – Google News

Local leaders staying informed as oil spill crisis continues 0

Posted on June 25, 2010 by bp complaints

Local leaders staying informed as oil spill crisis continues
LAPLACE – As millions of gallons of oil from the Deepwater Horizon well continue to spew into the Gulf of Mexico, local leaders from St. John the Baptist and St. Charles parishes say they are in the loop on daily updates from affected parishes.
Read more on L’Observateur

Gov. Jindal Stands with Restaurant and Seafood Industry Leaders, Calls on President to Force BP to Approve Louisiana?s Seafood Safety Plan 0

Posted on June 15, 2010 by bp complaints

EMERGENCY.louisiana.gov

Louisiana leaders want Gulf drilling to resume 0

Posted on June 11, 2010 by bp complaints

Louisiana leaders want Gulf drilling to resume
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — At the same time they are venting their fury on BP over the Gulf of Mexico spill and its calamitous environmental effects, Louisiana politicians are rushing to the defense of the oil-and-gas industry and pleading with Washington to bring back offshore drilling — now.
Read more on New Jersey Herald


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President Obama Meets with Congressional Leaders on the BP Spill and the Months Ahead 0

Posted on June 10, 2010 by bp complaints

This morning the President hosted Congressional leaders from both parties to talk through the months ahead and make sure they are as productive as possible.  As the President made clear in remarks afterwards, the top priorities have to be the BP oil spill and putting people back to work:

Obviously the top of our list was our continued response to the crisis in the Gulf and what’s happening with the oil spill.  We gave them an update on all the measures that are being taken, the single largest national response in United States history to an environmental disaster.  But we had a frank conversation about the fact that the laws that have been in place have not been adequate for a crisis of this magnitude.  The Oil Pollution Act was passed at a time when people didn’t envision drilling four miles under the sea for oil.

And so it’s going to be important that, based on facts, based on experts, based on a thorough examination of what went wrong here and where things have gone right, but also where things have gone wrong, that we update the laws to make sure that the people in the Gulf, the fishermen, the hotel owners, families who are dependent for their livelihoods in the Gulf, that they are all made whole and that we are in a much better position to respond to any such crisis in the future.

So that was a prominent part of the discussion, and I was pleased to see bipartisan agreement that we have to deal with that in an aggressive, forward-leaning way.

Even as we deal with that crisis, we’ve still got an economy that’s on the mend, but there are a lot of people out there who are still out of work.  There are a lot of families who are still struggling to pay the bills.  And so a major part of our discussion was how could we continue to build on the progress that’s been made in the economy and, in particular, how can we make sure that that has an impact on job growth and the day-to-day improvements that people are seeing in their own lives.

The President talked about the urgency of passing extensions for unemployment insurance and other measures to help families stay above water while they’re looking for work, which will in turn make sure the recovery continues with some stability.  He also expressed confidence that a strong package to help small businesses grow and hire is coming together.

Also on the agenda is finishing financial reform, a supplemental to fund our troops, and continued work on ways to reduce the deficit, an area the President was particularly hopeful of finding bipartisan solutions on.

The President closed speaking passionately about the need for a new energy policy for the long term to begin now:
In that same category of thinking about the next generation, I want to close by just talking about my personal belief that we have to move on an energy agenda that is forward-looking, that creates jobs, that assures that we are leaders in solar and wind and biodiesel, but recognizes that we are going to be reliant on fossil fuels for many years to come, that we are going to still be using oil and we’re still going to be using other fossil fuels, but that we have to start planning now and putting the infrastructure in place now, putting the research and development in place now so that we end up being leaders in our energy future.

I’m actually going to have a group of CEOs this afternoon who’ve come in from a wide range of different industries — people from Bill Gates of Microsoft to the former chairman of DuPont who have come up with a series of recommendations about how we need to move much more aggressively on the energy agenda.

And although obviously our immediate task is to deal with a crisis that is affecting millions of people down in the Gulf, we can’t keep our eye off the importance of having an energy policy that meets the needs of the next generation and ensures that the United States is the leader when it comes to energy policy.  We are not yet that leader, and that’s what I want us to do.

White House.gov Blog Feed.

Resources Available to Citizens, Businesses and Local Leaders Now on Website 0

Posted on June 08, 2010 by bp complaints

EMERGENCY.louisiana.gov

Obama to meet spill probe leaders as slick moves north 0

Posted on June 02, 2010 by bp complaints

Obama to meet spill probe leaders as slick moves north
President Barack Obama will meet with the leaders of a panel he created to probe the worst oil spill in U.S. history on Tuesday, as a giant slick from BP’s blown-out Gulf of Mexico well poses a new threat to the coasts of Mississippi and Alabama.
Read more on Reuters via Yahoo! News



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