BRITISH PETROLEUM STILL CAUSING PAIN AND SUFFERING

BY Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq.
September 2, 2011
Trice Edney Wire Service – For more than a year, People for
Peace, led by Art Rocker, has spent hours working to get underserved people
who’ve been injured by the British Petroleum (BP) Gulf Oil Spill paid what is
owed them. These are not people who are asking for millions of
dollars. Most of them are poor people who live from paycheck to paycheck.
The claimants have waited and waited. Some have lost hope. Just
this past week I was informed that someone committed suicide while
waiting. Many are suffering from illnesses caused by a toxic environment
left over from the spill.
The claimants have been promised action on their claims by
Kenneth Feinberg, Administrator for the British Petroleum (BP) 20 billion
dollar fund set up to help those who were injured by the spill. One would
think the poorest of people would be paid first, but that is not what has
happened so far. Feinberg has paid the politically well connected and left the
underserved in the lurch.
Dick Gregory, Art Rocker, Jimmie Gardner (Prichard, Alabama
representative) and I have traveled to BP in London, England in an effort to
get claimants paid. We have traveled all along the coast in Louisiana,
Mississippi, Alabama and Florida where the greatest damage was done. We
know that cities and states have received money for clean-up and other
purposes—but not the underserved.
Our team decided it was time to begin picketing Kenneth
Feinberg’s office in luxury towers in Washington, DC. He has not suffered
a day because he’s being paid over one million dollars a month, apparently to
stall and avoid paying poor people. We have filled every request his
office has made in an effort to speed up the process of paying claimants.
We have run out of patience. Friday, September 2, 2011, we began picketing Mr.
Feinberg’s office. We want the world to know this mega-company is not
meeting its obligation to the poor. Those of us working on behalf of the
poor have purchased BP stock to ensure that we have a seat at the table when
stockholders meet. Until then, we are calling upon all who understand the
pain and suffering of the underserved claimants to not purchase BP gasoline and
any products sold by BP. We are asking others to join our effort by using other
gasoline.
Over a year after the biggest oil spill in U.S. history
ravaged the Gulf Coast region, Feinberg has yet to uphold his promise to
respond to claimants. Gregory, Rocker and Williams are demanding to know when
Feinberg plans to resolve more than 10,000 plus claims by poor and underserved
citizens through a proposed settlement for a minimum of $488 million.
Gregory, known for breaking down color barriers during the
1960s, has been a champion of civil and human rights in America and abroad for
decades. Rocker is the founder of Operation People for Peace, whose goal is to
ensure that small business owners, minorities and the poor are compensated for
the damage inflicted by the oil disaster.
Eleven people died in this tragic oil spill, and 1.6 million
jobs were lost; yet, BP refuses to do the right thing by mostly minorities who
continue to be suffering.
Overall we’ve met with Feinberg and BP officials more than a
dozen times, leaving with nothing but empty promises. We plan to return to
London, England to echo the fact that BP should not be a lead sponsor for the
2012 Olympics while refusing to pay the claims of people who are experiencing
great pain and suffering.
(Dr. E. Faye Williams, Esq. is Chair of the National
Congress of Black Women. She’s Chair of the Board of the Black Leadership
Forum in Washington, DC. To reach her, call 202/678-6788; e-mail dr.efayew@gmail.com or see website at www.nationalcongressbw.org.)