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Mabus

Can Mabus save us?

Though President Obama’s highly anticipated oil-gusher speech was widely panned, he made an important commitment to restoring Louisiana’s coastal wetlands. If kept, this expensive, long-term promise –  made before a national prime-time audience –  might be the most significant commitment a president ever made to the Pelican state. Here’s the relevant excerpt from Obama’s Oval [...]

June 25 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion | Read More »

Another man-made disaster, another presidential speech

As President Obama prepares to make a prime-time address about the oil gusher, South Louisiana finds itself in a familiar position: reeling from man-made disaster, concerned about the future, and hopeful their president will make a bold commitment to the region in front of a national TV audience. Based on past experience, the smart money [...]

June 15 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion | Read More »

Q&A with Landrieu staffers

The Lens contacted Sen. Mary Landrieu’s office recently to discuss her role in the oil spill response. In an interview with Tom Michaels, the senator’s legislative director, and Aaron Saunders, her communications director, we discussed campaign contributions from BP and from the maker of the dispersants and whether drilling for oil continues to be a [...]

June 8 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion | Read More »

…and the rig you rode in on

The late, great Ashley Morris struck a chord with displaced Louisianans when he wrote  his famous FYYFF post three months after Katrina and the federal flood disaster. It was a perfectly timed rant that resonated among bloggers focused on New Orleans, and passionately expressed their common frustrations. FYYFF became a touchstone within the local blogging [...]

June 8 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion, Money and Politics | Read More »

Oil companies tax our coast; it’s time we tax them back

Bienvenue en Louisiane! We’re still calling ourselves the Pelican State, but who knows what the future holds? Louisianans identify with pelicans because they are unique, non-extinct birds that seem to coast through life and eat lots of fresh seafood. We admire them because when times get tough, pelicans will prick their breasts and feed their [...]

June 4 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion | Read More »

Defend Plaquemines

Diane Sawyer’s person of the week wants to show the world just how hospitable Plaquemines Parish can be. At a town hall meeting this week Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser, who is to be anointed by Sawyer during a Friday night appearance on the ABC newscaster’s show, implored residents in attendance to be “hospitable.” “The [...]

May 28 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion, Money and Politics | Read More »

Courtesy of Jack Cook, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Oil’s effects on wetlands could be dire

As the oil from BP’s Deepwater Horizon accident seeps into Louisiana’s 48,000 acres of wetlands, it’s officially beginning to endanger the habitat and nesting areas of many species of fish, invertebrates and birds. If the problem worsens, it will create insufferable burdens for area fishers and the markets and restaurants they serve. Not to mention, [...]

May 10 2010 | Posted in Asphalt, Air and Water, Coastal Erosion, Slider | Read More »