By Susan Buchanan
The Huffington Blog
Posted: 05/03/12
Vietnamese and Cambodian fishermen in Village L'est and Versailles in
New Orleans East were among the first residents to return after
Katrina, only to see their livelihoods crushed a few years later by the
BP spill. In early April, 41 Asian-American fishermen sued BP in U.S.
Eastern District of Louisiana court in New Orleans, claiming
discrimination in the company's Vessels of Opportunity program. Other
groups of fishermen have also sued over treatment in the VOO, which
hired boats to remove spilled oil.
Asian Americans were underrepresented in the program given their
numbers in the Gulf fishing community. Over half of all commercial
fishermen affected by the spill were Vietnamese and Cambodian Americans
but they accounted for less than 10 percent of the vessels hired by BP,
the suit says. Of the 5,000 vessels that BP engaged, only 350 belonged
to Vietnamese and Cambodian Americans.
Plaintiffs in the case are represented by attorney Ryan Beasley in
Harvey, La.. The suit says that during the VOO program, BP sent emails
to Danos and Curole Marine Contractors, LLC in Larose, La. and DRC
Emergency Services, LLC, in Mobile, Ala., telling them not to hire
vessels owned by Vietnamese and Cambodian Americans. The class action
suit was filed against BP, Danos and Curole, and DRC Emergency, and
seeks damages for civil rights violations and employment discrimination.
The suit says that 4,000 Asian Americans were affected by BP's
policies, and claims that defendants violated Section 1981 of the Civil
Rights Act of 1866 -- which says all Americans have the same rights as
white citizens.
Why didn't BP want to hire Asian Americans? Attorneys and others
point to the cost of translating legal language, a preference for
workers outside the area closest to the spill, and cronyism -- between
BP and its contractors and certain boat captains hired by the VOO.
Last week, Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser said "I can't
absolutely say whether or not there was discrimination against Asian
American fishermen in the VOO. But we do know that local people were
passed over in the program, and that was because they'd come back to the
community and say there's oil all around."
Nungesser continued, saying "BP preferred to hire people who didn't
live here, didn't have a passion for this area and who wouldn't let
other people know what they'd seen." He said local fishing vessels were
tied to docks while out-of-state boats were in the area working for the
VOO.
"We asked but never got a list of boats that were working in the
program," Nungesser said. "That's absurd. We wanted to make sure local
boats and fishermen hurt by the spill were being hired," especially
since the waters in southeast Louisiana were closed to fishing.
In addition to New Orleans East, Asian American fishermen live in
Jefferson Parish and in Belle Chasse, Boothville-Venice and other
Plaquemines Parish communities, along with Terrebonne Parish.
Local fishermen complained in mid-2010 that recreational boats from
Florida and Texas were floating by, working for the VOO in Louisiana
waters while their boats were idle. But some Asian-American vessels and
fishermen were hired by BP. A local staffing service ran ads in mid-2010
for Cambodian translators to work in the VOO in Venice in Plaquemines
Parish. The starting salary was $17 to $18 an hour for translators, plus
overtime and free room and board. That sounded pretty good if it hadn't
been for the toxins rising from oil lapping the shores around Venice.
Last week, BP spokesman Scott Dean had no comment on the Asian
American lawsuit or on translation services that BP provided to VOO
workers.
Nungesser said "unfortunately, it takes a lawsuit to get to the
bottom of what happened. BP hasn't been forthright with people, and
we've learned that we can't trust what the company says. It takes
lawsuits and Congressional hearings to find out."
A mid-2010 statement from the Asian Pacific American Society of New
Orleans or APAS discussed U.S. District Court Judge Ginger Berrigan's
May 2, 2010 decision that several provisions in BP's cleanup contract
with fishermen and volunteers were illegal -- including terms requiring
BP's exemption from liability, along with complete confidentiality
required from workers and a demand that BP be listed on volunteers'
insurance policies. Contracts handed out to Asian-American fishermen at
the John Alario Center on the West Bank on a Sunday in mid-2010 included
language that should have been removed after Judge Berrigan's decision,
APAS warned. APAS told fishermen that even though illegal wording may
have remained in Vietnamese versions of the contracts, those provisions
couldn't be enforced.
Tuan Nguyen, deputy director of Mary Queen of Vietnam Community
Development Center in New Orleans East, said last week that many
Asian-American fishermen, boat captains and deckhands live near the
center and work out of Plaquemines, Jefferson and Terrebonne Parishes.
"We've done a lot of advocacy work with Vietnamese-American fishermen
since the spill," he said. "And we work with Catholic Charities to help
them pay their bills. But we don't comment on litigation."
Meanwhile, Asian fishermen, like others affected by the spill, have
struggled with the BP claims process. "There was confusion in the
Asian-American fishing community about how to file claims with the Gulf
Coast Claims Facility for economic losses," Nguyen said. "People tried
but often didn't understand how to navigate the system. Some of them
took $5,000 final payments recently out of desperation and a need for
cash, and gave up their rights to sue BP. Many of them are unhappy about
that now."
For Asian American and all fishermen who want to learn their rights
and need help with BP claims, Nungesser recommended Seedco's
newly-expanded Southeast Louisiana Fisheries Assistance Center Facility,
which opened earlier this year next to his office in Belle Chasse.
"These people are doing a great job of helping fishermen get back on
their feet and assisting them with legal matters," he said. The old
office was in a temporary facility down the street.
Before the BP spill, Asian Americans held 75 percent of shrimp
licenses in Louisiana for vessels longer than 50 feet, according to data
compiled by David Burrage, Mississippi State University extension
professor of Marine Resources. And they held more than 60 percent of
shrimp licenses for vessels longer than 45 feet in Mississippi and
Alabama. A third of Gulf commercial boats with federal shrimp permits
were owned and operated by Vietnamese-Americans before the spill.
What's more, many seafood processing plants in Louisiana, Mississippi
and Alabama are staffed mainly by Asian Americans, particularly of
Vietnamese descent. And of an estimated 40,000 Vietnamese living in
these three Gulf states -- including 30,000 in Louisiana -- one in three
works in the seafood industry, according to Dr. Burrage in 2009. In
fact, incomes of most of Louisiana's Vietnamese-American households
depend on seafood in one way or another.
As for the VOO program, which was closed in 2010, BP temporarily
reactivated it in August and September of last year because of seepage
near its Macondo well.
1 comment:
Maybe they should be glad... since BP wants the VoO money offset aganist the claims....which they promised they would not do
They will end up making more money tied to the pilings than working for the VoO...
And they won't be the ones sick or the ones with damaged boats.
BP has reneged on their promise and not want their VoO payments paid back or offset aganist their claim....even though BP put it in writitng they would not seek this deduction.
Most of us next time....will not even attend the recuitment meeting.
Let BP clean up their own oil....
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