by Meg Bloomgren
This morning business leaders from the Gulf Coast region gathered on Capitol Hill to discuss the economic hardships and uncertainty they face as a result of the Obama administration’s blanket moratorium on oil and natural gas exploration in the Gulf of Mexico.
The U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, led by Senators Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), held a hearing entitled "The Deepwater Drilling Moratorium: A Second Economic Disaster for Small Businesses?" Witnesses included: Don Briggs, President of the Louisiana Oil and Gas Association; Dr. Joseph R. Mason, Chair of Banking at the E.J. Ourso School of Business at Louisiana State University; Ethan Treese, Vice President of Dunn and Bradstreet; Leslie Bertucci , Owner of R&D Enterprises; Troy Lillie, a former refinery worker for Exxon Mobil in Baton Rouge; Charlotte Randolph, President of the Lafourche (LA) Parish, and Kimberly Nastasi, CEO of the Mississippi Gulf Coast Chamber of Commerce.
Senators Landrieu and Wicker expressed the desire of the committee to receive clear answers from the Obama administration on why or when the moratorium policy would be changed. The Senators echoed the testimony of Louisiana business owner Leslie Bertucci, who noted that, "the moratorium will not resolve damage to the ecosystem or to the families who lost loved ones, but will instead add insult to injury," in a struggling region. Leslie Bertucci’s R&D Enterprises, based in Metairie, Louisiana, rents heavy machinery including oil well equipment & supplies. Her business is down significantly since the moratorium was issued in late May and in order to keep her employees working, she and her husband have slashed their own spending by 75%. She made it clear that her and her employees, "don’t want to file claims; we want to work and remain self-sufficient."
Troy Lillie, a former refinery worker for ExxonMobil, told the Senators about his employment history supporting the oil and gas industry and the uneasiness that the moratorium has brought for his family over the past 60 days. As a result of the moratorium, his son-in-law will soon be transferred to work on a rig overseas instead of in the Gulf, leaving his wife and two young children without him for months at a time. However, he said that his family is "lucky" because they still have work, unlike many of his neighbors.
Kim Nastasi of the Mississippi Gulf Coast Chamber of Commerce said this was supposed to be the year that the Gulf Coast was "going to be back" following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and the economic recession. She noted that while the oil spill affected the community, the moratorium is having a greater "economic multiplier effect" on small businesses throughout the state and region. She urged the administration to reconsider the moratorium and understand that the loss of jobs is "extraordinary and it’s real." Natasi pointed to a preliminary business impact analysis of the drilling moratorium’s effects on Mississippi conducted by Dunn and Bradstreet, which said that a total of 379 Mississippi businesses and nearly 3000 employees will be impacted negatively in the short-term.
Join the voices of today’s hearing and send a letter today to protest the standstill on energy exploration activities in the Gulf.