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  • Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

    Latest Escambia Oil Update

    June 23, 2010


    Here is the latest BP oil spill information for Wednesday, June 23 specific to Escambia County, with the newest information highlighted:


    <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=533 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
    • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone.
    • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401
    </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=163>
    • The Florida Association of Counties will be hosting a meeting with United States Coast Guard Captain Steve Poulin, Florida Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Mike Sole and commissioners, administrators and emergency directors from Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Bay, Gulf, Franklin and Wakulla counties. The meeting will be held at 3 p.m. at the Emerald Coast Conference Center, 1250 Miracle Strip Parkway Southeast, Fort Walton Beach, Florida 32548. The roundtable discussion will focus on the efforts being made to respond to the Deepwater horizon incident along with questions counties have regarding issues such as communications, claims and the response model. A live video webstream of the meeting will be available at www.fl-counties.com.
    • Gulf Islands National Seashore hosts volunteer training for citizens assisting seashore visitors on Saturday, June 26 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Naval Live Oaks Visitor Center, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Gulf Breeze. For more information call 850-916-3013
    • A tropical wave moving west-northwest ward is producing a large area of disorganized storm activity. There is a low (20%) chance of this becoming a tropical cyclone within the next 48 hours.
    • Reports from Perdido Key are that although inclement weather has kept clean-up crews from accessing the beach in some areas, no new material seems to be washing in and the tarballs are degrading in the sand.
    • Reports from Pensacola Beach are that although a dark brown film was seen on the west side of the beach, the relationship to incoming oil has not been determined. The inclement weather hampered the clean-up crews actions.
    • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
    • BP claims in Florida total 17,923 with approximately $15,988,477.02 paid.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
    • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
    • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
    • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
    • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
    • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118
    • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
    • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511
    • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511
    • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401
    • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
    • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
    • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
    • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
    • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
    • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236
    • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
    • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
    • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County Board of County Commissioners and Staff</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
    • Citizen/Public Meetings this week:
      • NOTE LOCATION CHANGE: Commissioner Grover Robinson will hold a District 4 town hall beach meeting on Tuesday, June 22 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Pensacola Beach Community Church, 920 Via De Luna Drive.
      • Escambia County Extension Office and University of Florida IFAS will host ?SOS: The Science of the Spill? Public Forum meeting on Wednesday, June 23 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Sanders Beach Community Center, 913 South ?I? Street
      • Commissioner Gene Valentino will host a ribbon cutting for the new kayak launch at Civitan Park on Thursday, June 24 at 5 p.m. at Civitan Park, 404 2nd Street
    </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
    • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil.Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
    • ?Hot shot? teams will respond to specific requests during the day as needed.
    • We are continuing to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
    • The Escambia County Health Department has rescinded the current health advisory related to swimming in the Perdido Key area. More details.
    • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
    • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
    • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
    • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519
    • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
    • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
    • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
    • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
    • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
    • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
    • The beaches at Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key remain open.
    • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
    • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
    • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
    • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
    • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
    • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
    • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
      • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
      • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
    • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
    • SRIA lifeguards continue patrolling beaches for oil from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
    • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
    • Escambia County, in conjunction with the University of West Florida, is collecting gulf water samples from Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key routinely to indicate any changes in water quality. The latest testing came back negative for aliphatic hydrocarbons, meaning no dissolved or dispersed hydrocarbons were found. Tar balls represent a different and less toxic form of the oil.
    • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
    • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
    • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
    • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
    • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
    • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
    • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
    • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
    • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
    • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
    • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
    • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=525>Wildlife
    • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
    • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
    Boats
    • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
    • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
    Beaches and Waterways
    • Citizens should take precautions around waterways to avoid contact with oil substances.
    • Officials are closely monitoring potential public health and environmental concerns.
    Personal Safety
    • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
    • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
    • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
    • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
    • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
    • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
    • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
    • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
    • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
      • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932or #DEP from a cell phone
      • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
      • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
      • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816or 1-800-320-0519
      • Escambia County Citizen?s Information Line: 471-6600
      • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569

    </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

  • #2
    Re: Escambia - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

    Latest Escambia Oil Update

    June 24, 2010


    Here is the latest update on the BP oil spill with information specific to Escambia County for Thursday, June 24:
    <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=535 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
    • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932or #DEP from a cell phone.
    • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
    </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=163>
    • The health department has issued a health advisory from Walkover 23 just west of Portofino on Pensacola Beach, through the Gulf Islands National Seashore, including Ft. Pickens, west to the entrance of Johnson Beach.
    • Signs have been placed in the area advising beach patrons to avoid contact with the contaminated water and double red flags have been posted.
    • The sound side is still safe for swimming and gulf front beaches are still open for sunbathing and other activities above the mean high water line.
    • Several solid mats of brown mousse were reported entering Pensacola Pass this morning. Crews were dispatched to assess and contain the product.
    • Crews cleaned eight tons of oily product off Johnson Beach last night and have been assessing and cleaning both beaches throughout the day, weather permitting. Crews will be cleaning the beaches tonight.
    • Monitors on Pensacola Beach reported heavy tar ball coverage this morning, increasing in severity west of the pier. Large amounts of oil are still washing ashore based on latest reports.
    • Additionally, mousse was discovered in the waters between the Pensacola Beach Pier and the ranger station near Fort Pickens gate, approximately three miles in length. Cleanup crews are on site.
    • New techniques and tools are being utilized to clean the beaches, such as sifting trays, sifting scoops, slotted shovels and nets.
    • A live beached dolphin was rescued from Langdon Beach today and has been taken for rehabilitation in Panama City.
    • Moderate east to southeasterly winds at 10-15 knots will flow onshore throughout today. The overnight winds will shift and become easterly before rotating back to southeasterly by Thursday afternoon.
    • The tropical wave over the central Caribbean Sea has a moderate (30 percent) chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours.
    • The Florida Association of Counties will be hosting a meeting with United States Coast Guard Captain Steve Poulin, Florida Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Mike Sole and commissioners, administrators and emergency directors from Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa, Walton, Bay, Gulf, Franklin and Wakulla counties. The meeting will be held Wednesday, June 23 at 3 p.m. at the Emerald Coast Conference Center, 1250 Miracle Strip Parkway Southeast, Fort Walton Beach, Florida 32548. The roundtable discussion will focus on the efforts being made to respond to the Deepwater horizon incident along with questions counties have regarding issues such as communications, claims and the response model. A live video webstream of the meeting will be available at www.fl-counties.com.
    • Gulf Islands National Seashore hosts volunteer training for citizens assisting seashore visitors Saturday, June 26 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Naval Live Oaks Visitor Center, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Gulf Breeze. For more information call 850-916-3013.
    • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
    • BP claims in Florida total 18,694 with approximately $16,880,359.96 paid.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
    • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
    • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
    • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
    • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
    • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
    • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
    • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
    • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
    • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
    • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
    • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
    • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
    • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
    • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
    • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorlines (PDF).
    • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
    • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
    • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236).
    • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
    • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
    • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County Board of County Commissioners and Staff</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
    • Escambia County Extension Office and University of Florida IFAS will host ?SOS: The Science of the Spill? Public Forum meeting today, Wednesday, June 23 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Sanders Beach Community Center, 913 South ?I? Street
    </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
    • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
    • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
    • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
    • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
    • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
    • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
    • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
    • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519.
    • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
    • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
    • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
    • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
    • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
    • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
    • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
    • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
    • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
    • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
    • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
    • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
      • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
      • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
    • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
    • SRIA lifeguards continue patrolling beaches for oil from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
    • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
    • Escambia County, in conjunction with the University of West Florida, is collecting gulf water samples from Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key routinely to indicate any changes in water quality. The latest testing came back negative for aliphatic hydrocarbons, meaning no dissolved or dispersed hydrocarbons were found. Tar balls represent a different and less toxic form of the oil.
    • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
    • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
    • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
    • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
    • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
    • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
    • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
    • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
    • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
    • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
    • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
    • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=525>Wildlife
    • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
    • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
    Boats
    • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
    • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
    Beaches and Waterways
    • Citizens should take precautions around waterways to avoid contact with oil substances.
    • Officials are closely monitoring potential public health and environmental concerns.
    Personal Safety
    • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
    • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
    • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
    • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
    </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
    • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
    • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
    • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
    • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
    • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
    </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
    "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
    -Nelson Mandela

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Escambia - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

      Escambia Oil Update For Friday

      June 25, 2010


      Here is the latest BP oil spill update for Friday, June 25 with information specific to Escambia County:
      <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=533 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
      • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 1-877-389-8932 end_of_the_skype_highlighting or #DEP from a cell phone.
      • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 1-866-557-1401 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.
      </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=740>
      • Unified Command reported 1,225 clean up crewmembers on the beaches today, from the Alabama line east to the Santa Rosa County line.
      • As a safety measure and help keep the tar/oil matter from being spread, stakes and tape are being used to mark off areas of high concentration at/near Casino Beach.
      • Heavy equipment is being utilized on Pensacola Beach. Seven front-end loaders are staged for use. The rakes did not work well with the heat this morning. As a result, four Beach Tech 2000s are planned for use this evening.
      • Pensacola Pass ? a line of tar balls near Big Lagoon was spotted this morning, skimmer vessels were en route. From the air this morning, a line of mousse was spotted in the bay and skimmers were already working the area.
      • Perdido Pass ? a line of tar balls and tar patties was been reported to Unified Command.
      • Aerial information indicated better conditions than yesterday. The oil product is spotted easier from the air than from the water.
      • Waves and currents are forecast to push northwest for the next few days, which in conjunction with winds will inhibit a further eastward movement of the oil plume.
      • The tropical wave just south of Cuba has a 40 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours. Officials continue to monitor the tropics.
      • Incident Command reported 44,955 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected on Wednesday.
        • West Perdido State Park- 7,500 pounds
          East Pensacola Pier ? 14, 070 pounds
          West Pensacola Pier ? 13,140 pounds
          Gulf Islands National Seashore ? 10,245 pounds
      • The health department has issued a health advisory from Walkover 23 just west of Portofino on Pensacola Beach, through the Gulf Islands National Seashore, including Ft. Pickens, west to the entrance of Johnson Beach.
      • Signs have been placed in the area advising beach patrons to avoid contact with oiled beaches and the contaminated water.
      • The sound side is still safe for swimming and gulf front beaches are still open for sunbathing and other activities above the mean high water line.
      • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
      • Please stay above the high tide line and away from the oil. Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
      • Gulf Islands National Seashore hosts volunteer training for citizens assisting seashore visitors Saturday, June 26 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Naval Live Oaks Visitor Center, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Gulf Breeze. For more information call 850-916-3013 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 850-916-3013 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.
      • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
      • BP claims in Florida total 19,464 with $17,636,720.79 paid.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
      • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
      • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
      • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
      • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
      • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
      • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
      • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
      • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
      • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
      • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
      • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
      • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
      • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
      • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
      • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorlines (PDF).
      • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
      • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
      • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO(1-877-693-5236).
      • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
      • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
      • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
      • Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp will visit the EOC on Monday, June 28 at 2 p.m. for an EOC briefing and tour of the facility. He will be available to the media immediately following..
      </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
      • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
      • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
      • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
      • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
      • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
      • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
      • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
      • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519
      • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
      • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
      • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
      • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
      • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
      • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
      • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
      • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
      • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
      • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
      • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
      • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
        • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
        • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
      • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
      • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
      • Escambia County, in conjunction with the University of West Florida, is collecting gulf water samples from Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key routinely to indicate any changes in water quality. The latest testing came back negative for aliphatic hydrocarbons, meaning no dissolved or dispersed hydrocarbons were found. Tar balls represent a different and less toxic form of the oil.
      • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
      • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
      • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
      • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
      • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
      • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
      • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
      • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
      • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
      • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
      • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
      • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
      • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
      • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
      Boats
      • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
      • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
      Personal Safety
      • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
      • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
      • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
      • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
      • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
      • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
      • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
      • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
      • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
      </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
        • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone
        • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
        • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
        • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816 or 1-800-320-0519
        • Escambia County Citizen?s Information Line: 471-6600
        • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569
      </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
      "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
      -Nelson Mandela

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

        Saturday?s Oil Update

        June 26, 2010


        Here is the latest BP oil spill information specific to Escambia County for Saturday, June 26:

        <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=535 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
        • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone.
        • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
        </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=740>
        • The beaches are open and ready for business.
        • The Health Department rescinded the health advisory for a portion of the beach. The area from Walkover 23 (just west of Portofino) on Pensacola Beach to the entrance of Fort Pickens is no longer under a health advisory. The entire Gulf Islands National Seashore from Fort Pickens to Johnson Beach is still under the advisory. (More Information) (Map)
        • Skimming operations successful in the gulf just off Ft. Pickens. This morning the Escambia County Sheriff?s helicopter was able to notify skimmer vessels of a two mile stretch of oil ribbons. From the water, these oil ribbons could not be seen. Six recovery vessels were dispatched and able to collect the oil before it hit the coastline.
        • Pensacola and Perdido Passes ? A line of mousse approximately three to five feet wide about three quarters of a mile long was visible in Perdido Bay. Scattered patches of mousse near Big Lagoon were spotted this morning. The patches are 10 to 25 feet in diameter. These areas have been reported and skimmers are responding.
        • Pensacola Beach had tar balls covering one to five percent of the beaches.
        • Heavy equipment is being utilized on Pensacola Beach. Work will continue tonight. The Beach Tech 2000 was moderately successful in a test area last night after several passes. Other options are still being considered.
        • Perdido Key had tar balls covering three to 15 percent of the beaches.
        • The local state of emergency has been extended through next Friday, July 2.
        • As a safety measure and help keep the tar/oil matter from being spread, stakes and tape are being used to mark off areas of high concentration at/near Casino Beach.
        • The tropical wave south of Cuba has a 80 percent chance of becoming a tropical cyclone in the next 48 hours. Officials continue to monitor the tropics.
        • Incident Command reported 65,370 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected on Thursday.
          • Perdido Key ? 14,250 pounds
            Perdido Beach ? 8,625 pounds
            East Pensacola Pier ? 10.575 pounds
            West Pensacola Pier ? 19,020 pounds
            Gulf Islands National Seashore ? 12,900 pounds
        • Health Officials are providing the following guidance for coping with the stress, anxiety and depressions that may be brought on by the oil spill:
          • Reacting to a Traumatic Event
            After surviving a disaster, individuals may feel dazed or even numb. They may also feel sad, helpless, or anxious. In spite of the tragedy, some people just feel happy to be alive. These are all normal reactions to the stress of a crisis.
          • Anger

            Anger is a normal, healthy emotion that moves us to action when we have been wronged or victimized. The gulf animals and community are being victimized by the oil spill. Significant anger regarding the events is normal. Properly directed this anger can provide energy for recovery. Improperly directed it is destructive, divisive and damaging.
              • Direct anger into community involvement and help. Individuals can focus their energies on helping friends, family, community and those whose livelihoods have been affected by the oil spill.
              • Be mindful of displacing/directing anger at those close to us such as our children, spouses, family, etc.
              • Be mindful that even those who disagree with us about the crisis are likely hurting too.
              • Be part of the solution, not the problem.
          • Protect Yourself

            Just as individuals would protect themselves from the flu with a flu vaccination, these are steps that can be taken to lessen the impact of stress from the oil spill.
              • Limit exposure to unsettling information (turn off the T.V.)
              • Spend time with family.
              • Go to church, synagogue or mosque.
              • Develop a routine of exercise and healthy living.
          • Ask for Help

            Untreated anxiety and depression, substance abuse, and isolation or lack of a support system may put individuals at greater risk of mental health impacts from the oil spill. It is important for individuals to ask for help if they:
              • Find that they are unable to take care of themselves or their children.
              • Are not able to do their job.
              • Use alcohol or drugs to get away from their problems.
              • Feel sad or depressed for more than two weeks.
              • Think about suicide. ? In this case, individuals should talk to a counselor, their physician, a community mental health organization such as Lakeview Center, or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline (1-800-273-TALK).
          • Children (and Adults also)

            It is important that parents help their children cope by using these measures (which can also be helpful tips for adults):
              • Validate what children are seeing and hearing ? oil is a real problem.
              • Provide hope. Explain to children that lots of people are involved in cleaning the beaches and fixing the problem. Explain that your children will be able to go to the beach again.
              • Remember that children absorb what?s around them. Be a positive, healthy stimulus by increasing your own resiliency to the situation.
              • Give children an active role so they feel they can contribute to the beach getting better. For example, children might donate allowance money to a clean-up effort, keep their own rooms clean or spend time with friends who are also missing the beach.
              • Do not take children to the beach to actually clean oil.
          • Need Mental Health Services?
              • Building H, which is located on the corner of ?H? Street and West Lakeview Avenue on the Pensacola campus of Lakeview Center
              • Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from noon to 2 p.m.
              • 6024 Spikes Way, Milton, Fla.
              • Open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
              In Escambia County:
              Lakeview Center (850) 432-1222
              Lakeview?s 24-hour Crisis Line (850) 438-1617
              Lakeview?s Walk-In Clinic (Adult Outpatient Services)
              In Santa Rosa County:
              Avalon Center of Lakeview (850) 437-8900Health officials would also like to remind everyone to avoid potential health impacts from an oiled shoreline:
          • Avoid entering areas where oil can be seen or smelled.
          • Avoid direct skin contact with oil, oil-contaminated water and sediments.
          • Do not swim or ski in areas affected by the oil spill, and if traveling through the area by boat, take precautions when hoisting the boat anchor. If oil makes contact with skin, wash it off with soap and water.
          • Do not fish in oil spill-affected waters.
          • Do not harvest or eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
          • Avoid boating through oil slicks or sheens.
          • Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
          • Prevent pets from entering oil-contaminated areas.
        • The sound side is still safe for swimming and gulf front beaches are still open for sunbathing and other activities above the mean high water line.
        • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
        • Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
        • Gulf Islands National Seashore hosts volunteer training for citizens assisting seashore visitors Saturday, June 26 from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Naval Live Oaks Visitor Center, Gulf Islands National Seashore, Gulf Breeze. For more information call 850-916-3013.
        • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
        • BP claims in Florida total 20,431 with $17,911,674.95 paid.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
        • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
        • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
        • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
        • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
        • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
        • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
        • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
        • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
        • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
        • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
        • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
        • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
        • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
        • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
        • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorlines (PDF).
        • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
        • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
        • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236).
        • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
        • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
        • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519or #DEP from your cell phone.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
        • Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp will visit the EOC on Monday, June 28 at 2 p.m. for an EOC briefing and tour of the facility. He will be available to the media immediately following..
        </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
        • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
        • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
        • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
        • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
        • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
        • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
        • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
        • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519.
        • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
        • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
        • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
        • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
        • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
        • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
        • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
        • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
        • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
        • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
        • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
        • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
          • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
          • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
        • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
        • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
        • Escambia County, in conjunction with the University of West Florida, is collecting gulf water samples from Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key routinely to indicate any changes in water quality. The latest testing came back negative for aliphatic hydrocarbons, meaning no dissolved or dispersed hydrocarbons were found. Tar balls represent a different and less toxic form of the oil.
        • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
        • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
        • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
        • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
        • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
        • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
        • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
        • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
        • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
        • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
        • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
        • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
        • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
        • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
        Boats
        • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
        • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
        Personal Safety
        • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
        • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
        • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
        • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
        • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
        • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
        • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
        • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
        • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
        </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
          • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone
          • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
          • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
          • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816 or 1-800-320-0519
          • Escambia County Citizen?s Information Line: 471-6600
          • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569

        </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
        "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
        -Nelson Mandela

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

          Oil Update For Sunday

          June 27, 2010


          Here is the latest BP oil spill information specific to Escambia County for Sunday, June 27:

          <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=530 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
          • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932or #DEP from a cell phone.
          • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
          </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=634>
          • There will not be a news conference in the EOC on Sunday. News conferences will continue on Monday as regularly scheduled.
          • Winds are forecast to be east-southeasterly through Monday. Seas of one to three feet and a 10-30 percent chance of offshore rain are expected.
          • Conditions will be mostly favorable for recovery efforts across the northern-central gulf today.
          • Tropical Storm Alex has formed in the western Caribbean. While it is still too soon to tell if the storm will impact Florida or the Deepwater Horizon Response, long-term model forecasts predict the storm to stay west of Louisiana.
          • Incident Command reported 51,907 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected on Friday.o Perdido Key- 9,775 poundso Perdido Beach- 10,950 pounds o East Pensacola Pier- 12,087 pounds
            o West Pensacola Pier- 10,995 pounds
            o Gulf Island National Seashore- 8,100 pounds
          • Incident Command is also reporting 10 skimmers in the inland waterways in Escambia County.
          • Perdido and Pensacola Passes ? A line of dark orange oil approximately five to 10 feet wide running from Ono Island west towards Alabama. Several small patches oil were observed in the Pensacola Pass. These areas have been reported.
          • Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key Beach Protection and Shoreline Cleanup Plan
          • The beaches are open for business.
          • The Health Department rescinded the health advisory for a portion of the beach. The area from Walkover 23 (just west of Portofino) on Pensacola Beach to the entrance of Fort Pickens is no longer under a health advisory.
          • The entire Gulf Islands National Seashore from Fort Pickens to Johnson Beach is still under the advisory. (More Information, Map)
          • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
          • Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
          • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
          • BP claims in Florida total 20,932 with $18,241,105.61 paid.
          • There are 387 vessels are deployed in Florida for the Vessels of Opportunity program.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
          • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
          • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
          • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
          • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
          • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
          • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
          • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
          • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
          • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
          • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
          • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
          • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
          • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
          • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
          • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorlines (PDF).
          • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
          • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
          • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236).
          • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
          • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
          • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
          • Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp will visit the EOC on Monday, June 28 at 2 p.m. for an EOC briefing and tour of the facility. He will be available to the media immediately following.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
          • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
          • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
          • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
          • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
          • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
          • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
          • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
          • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519
          • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
          • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
          • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
          • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
          • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
          • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
          • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
          • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
          • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
          • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
          • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
          • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
            • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
            • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
          • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
          • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
          • Escambia County, in conjunction with the University of West Florida, is collecting gulf water samples from Santa Rosa Island and Perdido Key routinely to indicate any changes in water quality. The latest testing came back negative for aliphatic hydrocarbons, meaning no dissolved or dispersed hydrocarbons were found. Tar balls represent a different and less toxic form of the oil.
          • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
          • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
          • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
          • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
          • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
          • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
          • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
          • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
          • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
          • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
          • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
          • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
          • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
          • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
          Boats
          • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
          • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
          Personal Safety
          • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
          • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
          • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
          • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
          • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
          • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
          • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
          • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
          • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
          </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
            • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone
            • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
            • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
            • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816 or 1-800-320-0519
            • Escambia County Citizen?s Information Line: 471-6600
            • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569

          </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
          "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
          -Nelson Mandela

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

            Monday?s Escambia Oil Update

            June 28, 2010


            Here is the latest BP oil spill information specific to Escambia County for Monday, June 28.

            <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=535 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
            • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone.
            • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
            • Everyone is advised to avoid contact with tar balls or oiled debris on the beaches. (More Information)
            </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=634>
            • The Health Department rescinded the health advisory for all area beaches.
            • Winds are forecast to be east-southeasterly through Monday. Seas of one to three feet and a 10-30 percent chance of offshore rain are expected.
            • Tropical Storm Alex is currently over the Yucatan Peninsula. It is forecasted to enter the southern Gulf of Mexico later today. The current track has the storm moving west-northwest.
            • Incident Command reported 72,510 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected on Friday.o Perdido Key- 14,370 poundso East Pensacola Pier- 21,750 poundso West Pensacola Pier- 22,800 poundso Gulf Island National Seashore- 13,590 pounds
            • Incident Command is also reporting 10 skimmers in the inland waterways in Escambia County.
            • Aerial recon flight information from Sunday morning observed the following:
              • Big Lagoon ? rainbow sheen and and silver sheen observed in streamers on the water surface, approximately 100 feet south into Big Lagoon from the north shore. Produce was approximately 300 feet long by 60 feet wide. There were seven vessels in the area and skippers were working the product.
              • Gulf of Mexico ? south of Pensacola Beach/Fort Pickens entrance beginning at five miles south into the Gulf of Mexico; heavy orang mousse, silver sheen, rainbow sheen, metallic sheen observed in streamers.
              • Gulf of Mexico ? offshore approximately 500 yards from entrance to Fort Pickens, heavy concentration of rainbow sheen.
              • Gulf of Mexico ? offshore at Pensacola Beach fishing pier, a streamer of light mousse and sheen was observed just east of the fishing pier.
              • Perdido Pass ? a streamer of heavy mousse was observed entering Perdido Pass. Several vessels were in the area.
            • Perdido and Pensacola Passes ? Sporadic tar balls along the tide line have been reported in Pensacola Pass. A streamer of heavy mousse was observed entering Perdido Pass. Several vessels were in the area.
            • News conferences will continue on Monday as regularly scheduled.
            • Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key Beach Protection and Shoreline Cleanup Plan
            • The beaches are open for business.
            • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
            • Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
            • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
            • BP claims in Florida total 21,288 with $18,241,105.61 paid.
            • There are 387 vessels are deployed in Florida for the Vessels of Opportunity program.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
            • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
            • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
            • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
            • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
            • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
            • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
            • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
            • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
            • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
            • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
            • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
            • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
            • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
            • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
            • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorlines (PDF).
            • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase St., Ste. 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
            • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
            • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO (1-877-693-5236).
            • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
            • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
            • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519or #DEP from your cell phone.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
            • Lt. Governor Jeff Kottkamp will visit the EOC on Monday, June 28 at 2 p.m. for an EOC briefing and tour of the facility. He will be available to the media immediately following.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
            • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
            • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
            • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
            • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
            • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
            • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
            • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
            • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519.
            • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
            • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
            • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
            • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
            • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
            • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
            • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
            • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
            • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
            • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
            • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
            • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
              • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
              • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
            • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
            • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
            • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
            • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
            • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
            • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
            • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
            • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
            • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
            • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
            • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
            • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
            • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
            • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
            • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
            • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
            Boats
            • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
            • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
            Personal Safety
            • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
            • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
            • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
            • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
            • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
            • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
            • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
            • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
            • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
            </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
              • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone
              • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
              • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
              • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816 or 1-800-320-0519
              • Escambia County Citizen?s Information Line: 471-6600
              • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569

            </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
            "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
            -Nelson Mandela

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

              Tuesday Escambia Oil Update

              June 29, 2010


              Here is the latest BP oil spill information specific to Escambia County for Tuesday, June 29:

              <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=535 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
              • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932or #DEP from a cell phone.
              • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
              • Everyone is advised to avoid contact with tar balls or oiled debris on the beaches. (More Information)
              </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=566>
              • The Escambia County Health Department has issued a health advisory from the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier west to the Pensacola Pass, including Fort Pickens. This advisory was issued du to the extensive oil sheen, oil mousse and tar balls reported in the area. (More Information)
              • The Escambia County Health Department has release information on avoiding oil and tar on the beaches. (More Information).
              • NOAA expands fishing closed area in the Gulf of Mexico. (More Information)
              • Winds are from the south southeast. Thunderstorms are impacting cleanup efforts both on the beaches and in the water. For safety reasons, if lightning is in the area, crews will be unable to continue working.
              • The projected path of Tropical Storm Alex is not expected to directly impact Escambia County. Higher tides and heavier surf conditions may be experienced as a result of the storm. Booms remain deployed and may need to be repositioned if conditions warrant.
              • Aerial recon flight information from Monday afternoon observed the following:
                • Pensacola Bay – Convergence line of silver sheen/seaweed/tar patties observed on the water surface, approximately 200 feet north of the old Coast Guard Station. Product was approximately 500 feet long by 15 feet wide. There were three vessels in the area.
                • Pensacola Bay – off Pensacola NAS beginning approximately 200 feet north of shore, area of silver sheen approximately 1 mile by 20 feet.
                • Gulf of Mexico – Pensacola Pass (east to Park West) – silver, rainbow, and metallic sheen located in Gulf impacting shore. Sheen also included streamers with localized tar balls/mats. Shoreline impacts had approximate coverage of 10 percent. Product extended approximately 600 feet into Gulf.
                • Gulf of Mexico – Pensacola Pass (Park West to fishing pier) – silver, rainbow, and metallic sheen located in Gulf impacting shore. Sheen also included streamers with tar balls/mats. Shoreline impacts had approximate coverage of 30 percent. Product extended approximately 600 feet into Gulf.
                • Perdido Pass was clear.
              • Incident Command is reporting 18 skimmers in the inland waterways in Escambia County.
              • Incident Command reported 88,410 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected by 484 people on Sunday. o Perdido Key – 11,050 pounds collected by 45 people o East Pensacola Pier – 3,270 pounds collected by 243 people o West Pensacola Pier – 55,050 pounds collected by 151 people o Perdido Beach – 19,040 pounds collected by 45 people
              • Perdido and Pensacola Passes – In Perdido Pass, no oil was observed this morning. In Pensacola Pass, a concentration of heavy mousse was seen in the bay. This was reported to unified command.
              • On Sunday, there were numerous reports of a brown material in part of Pensacola Bay from Bayou Texar to NAS Pensacola. Samples were collected and analyzed. This material was not oil. It was brown filamentous algae.
              • Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key Beach Protection and Shoreline Cleanup Plan
              • The beaches are open for business.
              • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
              • Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
              • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on “If Oil is Spotted on the Shore” that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
              • BP claims in Florida total 21,522 with $18,239,920.61 paid.
              • There are 396 vessels are deployed in Florida for the Vessels of Opportunity program.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
              • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
              • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
              • BP’s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
              • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
              • BP’s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP’s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118.
              • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640.
              • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
              • BP Vessels of Opportunity – see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
              • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
              • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
              • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
              • The Governor’s office released today that a meeting of the Gulf Oil Spill Economic Recovery Task Force will meet on Wednesday, June 30 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the University of West Florida Conference Center, 11000 University Parkway, Building 22. The meeting will also be web cast. Web cast and further information can be found at www.flgov.com/gulfrecoverytaskforce.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
              • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
              • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
              • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
              • See DEP’s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida’s Shorelines (PDF).
              • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase Street, Suite 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
              • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center’s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
              • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO(1-877-693-5236).
              • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
              • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
              • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
              • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
              • “Hot shot” teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
              • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
              • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
              • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
              • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
              • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
              • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519.
              • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
              • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
              • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
              • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
              • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
              • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
              • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida’s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
              • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
              • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
              • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida’s shoreline for impact.
              • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
              • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
                • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
                • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
              • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
              • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
              • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
              • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
              • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
              • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
              • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
              • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
              • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
              • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
              • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
              • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
              • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
              • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
              • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
              • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
              Boats
              • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
              • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
              Personal Safety
              • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
              • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
              • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
              • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
              • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
              • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida’s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
              • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person’s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
              • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
              • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business’s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
              </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>Important Phone Numbers For Citizens
                • Report oil on the beach or shoreline: 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone
                • To report oiled wildlife: 1-866-557-1401
                • BP Claims: 1-800-440-0858
                • To report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom: 1-866-448-5816or 1-800-320-0519
                • Escambia County Citizen’s Information Line: 471-6600
                • Florida Oil Spill Information Line: 1-888-337-3569

              </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
              "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
              -Nelson Mandela

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Escambia County, Florida - Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill Disaster Update

                Wednesday Escambia Oil Update

                June 30, 2010



                <TABLE cellSpacing=2 cellPadding=2 width=535 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ff4646 height=46>
                • Report tar or oiled debris on the beach 1-877-389-8932 or #DEP from a cell phone.
                • DO NOT TOUCH oiled or injured wildlife. Report your finding to 1-866-557-1401.
                • Everyone is advised to avoid contact with tar balls or oiled debris on the beaches. (More Information)
                </TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=566>
                • Winds are from the southeast. Thunderstorms are impacting cleanup efforts both on the beaches and in the water. For safety reasons, if lightning is in the area, crews will be unable to continue working.
                • The projected path of Tropical Storm Alex is not expected to directly impact Escambia County. The storm is headed toward northern Mexico and southern Texas. Higher tides and heavier surf conditions may be experienced as a result of the storm. Booms remain deployed and may need to be repositioned if conditions warrant.
                • Aerial recon flight information from Tuesday morning observed the following:
                  • Pensacola Pass ? light mousse and silver sheen was noted in four separate streamers. Three skimmers were on site and helicopter pilot circled to give visual. Coordinates were given to FWC water craft also on site. Streamers were .4 nautical miles, .25 nautical miles, .2 nautical miles, and .15 nautical miles in length.
                  • Near the shore of Johnson Beach ? observed silver sheen, and light mousse streamers to 2.5 continuous nautical miles east along the Gulf front.
                  • Fort Pickens ? observed tar balls, mousse and silver sheen; streamers and patches near the shore.
                  • Twenty percent coverage of product near the shore from Park West for 3.7 continuous nautical miles east to approximately 1.2 nautical miles east of the Pensacola Beach fishing pier. Observed tar balls, mousse and silver sheen.
                  • Five percent coverage of product observed near shore on Gulf side across from sewer plant; approximately 100 foot patch of tar balls, light mousse and silver sheen.
                  • No product observed in Little Sabine Bay.
                • Incident Command is reporting 20 skimmers in the inland waterways in Escambia County.
                • Incident Command reported 91,610 pounds of tar ball and oil material was collected by 568 people on Monday.
                  • Perdido Key State Park ? 8,160 pounds collected by 53 people
                  • Perdido Key State Park Public Access #2 ? 6,800 pounds collected by 53 people
                  • East Pensacola Pier ? 7,800 pounds collected by 150 people
                  • West Pensacola Pier ? 8,850 pounds collected by 150 people
                  • West Pensacola Pier #2 ? 60,000 pounds collected by 162 people
                • Perdido and Pensacola Passes ? Pensacola Pass was reported clear this morning. In Perdido Pass, a patch of reddish-brown mousse, approximately 15 feet by 20 feet, was seen and reported to unified command.
                • The Escambia County Health Department has released information on what a person should do when an oily feeling or residue is present on skin. (More information)
                • The Escambia County Health Department has issued a health advisory from the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier west to the Pensacola Pass, including Fort Pickens. This is not a ban. If you choose to swim, do so at your own risk. This advisory was issued du to the extensive oil sheen, oil mousse and tar balls reported in the area. (More Information)
                • The Escambia County Health Department has release information on avoiding oil and tar on the beaches. (More Information).
                • Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key Beach Protection and Shoreline Cleanup Plan
                • The beaches are open for business.
                • Please be sensitive to the clean up efforts on the beaches. We understand curiosity, but officials are asking the public to avoid work areas and allow room for the workers and equipment needed to clean the beaches.
                • Please do not handle or walk through the tar balls and oil. This only spreads the product and makes cleanup more difficult.
                • Unified Command has released a fact sheet on ?If Oil is Spotted on the Shore? that provides details on what happens after the oil reaches the shore. Details.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>BP</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00 height=25>
                • Incident Command has received reports that unknown individuals are attempting to scam people who would like to be beach cleaning workers for the Deepwater Horizon oil spill response effort. Reports have come in from the states of Florida, Alabama and Mississippi. These individuals reportedly state that workers must pay them for training before they can be employed. Legitimate beach cleaning contractors provide all required training free of charge. Individuals approached by anyone offering employment, only after you pay for the training, are encouraged to contact local law enforcement officials.
                • BP claims in Florida total 22,492 with $18,755,093.32 paid.
                • There are 262 vessels are deployed in Florida for the Vessels of Opportunity program.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff height=422>
                • Do not sign any documents in return from money from BP or anyone else until you know the extent of your loss. BP officials carry proper identification badges or business cards.
                • There are reports of a scam involving individuals falsely representing themselves as BP employees and offering applicants training and job placement for a fee. BP does not charge to train applicants. If you or someone you know has been charged for training, please contact law enforcement.
                • BP?s Florida Gulf Response web site: www.floridagulfresponse.com.
                • File claims with BP online: http://www.bp.com/claims.
                • BP?s claims office is located at 3960 W. Navy Boulevard, Suite 16 & 17. The office is currently open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., seven days a week, until further notice. BP claims categories. Call 1-800-440-0858 to help expedite the process. If you are not satisfied with BP?s resolution, call 1-800-280-7118
                • The BP community outreach office is located at 435 East Government Street for questions on volunteering, vessels of opportunity program, or any other questions. Phone: 850-912-8640
                • To register as a consultant, contractor, vendor or submit information on alternative response technology, services products or suggestions, call BP at 281-366-5511.
                • BP Vessels of Opportunity ? see the master vessel charter agreement and vessel requirements checklist online www.deepwaterhorizonresponse.com. To pick up or deliver completed Vessels of Opportunity packets, visit 435 East Government Street. For information, call 281-366-5511.
                • The Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Tri-State Bird Rescue & Research, contracted by BP to provide assistance to oiled wildlife. Specific safety and other requirements must be met before anyone will be allowed on-site for any participation. If you have wildlife training, call 1-866-557-1401.
                • Boaters are requested to report sightings of broken, disconnected or adrift boom and are asked to keep their distance from boom especially at night or in conditions of restricted visibility. Please report damaged, vandalized, adrift or stolen boom to: 1-866-448-5816. See details.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Federal</TD></TR><TR bgColor=#ffffff><TD height=41>
                • Latest information from NOAA Fisheries Service, including federal fisheries closure, regulation changes and quota increases: http://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>State of Florida</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
                • The Gulf Oil Spill Economic Recovery Task Force will meet on Wednesday, June 30 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the University of West Florida Conference Center, 11000 University Parkway, Building 22. The meeting will also be web cast. Web cast and further information can be found at www.flgov.com/gulfrecoverytaskforce.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD height=268>
                • Governor Charlie Crist sent a letter to Doug Suttles, Chief Operating Officer of Exploration and Production for BP America, Inc. requesting the data needed to evaluate the claims process and measure the economic impact of the losses to all level of governments throughout Florida. Letter
                • Five skimmers were contracted by the state of Florida for this area with one skimmer designated for Escambia County.
                • See Florida Department of Health information and alerts about the health effects from oil.
                • See DEP?s Homeowner Tips for Protecting Florida?s Shorelines (PDF).
                • The Small Business Administration issued an economic injury Disaster Loan Declaration for the state of Florida. Pensacola office: 401 E. Chase Street, Suite 100. For more information on Economic Injury Disaster Loans visit the SBA website.
                • For information on the Florida Small Business Development Center?s Mobile Area Command units, visit www.floridasbdc.org/Special Programs/bcrm.asp.
                • Additional guidance to help small businesses survive a disaster can be found at www.MyFloridaCFO.com or by calling 850-413-3089 or toll-free 1-877-MY-FL-CFO(1-877-693-5236)
                • Submit innovative technology ideas, suggestions or products by completing this form. Send the form and supporting documentation to Innovative.Technology@dep.state.fl.us.
                • Video and audio public service announcements are available for download to educate the public on response, safety, coast watch and beach cleanup. See details.
                • Report boom vandalism to the 1-800-320-0519 or #DEP from your cell phone.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Escambia County</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffff00>
                • Buck Lee, Santa Rosa Island Authority Executive Director, will hold a news conference at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, June 30 at the base of the Pensacola Beach fishing pier. The topics will include water sampling testing and the safety of swimming in the waters. Keith Wilkins, Escambia County Community & Environment Deputy Bureau Chief, will also be attending.
                • The Escambia County Emergency Operations Center is changing the operational schedule to Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
                • A news conference will be held at 9:30 a.m. on operational days.
                • In observance of the Fourth of July holiday weekend, the EOC will be closed on Monday, July 5.
                • Normal operations will resume, Tuesday, July 6.
                • News releases and updates will be sent as needed on non-operational days.
                • County personnel continue to monitor the situation and will re-evaluate operations in the event circumstances change.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#f1f1ec height=916>
                • Cleaning stations have been placed on both Perdido Key and Pensacola Beach at the crossovers (between the crossovers and the roadways) to aid in the removal of tar and oil. Clean-up crews continue to work both beaches at night when temperatures are cooler.
                • ?Hot shot? teams are responding to specific requests during the day as needed.
                • Staff continue to monitor clean-up efforts and skimming operations.
                • Skimmer vessels continue to respond as reports are received. Skimmers are working nightly.
                • A federal website is live providing real time information about the Deepwater Horizon BP Oil spill into one customizable, interactive map.
                • A Recreational Vessel Decontamination Facility for local boaters is being established.
                • Reports vary widely throughout the day as heat from the sun brings subsurface oil to the top, and cooler temperatures at night tend to cause it to sink below the surface.
                • Anyone caught destroying, disturbing or stealing boom will be prosecuted. If you spot any illegal activity related to the booms, please call 1-800-320-0519 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 1-800-320-0519 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.
                • See Escambia Inland Waterways Deployed Boom List.
                • Perdido Pass, Pensacola Pass and Bayou Texar are navigationally restricted during flood (incoming) tide and reopen during ebb (outgoing) tide as water flows out to the gulf. They are manned to allow access to necessary vessel traffic. (See NOAA tide predictions.)
                • Boaters are asked to be mindful of the boom and skimming operations, to use slow speeds so as not to produce a wake that may disrupt the boom, and to be aware of restricted areas.
                • A flashing light has been attached to all boom to increase visibility to boaters.
                • The Intracoastal Waterway remains open.
                • The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), in coordination with Florida?s Department of Environmental Protection, the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services and the Department of Health, issued an executive order to temporarily close a portion of coastal state waters offshore of Escambia County to the harvest of saltwater fish, crabs and shrimp. Details.
                • The closure includes state waters from the beaches out nine nautical miles into the Gulf from the Alabama line east to the Pensacola Beach water tower. Interior bays and estuaries remain open to fishing. This area covers approximately 23 miles of Florida?s coastline in Escambia County. Map.
                • Recreational catch-and-release fishing is still allowed.
                • The Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier and the Pensacola Bay Fishing Bridge are open for sightseers and fishing, however fishing off the Pensacola Beach Fishing Pier is catch and release only.
                • Reconnaissance flights and ATV beach patrols are being conducted daily, weather permitting, to monitor Florida?s shoreline for impact.
                • Unified command continues to check, verify the condition and make repairs as needed to currently placed booms.
                • If citizens see anything unusual on the beaches, Escambia County has opened field offices on Pensacola Beach and Perdido Key to assist in answering questions from the public and to also act as staging areas for the county monitoring teams.
                  • The Pensacola Beach field office is located at 5 Via Deluna, Suite 8; phone: 934-6500.
                  • The Perdido Key field office is located at 13578 Perdido Key Drive; phone: 791-6905
                • Staff continue to monitor and maintain boom. See Booming Locations and Booming Maps.
                • Hurricane season began June 1. See the Hurricanes and Oil Spill Fact Sheet (PDF)
                • On inland waters (bays, bayous, estuaries, rivers), private property owners may install oil absorbent material, booms or fences on private property above the mean high waterline (MHWL) only. No material may be installed or sprayed below the MHWL.
                • On gulf-front property, the use of silt fences, obstructions, hay bales, peat, surfactants or other material is not approved. DEP is the permitting agency for beaches and coastal systems. No obstructions to sea turtle nesting behavior is allowed.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>City of Pensacola</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>
                • Boom has been added by city at the Escambia Bay entrance to Gaborone Swamp off Scenic Highway.
                • As requested by the city, additional boom has been placed at the mouth of Bayou Texar by the county to provide additional protection.
                • Boom has been added by city to protect aquatic vegetation just south of 17th Avenue boat ramp at Bayou Texar on west side.
                • DEP has boomed Project Greenshores Phase II from Muscogee Wharf to Hawkshaw Lagoon.
                • Boom has been added by the city across entrance to Pitt Slip Marina in the very near future, as warranted.
                • Boom has been added by the city to entrance of new Maritime Park bulkhead mitigation site immediately west of Crab Trap restaurant.
                • City is currently requesting/seeking approximately 1100′ of boom to secure and protect the rip-rap surrounding the Bruce Beach wetland mitigation site maintained by the Port of Pensacola.
                • Boom has been added by city to protect shoreline of Sanders Beach-Corrine Jones community center and waterfront park facility immediately east of Bayou Chico.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Volunteer Opportunities</TD></TR><TR><TD>
                • The Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has determined volunteers cannot be used in any situation where they may come in contact with oiled shorelines or oiled wildlife.
                • To volunteer, visit www.volunteerfloridadisaster.org.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD>Safety Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=495>Wildlife
                • Do not attempt to rescue oiled or injured birds or wildlife as this may cause additional injuries.
                • If oiled, injured or dead wildlife are found, call 1-866-557-1401. Provide location where the wildlife was sighted.
                Boats
                • Boats should keep a safe distance from the booms. Do not drive boats over booms.
                • Do not drive boats through slicks or sheens.
                Personal Safety
                • Gulf coast residents may detect an odor because of the oil spill. Some are more sensitive to these odors and may experience nasal irritation and feelings of nausea. In combination with seasonal allergies or pre-existing respiratory conditions, some may experience more severe symptoms. For Air Quality Reports, see http://www.epa.gov/bpspill/air.html.
                • Individuals who have pre-existing medical conditions, such as asthma or other respiratory illness should contact their health care provider if feeling symptomatic.
                • If you see or smell oil, leave immediately. Avoid skin contact with oil or oil-contaminated water. Do not swim or ski in areas affected by oil, and if you travel through the area by boat, take care when hoisting the anchor. Restrict pets from entering oil-contaminated areas. If you get oil on your skin, wash it off with soap and water. Young children, pregnant women, people with compromised immune systems, and individuals with underlying respiratory conditions should avoid the area.
                • Do not fish in the oil spill-affected waters. Do not harvest and eat dead fish, fish with oily residue or fish that have a petroleum odor.
                </TD></TR><TR><TD height=6><HR></TD></TR><TR><TD height=20>Business Information</TD></TR><TR><TD height=269>
                • More information about what types of damages are eligible for compensation under the Oil Pollution Act as well as guidance to seek compensation can be found at www.uscg.mil/npfc.
                • Florida emergency management and economic development staff are gathering information from businesses impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Please complete their survey and help shape Florida?s response to this event. The survey will be updated periodically.
                • Take detailed records of cancelled reservations. When cancellations occur, ask the party if the cancellation is related the oil spill. Keep the person?s name and contact information, and the revenues lost as a result of the cancellation.
                • Businesses negatively impacted due to the oil spill, are asked to keep detailed profit and loss records should a claim need to be presented. Calculate estimated losses for a six-week period and have records, receipts and documentation to support your claim. Compare business to a five-year average of revenues between May and June, which can offer insight as to the damages incurred.
                • Make a detailed list of assets, including non-structural, and include supportive records. If your hotel or restaurant is within walking distance to the beach, the business?s assets could be damaged even though there is no physical damage to the structure. Please record this depreciation.
                </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
                .../

                "Safety and security don't just happen, they are the result of collective consensus and public investment. We owe our children, the most vulnerable citizens in our society, a life free of violence and fear."
                -Nelson Mandela

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