
By JIM GERLACH, Guest Columnist
The
British Petroleum Deepwater Horizon spill has demonstrated that not
only does oil and water not mix, but throw in bureaucracy, and you have
a combination that can devastate the environment, idle entire
industries and cause gut-wrenching misery. Nearly three months have
passed since the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded in the Gulf of Mexico,
uncorking a geyser of natural gas and oil and claiming the lives of 11
workers.
Like most Americans, I am extremely frustrated that so
much time has passed with so little evidence that executives at BP or
the leaders of federal agencies have a workable plan to cap the gushing
well and limit the environmental and economic damage.
A recent
CBS/New York Times nationwide poll showed the public's patience is
wearing thin, with 59 percent of Americans saying that the president
does not have a clear plan for combating the spill. Americans are eager
to help find solutions to cap the gushing well and clean up every drop
of oil.
BP has reportedly received more than 20,000 proposals
from small businesses and entrepreneurs who want to stop the estimated
30,000 to 60,000 barrels of oil polluting the Gulf each day. But the
company is considering just 500 of these proposals.
Troubling
testimony during a recent Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Committee hearing also revealed major hurdles stand in the way of
developing and implementing new technologies that could potentially aid
with the Gulf cleanup. The federal government and BP need to get their
acts together and stop wasting precious time in putting an end to this
environmental and economic catastrophe.
Every available resource
must be committed to this effort. The same kind of ingenuity and
engineering know-how that our nation marshaled to repair the Hubble
telescope orbiting 355 miles above the Earth must be applied in capping
this leaking oil well 5,000 feet under water. Neither BP nor the
federal government should stand in the way.
The White House
should immediately make sure a law passed in 1920 known as the Jones
Act is not standing in the way of allowing our foreign allies to pitch
in with cleaning up the spill. The Jones Act requires ships involved in
mercantile trade in U.S. waters to be built, owned and operated by
Americans.
There have been conflicting reports about whether the
Jones Act led to the federal government turning down offers from
foreign nations to provide skimmers to capture some of the leaking oil.
Let's eliminate all doubt and avoid potential bureaucratic delays by
temporarily waiving the Jones Act restrictions to make it perfectly
clear that any and all offers to help will be accepted.
The
House of Representatives has already passed bipartisan measures that
will hold BP accountable and give the White House access to funds
needed for the cleanup.
The first bill, which President Obama
signed into law, allows the administration to withdraw additional money
from the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund to better respond to the BP
disaster.
Another bill I supported would grant subpoena power to
the National Commission investigating the Deepwater Horizon explosion
and the response to this terrible tragedy. BP must be responsible for
cleaning up the spill and compensating the fishing crews, hotel owners
and countless other workers whose livelihoods have been jeopardized by
this spill and the slow response.
Agreeing to set up a $20
billion escrow fund to pay claims for damages and lost wages is an
encouraging sign that BP will meet its tremendous obligations to those
in the Gulf region.
Taxpayers did not create this mess, and
should not bear an undue burden in repairing the widespread damage it
has caused. Americans have a long and proud history of overcoming steep
challenges. Whether reuniting the nation after the Civil War,
rebuilding our economy after the Great Depression or reaffirming our
commitment to freedom and democratic principles after the terror
attacks on September 11, 2001, we have always rallied to prevail in the
face of seemingly insurmountable odds.
Now, it's time to
redouble our efforts and commit every resource available in the Gulf to
show the world that while oil and water will always separate, Americans
will always unite in a time of national crisis.
(Congressman Gerlach of Chester Springs, represents parts of Berks, Chester, Montgomery and Lehigh counties.)