Obama says he won't forget Gulf oil spill families
WASHINGTON
One man who lost a son asked Obama to support efforts to update
federal law limiting the amount of money the families can collect.
"He told us we weren't going to be forgotten," said Keith
Jones of Baton Rouge, La. "He just wanted us to know this wasn't
going to leave his mind and his heart."
Jones' 28-year-old son, Gordon, was working on the Deepwater
Horizon oil rig leased by BP PLC when it exploded April 20 and then
sank in the Gulf of Mexico, causing the worst environmental
disaster in U.S. history and creating one of Obama's biggest
challenges as president.
The younger Jones, a mud engineer, left behind a wife, Michelle,
and two sons, a 2-year-old and one born just a month ago. Obama
held the baby, Maxwell Gordon.
"He said he hadn't done that in nine years, held a baby that
size," Keith Jones told reporters afterward on the White House
driveway.
The meeting with the families came on Day 51 of the disaster.
Obama also updated congressional leaders from both parties on the
response to the spill, and the top federal official overseeing the
crisis invited BP executives to meet next week with Obama, their
first meeting with the president since the rig exploded and sank.
Amid the grandeur of the Red Room and the adjacent State Dining
Room, Obama addressed the grieving families as a group before he
worked his way around the rooms, taking as much time as needed to
console each family, Keith Jones said.
White House press secretary Robert Gibbs released a brief
statement afterward that said Obama expressed his condolences and
told the families that he, first lady Michelle Obama and the entire
administration are "behind them and will be there long after the
cameras are gone as they go through their unimaginable grief."
Obama was joined by Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, White House
energy adviser Carol Browner, senior adviser Valerie Jarrett and
Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, who is overseeing the crisis for the
government.
The meeting lasted about 50 minutes and Bo, the Obama family
dog, was brought in at one point.
Keith Jones said he and another son, Chris, asked Obama to
support changing the Death on the High Seas Act, a 90-year-old law
that limits liability for wrongful deaths more than three miles
offshore. He said the law is unfair and "not in keeping with the
way we do things now."
Obama promised to look into the matter, Keith Jones said.
Gibbs had told reporters earlier Thursday that Obama would tell
the families that he'll work with Congress to address disparities
in the law and to make sure that the families receive due
compensation.
Jones is among four families that have sued Transocean Ltd., the
rig's owner, as well as BP and other companies involved in its
operation. The cases seek unspecified damages and are pending in
federal courts in Houston and New Orleans. They could be
consolidated with more than 150 other lawsuits filed by fishermen,
businesses and property owners claiming economic losses because of
the spill.
Obama put a six-month halt to such deep-sea oil drilling after
the accident, but some lawmakers and others want him to lift it,
arguing that the freeze could idle tens of thousands of oil
industry workers.
Courtney Kemp, the widow of 27-year-old Roy Wyatt Kemp of
Jonesville, La., said at a news conference on Capitol Hill that she
told Obama the offshore drilling moratorium was devastating Gulf
states. She said Obama "understood where we were coming from."
In his conversations with the families, Obama defended his
decision to halt drilling, saying he wanted time to put additional
safety measures in place to make sure something like the Deepwater
Horizon explosion doesn't happen again.
Roy Kemp's mother, Peggy, said Obama "made promises I hope can
be fulfilled."
"We walked away very confident," added Sheila Clark, widow of
Donald Clark, 49, of Newellton, La. "Everything he can do he will
do. I feel he will do his very best."
Congressional leaders, meanwhile, stepped up the pressure on BP
to fully compensate economic victims of the spill.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said after the leaders met with Obama
that "every taxpayer in America must know that BP will be held
accountable for what is owed." Senate Republican leader Mitch
McConnell agreed that BP must "clean up the spill," but he also
said Democrats shouldn't use the tragedy to campaign for energy
legislation he contended would amount to a "national energy tax."
Asked whether BP should cut its dividends to shareholders,
Pelosi said BP made $17 billion last year and has a responsibility
"to pay these damages" to businesses in the Gulf. "Maybe people
who receive dividends have deeper pockets," she said.
Gibbs declined to comment on BP's legal obligations to its
shareholders.
Late Thursday, the White House released a letter from Coast
Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the top federal official overseeing the oil
spill, inviting BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg and "any
appropriate officials from BP" to meet Wednesday with senior
administration officials. Allen said Obama, who has yet to speak
with any BP official since the explosion more than seven weeks ago,
would participate in a portion of the meeting.
Gibbs earlier in the day did not rule out the possibility of a
meeting next week between Obama and BP chief executive Tony
Hayward. Hayward is scheduled to testify next Thursday at a House
Energy subcommittee hearing into the spill.
Conservative commentators, including former Alaska Gov. Sarah
Palin, have been criticizing Obama for not having met face to face
with BP executives.
Keith Jones described the mood during the meeting with Obama as
sedate and respectful, not solemn or morose. He said he was glad
Obama hadn't invited the families to the White House sooner because
"it would have been far too early for me."
Keith Jones wore a blue ribbon pinned to his lapel with
"Deepwater Horizon" written in yellow and 11 yellow stars -- one
for each victim.
Asked about criticism that Obama was too hands-off in the weeks
immediately after the disaster, Keith Jones sounded supportive of
the president.
"I don't know what people expected the president to do exactly,
if they want him to go out there and wash pelicans," Keith Jones
said. "He's the president. He's not someone who cleans beaches.
It's important for us Louisianans to know that we have his support
and I think he's communicated that."