CJ, I?m not trying to threaten you on this; merely trying to explain the realities of the situation.
As you may already know, the Walton County Board of Commissioners has delegated Emergency Management responsibilities to the Sheriff ? which is why you see him out front in this situation. You?ll see more of him if we have to deal with a hurricane this year. The County Commission still retains the ultimate responsibility for providing Emergency Management for its citizens under Florida law, as well as the responsibility for paying for it all through the revenues available to the county from property taxes and other revenue streams. In the present instance, one of the potential revenue streams, and one we?re counting greatly on, is BP reimbursement under the federal Oil Spill Protection Act of 1990 for the county?s expenses in cleaning up their mess.
Our local folks are not driving the train on the oil spill recovery?yet. There is a host of state and federal agencies, regulations, and procedures that are driving this at the present time ? all with the hammer of being reimbursed or not by BP if we don?t do it their way.
I spent two hours yesterday afternoon taking notes at a meeting at the Emerald Coast Conference Center (the palm forest on Okaloosa Island) in a meeting with Florida DEP Secretary Mike Sole, CAPT Poulin from the Mobile Coast Guard District (and his henchpeople); 2 BP representatives (one a Vice President ? of what, I don?t know); a lady from the US. Department of Homeland Security (Deputy Assistant Undersecretary, etc. etc.) and County Commissioners. County Administrators, and Emergency Management Directors from nine coastal counties across Northwest Florida ? from Escambia to Franklin County.
Walton County was well represented by Sheriff Adkinson, County Commissioner Larry Jones, our County Administrator Lyle Seigler, Dawn Moliterno from our TDC, Mike Barker, our Sheriff?s Emergency Management Director, and Chief Rick Talbert from South Walton Fire District. Walton County was better represented than any other county in terms of number of people there from my count ? and Walton County was heard loud and clear along with all the others.
Topics of discussion at the meeting were the clean up response as it pertained to each county; then procedures for BP reimbursement to counties for expenses incurred to date (which has changed 6 times since this all started) and ongoing expenses. Since the local media is pretty well awash in coverage of this meeting I won?t go into the details of the discussion. Suffice it to say, nothing was settled at meeting?s end and nobody got a check in hand from BP, but everybody above the county level of government got an earful from the rest of the folks around the table.
Yes, there were many volunteers who came forward and devoted their time to the training for oil clean-up. This is admirable. We even had inmates at the county jail volunteer to receive the training in the event they might be needed. But the reality is that the federal government?s and the state?s position on this is that BP employees should clean up the oil ? not local volunteers. JobsPlus (a state agency) had jobs available with BP contractors for 200 people (with Walton County residency a requirement) ? at $18/hr no less. Sheriff Adkinson (with the concurrence of the County Commission) has made it clear to the state and the feds that if BP doesn?t respond in a reasonable time to oil on our beaches that we will ? with volunteers, county inmates, and county public works resources.
This is a disaster that affects us all here in Walton County ? whether you rely on the beaches for your living, or you?re a local who enjoys going to the beach, or a taxpayer who for the past few years has seen our county grow and build infrastructure from the benefits of the high tax base along our beaches.
We are all in this together, and it is not a time for politics and throwing bricks at our local government officials. Your local government officials are doing everything they can to protect our interests and get our beaches cleaned up if they get oil ? and keep the oil from hitting our beaches if they can. The obstacles to success in this are all external ? BP, the state, and the federal government. We don?t need to make the job harder by attacking folks within the county. I respectfully submit to you that the team we have in place now is working together and doing everything they can to minimize the affects of this disaster on us.