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Share your story: How well is BP handling Gulf oil-spill claims?
2010-07-28
In the three months since oil first spewed into the Gulf of Mexico, thousands of people throughout the coastal region have lost jobs or seen their incomes slashed. Many businesses are reeling too. BP has pledged to make good on all legitimate claims for damages. But how well is the process going? ProPublica, an award-winning investigative newsroom, is launching a new effort to find out. To get a better look at how quickly - and how fairly - those claims are being paid, ProPublica would like to hear directly from Gulf residents who have filed a claim. (For more information on how to file a claim, here's ProPublica's unofficial guide.)
It should be a fascinating project, and the more responses they get, the more insight they'll have into what's really happening in the Gulf. Yahoo! News will be working with ProPublica on this effort, and we'll share with our readers the most interesting insights and stories that come out of it. So we'd like to help spread the word.
We've reprinted ProPublica's article below on how it will work and how you can participate. If you've filed a claim and need no further details before joining in, just click through to the ProPublica form. HAVE YOU FILED A DAMAGE CLAIM WITH BP? By Amanda Michel and Sasha Chavkin Readers, we need your help. It's time to examine the massive claims operation set up by BP for damages from the Gulf oil spill. The gushing pipe has been capped. More than 100,000 claims have been filed. So far, BP has paid less than a third of the claims it has received, and spent a little over $200 million, about 1 percent of the $20 billion that it set aside in an escrow account to pay damages. In less than two weeks, an independent claims administrator appointed by President Barack Obama - Kenneth Feinberg - will take over the claims process from BP. We could take BP at its word that it will pay all "legitimate" claims, and trust the administration's assurances that the people of the Gulf will be made whole. We think it's better to shine some sunlight on the process. That's where you come in. If you've filed a claim with BP, please share details of your experience with ProPublica's reporters using this form. (Spanish version. Vietnamese version.) A reporter may follow up with you by phone, and we'll make it easy for you to share documents and records with our newsroom. If you haven't filed a claim, you can help ProPublica find claimants by doing your own outreach - tweet this, post it to Facebook, send it out to a local listserv ... BP's data show that it has returned more than half of submitted claims because they "lack enough information for BP to make a payment." In most of those cases, it has told people that they have to provide more documentation to prove that their claim is legitimate. News reports have also spotlighted problems like translation difficulties between BP adjusters and Vietnamese fishermen working off the Louisiana coast. Some claims offices are hard to find. Bartenders, deckhands and other workers who earn their salaries in hard cash can't easily document their earnings. As we have reported, repeated changes made to procedures for filing county claims have frustrated county officials. These problems are real, but not easily put into perspective. When are people being told they need to send more documents? Just how serious - or trivial - are the procedural changes? Who has been paid, and who hasn't? Getting a handle on an operation this big and complex requires talking to more than a handful of people. We want to cast a wide net to try to figure out which parts of the claims system are working and which ones aren't, so we can add some accountability to the process. If you've filed a claim with BP, share details with ProPublica's reporters using this form.
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