YAHOO NEWS – Perhaps you saw news footage of President Obama in Grand Isle, La., on Friday and thought things didn’t look all that bad. Well, there may have been a reason for that: The town was evidently swarmed by an army of temp workers to spruce it up for the president and the national news crews following him.
Jefferson Parish Councilman Chris Roberts, whose district encompasses Grand Isle, told Yahoo! News that BP bused in “hundreds” of temporary workers to clean up local beaches. And as soon as the president was en route back to Washington, the workers were clearing out of Grand Isle too, Roberts said.
“The level of cleanup and cooperation we’ve gotten from BP in the past is in no way consistent to the effort shown on the island today,” Roberts said by telephone. “As soon as the president left, they were immediately put back on the buses and sent home.”
Roberts says the overnight contingent of workers was there mainly to furnish a Potemkin-style backdrop for the event — while also making it appear that BP was firmly in command of spill cleanup efforts.
New Orleans NBC affiliate WDSU reports that the workers were paid $12 an hour and came mostly from neighboring Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes.
News of 11th-hour spruce-up brigade spread rapidly Friday afternoon and
infuriated locals. One popular radio host, WWL’s Spud McConnell, suggested that
the Coast Guard and the White House may have been involved in setting up the
“perfect photo op.”
“Who else has the kind of authority to bring a bunch of strangers to Grand
Isle when the president is in town for a visit? You think they did background
checks on all those people?” wondered McConnell. “I’d be a lot less
upset about this if they would have at least stayed to clean the beach.”
Yahoo! News could not reach BP for comment.
Brett Michael Dykes is a national affairs writer for Yahoo! News.
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