Full Text: Obama’s Remarks On Pensacola Beach
June 15, 2010
The following are remarks from President Barack Obama after a briefing with Admiral Thad Allen and local officials on the BP Oil Spill at the Fish Sandwich Snack Bar on Pensacola Beach Tuesday morning.
We just had a very useful discussion, and I want to thank Governor Crist and the congressional delegation, as well as our owner here, Mike Pinzone, of this wonderful facility overlooking this beautiful beach. I want to also thank the mayor of Pensacola for his hospitality.
What we’ve done is to try to find out from local business owners, local officials, as well as state officials like Alex Sink and Senator LeMieux and others, how the response can be most effective here specifically in Florida. And when you look out over this unbelievable beach, one of the things that you can see is that so far at least this beach has not been affected.
This is a still place that’s open for business and welcoming so vacationers and people can have a wonderful holiday here. And I know the mayor wants to emphasize that. But there are obviously fears about the oil that is offshore.
And what we emphasized was that we’re going to be doing everything we can — make sure that there are skimmers out, there are booms out, and a response to keep the oil offshore. But even if we do the best possible job on that, what the mayor described, what Mike described as a local business owner here, is that they’re still being affected by perceptions — that business has dropped off as much as 40 percent in this area. And that has an impact on the entire economy. You saw the same thing yesterday when we were in Alabama and Mississippi.
So a couple of things that we’ve done. Number one, to make sure that there is a nimble and effective local response, Thad Allen has now assigned deputy incident commanders to each of the individual states, so Florida will have its own deputy incident commander, as Mississippi and Alabama do.
In addition to the sites in Houma and in Mobile, we’re also going to set up an incident management team in Tallahassee, here in Florida. All this is designed to make sure that on the federal response we are able to work and make decisions at a local level in response to the suggestions of people who know the communities best and know the waters best. And my expectation is, is that we’re going to see a lot of good ideas coming from the local area that we can implement right away, as opposed to waiting until it goes all the way to the top.
But the other thing that we’re hearing here is the same thing we heard yesterday, which is businesses need help right now. I’m going to be addressing this this evening, the issue of how we can make sure that claims to businesses that have been affected are responded to quickly and fairly.
I’ll be meeting with BP chairmen and officials tomorrow to discuss the stories that I’ve heard from people like Mike. Mike has put in all the paperwork. In fact, he has documented more than amply the fact that his business has been deeply affected by this crisis, but he hasn’t received the compensation that he needs to make sure that his business stays open.
And I told Mike — and I want every business person here in Florida to know — that I will be their fierce advocate in making sure that they are getting the compensation they need to get through what is going to be a difficult season. But what I described for them is the fact that if we can get through this season, cap this well, mitigate the damage — we’re not going to eliminate it completely; there’s going to be damage to the shoreline — but if we can reduce it as much as possible, help businesses get through this season, clean it up, by the time we get to next season there’s no reason why this beach behind us is not going to be as beautiful as ever, and Pensacola and other coastline communities across Florida won’t be thriving as they always have.
So the key right now is just to make sure that people like Mike are helped, that they’re able to get through what’s going to be a tough time. And I told him and I told the governor and all the other Florida officials here that we’re not going to go away. We’re just going to keep on at this until we are able to not only get back to normal, but maybe even get better than it was before this crisis.
So I appreciate everybody’s input, and we look forward to continuing to work with you on this enormous challenge.
END
9:53 A.M. CDT
Comments
3 Responses to “Full Text: Obama’s Remarks On Pensacola Beach”
I don’t see where it matters if it’s notes on a teleprompter or scribbled on the palm of the hand.
You make notes to be sure you cover the points you consider important and avoid the ones you will get flack over. A well written statement helps get the point across. A poorly delivered statement gets sidetracked onto matters other than what you were trying to say.
The real questions always are:
What was said?
What does it mean?
Will it work?
Will it hurt?
Will it help?
Will it help now but hurt down the line?
Will it hurt now but help down the line?
“we’re also going to set up an incident management team in Tallahassee, here in Florida”
Is this a good idea? bad idea? Will it help? Would some place closer to the water be better? Is being close to the state government offices more important than being near the water? Me not know.
“. . . business has dropped off as much as 40 percent in this area. And that has an impact on the entire economy . . . ”
Does this show he understands the situation? Seems to or at the very least is trying to. That counts and reduces fear.
“. . . I will be their fierce advocate in making sure that they are getting the compensation they need to get through what is going to be a difficult season. ”
Will he try to help all Americans rather than just those who have said good and supportive things about him (like me, of course)? It seems so. Will what he does to help actually help? We shall see.
David wanting a teleprompter for Christmas
Good job Obama! Some people forget he is an elected president, not an Oil expert.
I wonder how long it took this speech to roll through his teleprompter.