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Minority Business Leader Blasts BP over Payments

The president of the National Black Chamber of Commerce today expressed his outrage and concern over reports that hundreds of Gulf Coast fishermen have not received their scheduled hardship payments.

Oil and oiled boom unattended near Grand Isle Louisiana, June 21, 2010 (Photo credit: US Coast Guard)

“I’m deeply troubled that BP is not fulfilling its promise to these fishermen and their families,” Harry Alford, president and CEO of the National Black Chamber of Commerce, said. “When BP made this mess, they promised the thousands of people who rely on the Gulf for their livelihood that they would make them whole – to-date they’ve failed miserably. They aren’t stopping the spill. They aren’t cleaning up the mess. And now they’re not taking care of the families that they’ve harmed. America and the Gulf Coast residents need more than empty promises and broken dreams. We need BP to follow through on their commitments.”

Mr. Alford responded to news reports that workers from the Gulf region were unexpectedly notified that BP was changing its payment schedule to individuals who have been caused severe hardship due to BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster.

Mr. Alford is in Houston today talking to minority business owners about the disaster’s impact on their businesses and getting a firsthand account of BP’s response efforts and the long road to recovery for the region.

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