Leslie Hood

Location of Interview
Collection Name

Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster Oral History

Description

NOAA's Deepwater Horizon Oil Disaster Oral History documents the experience of people living in Gulf  of Mexico  oil-spill-affected fishing communities. The oral history data complements other social and economic data about the spill collected by NOAA and other governmental agencies and non-governmental organizations.

Interviewer
Date of Interview
02-17-2012
Transcribers

Carol Short
Stephanie Scull-DeArmey
Linda VanZandt

Audio
Transcript
Biographical Sketch

Leslie Hood is a commercial fisherman in Long Beach, Mississippi.

Scope and Content Note:
He discusses commercial fishing, boats, family fishing, Hurricane Fredrick, Hurricane Katrina, dredging oysters, BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster, Vessels of Opportunity, meetings to advocate for fishermen, Bonnet Carré Spillway, finfish, crabs, media?s power, Vietnamese fishermen and boats, regulations, low catches after BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster, conservation/sustainability issues, Oyster Task Force, cultivating oyster reefs, mapping oyster reefs, equipment circa 1960's, marketing catch, turtle excluder devices, sea turtles, testing seafood, seafood business, lost-income claims against BP, Corexit dispersant, barrier islands, BP?s management of BP Deepwater Horizon blowout and leak, Long Beach Harbor circa 1950's.


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The NOAA mission is to understand and predict changes in climate, weather, oceans, and coasts, to share that knowledge and information with others, and to conserve and manage coastal and marine ecosystems and resources. The Voices Oral History Archives offers public access to a wide range of accounts, including historical materials that are products of their particular times, and may contain offensive language or negative stereotypes.

Voices Oral History Archives does not verify the accuracy of materials submitted to us. The opinions expressed in the interviews are those of the interviewee only. The interviews here have been made available to the public only after the interviewer has confirmed that they have obtained consent.