Final Claims Process for BP Oil Disaster Victims Begins
The announcement by the Gulf Coast Claims Facility was accompanied by a detailed protocol for handling final payments to individuals and businesses such as fishermen and coastal hotels and restaurants. It includes an appeals process for settling disagreements between claimants and the fund.
The fund was created in the wake of the spill that began with a well blowout offshore of Louisiana on April 20 that killed 11 workers aboard Transocean’s Deepwater Horizon drilling rig. The leak from BP’s Macondo well was halted in July, and the well was declared permanently capped in September.
Feinberg said the fund has paid $2 billion to 125,000 people from the $20 billion committed by BP. He told the Financial Times that he has approved fewer than half the claims filed so far and expects available funds to be adequate to cover all legitimate claims. The fund is privately operated but is intended to comply with the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 requiring responsible parties to compensate victims of spills.
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