Oil Spill and Hair Sausages

 ========= Old Image Removed =========1664527864 
1277769600

Many of us watch the coverage of the BP Oil Spill and wonder: what can we do to help? WBHM’s Tanya Ott reports some people are traveling to the Gulf region to volunteer. But others who can’t make the trip have options too.

Wendy Spencer is a busy woman. So busy, we had to catch her between meetings, in a hallway, on her cell phone. Spencer is CEO of Volunteer Florida,the sunshine state’s official volunteer recruitment program. She’s registered thousands of volunteers to spend their Florida vacations picking up trash.

“When oil hits it will be easier to clean the shoreline if it is free of litter and debris,” says Spencer.

So far, 3,000 volunteers have logged more than 17,000 hours of work in Florida alone. And there are countless more in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. But what if you can’t jet down to the Gulf Coast?

GETTING CREATIVE WITH … HAIR?

John Coy owns Fran Coy’s Salon Spa in Ann Arbor. He says when he looks at the cutting room floor, he sees opportunity. He opens a big bag stuffed with hair.

“We have around 30 pounds of hair stored up ready to go. All different types of hair, different lengths and colors,” he says.

Coy ships the hair to a San Francisco-based non-profit environmental group called Matter of Trust. The group sends the hair to warehouses in Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana, where it’s stuffed into donated pantyhose. Some people call them “hair sausages”.

The official term is booms. The homemade booms are put in the water to soak up oil and keep it from shore. Fran Coy’s Salon Spa has donated 100 pounds of hair to the effort. And customers say they’re happy to help. Julie Blackhall is getting her haircut today.

“I think it’s great,” Blackhall laughs. “I mean I’m not going to do anything with my hair that you cut off. Why not help the world with it?”

RESPONSE HAS BEEN OVERWHELMING

So far, nearly half a million pounds of human hair and animal fur have been donated nationwide. So much, Matter of Trust’s warehouses are overwhelmed and they’re not accepting any new donations.

There is some concern it won’t all get used. Officials from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration say these hair booms can get water logged and sink. And a Coast Guard spokesman told the Huffington Post the booms can add to the debris problem when they wash up on shore. Still, some towns and counties along the Gulf Coast are willing to take the chance and will continue to use these hair booms.

The BP oil spill isn’t just an environmental crisis. It’s an economic one too. Thousands of coastal families have lost work because fishing boats aren’t fishing and tourists aren’t visiting. Wendy Spencer of Volunteer Florida says it’s only going to get worse.

“Our food banks are being impacted by people who are out of work. We are seeing an increase in the applications for food stamps,” Spencer says. “Go to your local food bank. Say, look, can we provide some help in collecting food and connect with the food banks in Florida or Alabama and have this shipped in to the region to help?”

And, she says, don’t forget money. It might not be as hands-on as getting a haircut. But, she says, Gulf-based social service and environmental organizations could really use the cash right now.

 

 

YouTube agrees to pay Trump $24 million to settle lawsuit over Jan. 6 suspension

YouTube is the latest social media company to pay Trump tens of millions of dollars to resolve lawsuits brought before he returned to power. The money will fund a new ballroom at the White House.

From painting to producing: Birmingham DJ Andrea Really releases first album

Birmingham DJ Andrea Really wasn't always a music producer. She used to be a prolific painter. But when her art studio burned down in 2017, she pivoted careers. Really spoke with WBHM about that journey upon the release of her first album this summer, called Zeitgeist.

A year after Helene, a group of raft guides embarks on a river clean-up mission

A popular rafting river in the Appalachian mountains is still closed a year after Hurricane Helene, because there's just too much debris. Now, rafting guides have come together to help clean it up.

Lesotho’s Famo music: from shepherd songs to gang wars

In Lesotho, a style of traditional accordion music called Famo has become entangled with deadly gang rivalries. Once the soundtrack of shepherds and migrant workers, today it's linked to killings, government bans — and a fight over cultural identity.

Comic Cristela Alonzo grew up in fear of border patrol. ICE has ‘brought it all back’

For the first seven years of her life, Alonzo lived in an abandoned diner in a south Texas border town. Her new Netflix stand-up special is called Upper Classy.

Compass-Anywhere real estate merger could squeeze small brokerages

The deal, announced earlier this week, would combine the two largest U.S. residential brokerages by sales volume.

More Environment Coverage