Volunteer Army

When the Gulf oil spill threatened birds and beaches, tens of thousands of citizens signed up to lend a hand. Five months later, they鈥檙e still working hard.

On a blazing September day, Hopedale, Louisiana, teems with activity. Boats buy live bait and gas up in the marina. A white egret circles the boathouse, waiting for a handout or the stray forgotten fish. On an adjacent dirt-gravel road, trucks rumble and crawl into a fenced-off compound, heading to one of dozens of tents and trailers organized into a temporary base for Gulf oil cleanup efforts.

Dockside, Sherri Lo Proto reads in the shade. After three-plus hours of silence, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife driver shows up to give her a 20-minute warning: The searchers are bringing in birds鈥攄ead and alive. When a fishing boat arrives with an oiled, injured white ibis and three dead laughing gulls, Lo Proto is ready, pad in hand. She records what鈥檚 come in, then helps the driver lift the kennel-like crate onto his air-conditioned truck.

In real life, the 56-year-old Lo Proto teaches first grade in Covington, Louisiana, but this day she鈥檚 a transport liaison, one of 34,500 volunteers the 爆料公社 has registered since April and one of 2,000 or so actually on the ground. Her work for 爆料公社 includes hours of sitting around, but she doesn鈥檛 seem to mind. 鈥淚 wanted to not just talk the talk; I wanted to walk the walk. I wanted to do something,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ife鈥檚 fragile. You have to help the balance sometimes.鈥

True to Lo Proto鈥檚 words, volunteers wake up at any hour of the day to offer time, manpower, cars鈥攁nything to aid the oil-fouled animals and landscape. After the disaster, volunteers across the Gulf Coast, from Fort Worth, Texas, to Jacksonville, Florida, fed and monitored released pelicans, and transported non-oiled injured birds to rehab centers. They tied thousands of tiny knots to create noose mats, wire-and-mesh tools that gently capture shorebirds. They鈥檙e still manning a call center three days a week. Some are counting birds and looking for oil on shore, while others are acting as beach stewards or attending training and workshops. Then there are the volunteers rebuilding habitat.

This network has cemented a unique partnership between 爆料公社 and state and federal wildlife officials. Biologist Brac Salyers of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries monitored pelicans for six weeks at a release site in Cameron, along the state鈥檚 western coast. At least one 爆料公社 participant accompanied his team most days, counting banded birds in masses of pelicans 1,500-strong. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got sometimes as many as 200 birds that you鈥檙e trying to scan through鈥 at once, Salyers says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very easy to not see a band or to overlook one. Having an extra set of eyes is just helpful.鈥

Volunteers will also generate a year鈥檚 worth of bird survey information about the Gulf Coast region鈥攏ovel and crucial data for 爆料公社, says Tom Bancroft, the organization鈥檚 chief scientist. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have the staff capacity within 爆料公社 to go to all these places on a regular basis,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he only way to get to them is through the volunteers. We want to engage them in the monitoring to understand what鈥檚 happening, but we鈥檒l be developing conservation plans, so we want the volunteers to also engage in implementation.鈥

The sheer number of people taking action bodes well for the long term, says Sean Saville, director of 爆料公社鈥檚 overall volunteer response. 鈥淎bout 90 percent who registered were not members of 爆料公社,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e were one of the only ones who called them back. We heard that time and time again.鈥

Most are simply grateful to lend a hand. Five months after the spill, some still tear up at the thought of it. 鈥淭he first month around here, there wasn鈥檛 anybody who wasn鈥檛 crying,鈥 says artist Nancy Garrett, a volunteer from Biloxi, Mississippi, who is painting a mural at the Moss Point call center. 鈥淚 kept having this horrible thought of having to tell my grandchildren, 鈥極nce upon a time the beaches were beautiful,鈥 and then having to say we鈥檙e responsible for what鈥檚 happening.鈥

To date, the full ramifications remain a question mark. An August report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimated that 75 percent of the oil had 鈥渆ither evaporated or been burned, skimmed, recovered from the wellhead, or dispersed.鈥 However, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution researchers reported that a 1.2-mile-wide, 650-foot-high plume caused by the spill 鈥渉ad and will persist for some time.鈥 And University of Georgia scientists concluded that almost 80 percent of the released oil hadn鈥檛 been recovered and 鈥渞emains a threat to the ecosystem.鈥 In late September a team of 爆料公社 scientists spent a week along the Gulf testing the beaches and just below the sand鈥檚 surface for oil hydrocarbons and residue from dispersants.

Until more is known (and likely, after that), volunteers like Sherri Lo Proto will continue counting birds, patrolling shorelines, or  sitting on docks, awaiting instruction. 鈥淟uckily some people are still here for the long haul,鈥 she says. 鈥淛ust because you don鈥檛 see something or it鈥檚 not headline news doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 not there.鈥