May 4, 2010 8:40 PM

21 Years Later, Exxon Valdez Scars Still Healing

By
Ben Tracy
(CBS)  Not even the stunning beauty of Alaska's Prince William Sound can hide the deep and lasting scar just beneath the surface.

"There are some folks I cannot get to talk to anybody about the spill because it brings back nightmares," said Patience Andersen Faulkner, a Cordova resident.

"The Spill" began at 12:04 a.m. on March 24, 1989 when the Exxon Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef, reports CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy.

"Evidently leaking some oil and we're going be here for awhile," Exxon Valdez Captain Joseph Hazelwood said during the spill.

Special Section: Gulf Coast Oil Disaster
Oil Spill by the Numbers
Gulf Oil Spill Containment Efforts

Over the course of 56 days, the black cloud spread damaging 1,300 miles of shoreline. Ten thousand people helped clean it up. It took more than four summers and cost Exxon $2.1 billion.

Faulkner lives in Cordova, the largest fishing town on the sound. Twenty-one years later, things look pretty normal.

"Well it does look nice and normal but we don't have any herring," Faulkner said.

That's why Mark King's boat is parked in a warehouse. The former herring fisherman used to pull in up to $150,000 per year. Now he makes about $50,000 fishing salmon. Herring basically disappeared within three years of the spill.

King's hope was to pass on his business to his kids.

"They're gone," King said. "They aren't involved in fishing. They didn't have the opportunities I had growing up here."

While herring populations are still devastated, other species such as salmon and bald eagles have recovered. But perhaps the most remarkable is what never went away - and you can find it just a short plane ride from Cordova. On the shoreline, all you have to do is move a couple of rocks and you strike oil - Exxon Valdez oil - 21 years later.

In fact, over 21,000 gallons of oil are left from the spill. It is naturally decreasing at a rate of 0 to 4 percent per year. So it could take decades - or even centuries - before it's all gone.

Researcher David Janka said that two decades later, the oil is still a threat.

"There are salmon streams nearby, there are birds that utilize these beaches," Janka said.

Along with the oil, a bitterness remains. A jury awarded fisherman and other residents along the sound $5 billion, but Exoon appealed and only had to pay $507 million, while the community has paid a heavy price.

"We've had tons of divorces, tons of domestic violence, alcohol abuse, and suicides," Faulkner said.
So prevention is now the focus. From the air you can see barges stationed on the water with equipment to handle a spill and oil spill drills are held regularly.

"If there was another spill like here like the one that we had, it would be devastating," said Mike Collins, a local pilot. "And there is that constant fear around people that live here."

For the infamous tanker, by law it can never enter these Alaskan waters ever again.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment
by annphilip June 15, 2010 12:40 AM EDT
Planetresource.net has a Eco friendly solution to clean up the tragedy British Petroleum has created, please watch the video animation:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=60bdQQQ3iVw and pass this along to as many people as you know.

One person can still make a difference in this world, is that simple interactions have a rippling effect. Each time this gets pass along, the hope in cleaning our planet is passed on.
Reply to this comment
by sierrablancalucia May 6, 2010 9:36 AM EDT
Thanks, Republicans, for protecting polluters.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/05/04/eveningnews/main6461218.shtml
Reply to this comment
by isanyonefair May 5, 2010 9:57 AM EDT
Only way to change ours ways is to add a $2/gal tax on gas. It's the only way to change the consumer's math on what the costs of our current energy policy.

American's don't have the appetite to see the perils of the future until it smacks us in the rear. Or spills onto our shores.

We have to stop subsidizing the old technologies and push forward with the new.
Reply to this comment
by NoWayJose9999 May 5, 2010 9:14 AM EDT
....Except the troops are NOT fighting for our freedom. They are fighting for Big Oil,and I$rael.....
Reply to this comment
by tmittelstaed May 4, 2010 8:51 PM EDT
They voted in drill, baby, drill Palin. I guess that all that oil damaged the reasoning ability of the people who live there. They are unable to connect that all of their pro-oil, and pro-fossil fuels stance has destroyed their way of life.

If the government had done a crash program for electric vehicles back in the 70s - when EV's were first shown to be practical - we would have converted 95% of the passenger car and light truck fleet to them by now, and we would probably be well on our way towards biodiesel for the semitrucks.
Reply to this comment
by Overruled1 May 4, 2010 9:05 PM EDT
While I am proud to be an American, we haven't had much to be proud about lately....exception being our troops who risk their lives everyday for our way of life....no thanks to the people that sent them there....
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