July 4, 2010 11:43 PM
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Grand Isle Celebrates an Oil-Covered Fourth
On Grand Isle, it's a Fourth to forget - forget all that oil. For Kathy Mayberry, this Fourth is upsetting.
"It's sad really," she says. "It's almost like a ghost town."
Since she was a kid, Mayberry has loved the island's lifestyle. Now she worries about the future of her kids here. Reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann.
"We're having fun. But there is a seriousness to it. We all realize that our way of life may be changed forever," she says.
Complete Coverage: Disaster in the Gulf
The Spirit of '76 was alive on the water on this, the 76th day of this oil spill disaster. It's a different kind of long weekend; no time off for clean-up crews skimming in Barataria Bay.
And no time off cleaning Grand Isle's oiled beaches.
BP's brought in a mammoth machine to separate oil, wash the sand and restore these beaches.
"It is a proven performer," says BP project engineer Chris Lunsford. "It does work but they haven't used it on this scale before."
BP also paid for Grand Isle's fireworks this year. But for island residents, BP's best goodwill gesture would be to plug the gushing well.
Mideast Investors Reportedly Eyeing BP
Gulf Coast Deserted for July Fourth Weekend
Giant Oil Skimmer Undergoing Tests in Gulf
Locals watched fireworks wistfully.
"That's all you're hearing about. The oil. It's a tragedy," says Darlene Lozier.
Donations have fallen at Grand Isle's First Baptist Church. This spill has been a test of finances but not a test of faith.
"We don't put our hope in BP," says the pastor. "The hope is in Jesus."
Most of all today, the Mayberrys wanted to feel like any other American family celebrating the Fourth.
"We're trying to make the best of a dire situation. It's all I can do," says Mayberry.
The Coast Guard says 800 workers cleaned the beaches of tar balls Sunday. That's a productive Fourth, unless there's more oil on Monday.
Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved. "It's sad really," she says. "It's almost like a ghost town."
Since she was a kid, Mayberry has loved the island's lifestyle. Now she worries about the future of her kids here. Reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann.
"We're having fun. But there is a seriousness to it. We all realize that our way of life may be changed forever," she says.
Complete Coverage: Disaster in the Gulf
The Spirit of '76 was alive on the water on this, the 76th day of this oil spill disaster. It's a different kind of long weekend; no time off for clean-up crews skimming in Barataria Bay.
And no time off cleaning Grand Isle's oiled beaches.
BP's brought in a mammoth machine to separate oil, wash the sand and restore these beaches.
"It is a proven performer," says BP project engineer Chris Lunsford. "It does work but they haven't used it on this scale before."
BP also paid for Grand Isle's fireworks this year. But for island residents, BP's best goodwill gesture would be to plug the gushing well.
Mideast Investors Reportedly Eyeing BP
Gulf Coast Deserted for July Fourth Weekend
Giant Oil Skimmer Undergoing Tests in Gulf
Locals watched fireworks wistfully.
"That's all you're hearing about. The oil. It's a tragedy," says Darlene Lozier.
Donations have fallen at Grand Isle's First Baptist Church. This spill has been a test of finances but not a test of faith.
"We don't put our hope in BP," says the pastor. "The hope is in Jesus."
Most of all today, the Mayberrys wanted to feel like any other American family celebrating the Fourth.
"We're trying to make the best of a dire situation. It's all I can do," says Mayberry.
The Coast Guard says 800 workers cleaned the beaches of tar balls Sunday. That's a productive Fourth, unless there's more oil on Monday.
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