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The oil also has kept the Wilkersons from fishing, and that, too, has put a strain on their finances. "That seafood would help stretch our food budget. But we don't have anything left in the freezer," said Wilkerson, as she waited with her son and 5-year-old daughter to pick up free school supplies being given out this week at Galliano Elementary School by Louisiana first lady Supriya Jindal. Austin Verdin was waiting for supplies, too, and shyly smiled as Jindal handed him his backpack full of notebooks, folders and pencils. But he hasn't had a lot of other reasons to be happy about the summer between fourth and fifth grades. Austin's dad, Michael, was working as a fisherman. When the waters closed because of the oil spill, he fell back on his commercial driver's license and took a job with a trucking firm, according to his wife, Elana Verdin. He would much rather be on the water. "We love the water. He was raised on it," Verdin said. "He loved going out there and spending time with his dad. You wonder if that kind of thing is gone now." Fishing isn't the only industry where the future is uncertain. Michael Melancon, a senior biology teacher at South Lafourche High School, said the rig explosion that killed 11 workers and an offshore drilling moratorium that followed have some of his students rethinking career paths that might have otherwise led out to the giant oil rigs in the Gulf. "They would ask, 'Is there going to be a job for me?' They are trying to figure out if they should stick around or go somewhere else," he said. Melancon, whose district was cash-strapped even before the explosion, has his own worries about whether his job is secure. He was standing at the school supply giveway in the Galliano school gym with his 8-year-old son and 10-year-old daughter, waiting in a long line that snaked around a basketball court with the finish peeling in numerous places. About two-thirds of the school's 430 students showed up. Jindal, the mother of three young children herself, said she wanted to give them something to look forward to after a summer of worry. "My children have all kinds of questions about the oil spill," Jindal said. "I can only imagine what these parents are having to explain."
[Associated
Press;
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