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"It shaped my views along with everyone in the region," she says. "It was such a devastating event. The spill was much closer to the shore, so we felt its impact sooner and more directly than this long, drawn-out affair we're having in the Gulf." Capps says there has been a strong reaction in Congress to the BP Gulf spill, with dozens of hearings and several pieces of legislation making their way through the House and Senate. But it's too early to draw conclusions about a societal shift, she said. "It doesn't happen overnight," Capps said. "I think these things build like a tidal wave." Gaylord Nelson's speech calling for a teach-in came eight months after the January 1969 spill, and the resulting Earth Day didn't take place until more than a year later
-- April 1970. And it was not until 1981 that Congress imposed a ban on offshore drilling along most of the nation's coastal waters, an action widely attributed to the memories of the Santa Barbara spill a dozen years earlier. The moratorium endured for a quarter-century, until Congress lifted it in 2008. "I think we're going to see a really significant response to what happened in the Gulf played out over time," said Sarah Chasis, ocean initiative director for the Natural Resources Defense Council. "I think it's going to affect people's consciousness, thinking, the way they approach issues for a long time." There are signs this is starting to happen. An Associated Press poll last month found that 72 percent of Americans rated the environment as extremely important or very important
-- up from 64 percent in May and 59 percent in April.
Actor Ted Danson, a board member for the international ocean conservation group Oceana, says the focus has until now been stopping the leak. "I am hopeful. I think the time will come," Danson said. "Oil is a very, very powerful lobby. And the basic feeling out in the world, and I think mostly created by people whose interests are in oil, is that alternative energy is a very sweet, kind, loving thought, but certainly its day has not come. We need oil." James "Bud" Bottoms, a Santa Barbara resident who co-founded "Get Oil Out" in 1969, said the Gulf spill reminded him of those days. "The same thing happened here," said Bottoms, now 82. "We stood there on our banks and saw our harbors and beaches black, about two or three inches of thick goo. We stood here and cried along our beach. We thought our lives were over here in Santa Barbara." Bottoms penned a children's book in 1969 called "Davey and the GOM," which wasn't published until 2008. "GOM" stands for "Giant Oil Monster." It's also the acronym the offshore drilling industry and government regulators use for something else: The Gulf of Mexico.
[Associated
Press;
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