Community Oil Spill Survey (COSS), Wave 3, People of Plaquemines, Lafourche, Terrebonne Parishes and Grand Isle, Louisiana, April 2011.
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File Format(s):
SPSS .sav file, word .docx
Funded By:
Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative
Funding Cycle:
Louisiana State University (LSU)
Tim Slack
Louisiana State University / Department of Sociology
slack@lsu.edu
social impacts, vulnerability, resilience, health, human
Abstract:
This is the third wave of the Community Oil Spill Survey (COSS). The data was collected in April 2011, one year out from the beginning of the oil spill. Conducted by Louisiana State University's Public Policy Research Lab, the COSS is a cross-sectional telephone survey of households randomly drawn from a listed sample of those living in the coastal zip codes of Plaquemines, Lafourche, and Terrebonne Parishes and the City of Grand Isle in Louisiana.
Suggested Citation:
Troy Blanchard, Tim Slack, et. al.. 2014. Community Oil Spill Survey (COSS), Wave 3, People of Plaquemines, Lafourche, Terrebonne Parishes and Grand Isle, Louisiana, April 2011.. Distributed by: GRIIDC, Harte Research Institute, Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi. doi:10.7266/N7PG1PP2
Publications:
Purpose:
Assessing social impacts of the oil spill in affected communities in southeast Louisiana.
Data Parameters and Units:
The COSS is a cross-sectional telephone survey of households randomly drawn from a listed sample of those living in the coastal zip codes of Plaquemines, Lafourche, and Terrebonne Parishes and the City of Grand Isle in Louisiana. WAVE3_Instrument.docx-- home proximity to the coast (GoM coastline, GoM coastline waters, less than 1, 1-5, 5-10, 10-20, 20-50, greater than 50 miles), community name, satisfaction with place you live (1-5 dissatisfied to satisfied), likely to recommend to a friend as a place to live (1-5 unlikely to likely), Five years from now compared to now as a place to live (1-5 worse to better), to say proud to live here (1-5 disagree to agree), to say perfect place for people like me (1-5 disagree to agree), general health (1-5 excellent to poor), stress when oil spill occurred (1-10 none to extremely), stress while the well was leaking (1-10 none to extremely), stress since BP officially declared the well dead in September (1-10 none to extremely), times experienced [anxiety, anger, happiness, worry, depression, sadness, excitement, nervousness, fear, hopefulness] because of the oil spill (1-4 constantly to never), times in the last week [sick to your stomach, diarrhea, headaches or Migraines, aches and pains in your joints or muscles, loss of appetite, chest pains, shortness of breath] because of the oil spill (1-4 constantly to never), experienced worry or concern because of the oil spill preventing your good night's sleep because of the oil spill, getting along well with friends, getting along well with family members, your usual daily chores, your being able to take care of your family as well as you would like] (Yes, No), experienced worry or concern because of the oil spill caused you to [drink alcohol, eat, curse, exercise, sleep, watch television, surf the internet more, get together with friends and family, pray, go to church] more than you usually do (Yes, No), since the oil spill first started has it caused you to worry about [your family's ability to make a living, friends' and community's ability to make a living, community's survival, it forcing you to move] over the next couple of years (Yes, No), rate your understanding about [what caused, consquences of] the oil spill (1-3 very to not at all knowledgeable), Oil spill information you trust [Federal Government, BP Representative, State Representatives] (Yes, No), Blame consequence of the spill like oil in th marsh, moratorium on drilling, closure of fisheries on [Federal Government, BP, Louisiana State Government, There is no one to blame] (Yes, No), Household Economic Impact of [moratorium on deepwater drilling, oil spill compared to last year, income compared to last year, out-of-pocket spending on medical care] (1-5 major negative impact to major positive impact), Have any member of your family [lost their job, who is unemployeed become so discouraged with their job prospects that they quit actively looking for a job, working significantly fewer hours than they would prefer] due to the impact of the oil spill (Yes, No), Does anyone in your household own their own business (Yes, No), If yes economic impact on the business (1-5 major negative impact to major positive impact), Did the business close if negative impact (Yes, No), Do you or any member of your immediate family currently work in [the oil industry, the fishing or seafood industries, the restaurant or hotel or tourist industries] (Yes, No), How many years have you lived in your community (less than 1, 1-5, 6-10, 11-20, greater than 20 years, all my life), Did you have plans to move away prior to the oil spill (Yes, No), Do you expect to be living here five years from now when you are thinking about how things have been since the oil spill stopped in September (Yes, No), Which of the following are reasons you consider moving (look for work, new job, retiring, better home, better neighborhood, to own a home and not rent, cheaper housing, school, job training, environmental concerns, health reasons), Rate your community as a place to live (1-4 excellent to poor), do you own the place you currently live (Yes, No), Number of people in your household, number of children 17 or younger, marital status, year born, amount of schooling, race affiliation, religious affiliation, frequency join religious community (each week, almost weekly, monthly, few times year, less than that), employment (full-time, part-time, retired, unemployeed and looking for work, unemployeed and not looking for work, on disability), income last year, gender.