GULFPORT – The White House said yesterday BP appeared willing to set up the kind of victims compensation fund President Barack Obama was demanding, as Obama set out on a three-state tour of the stricken Gulf Coast.Spokesman Bill Burton, speaking to reporters travelling with Obama aboard Air Force One to the Gulf, said the White House and BP were “working out the particulars,” such as the amount of the fund and how it will be administered. The account would be run by an independent third-party entity, Burton said, and would run into “the billions of dollars,” although he wouldn’t give a specific amount.“We’re confident that this is a critical way in which we’re going to be able to help individuals and businesses in the Gulf area become whole again,” the spokesman said.BP’s board was meeting yesterday in London to discuss deferring its second-quarter dividend and putting the money into escrow until the company’s liabilities from the spill are known. BP spokeswoman Sheila Williams had said earlier that the company was aware of the White House’s demand for a compensation fund, but declined to comment further.The administration said earlier that Obama was prepared to force BP, if necessary, to set up the fund. Burton said yesterday that Obama’s aides were “confident we have the legal authority” to do that. But he didn’t expand on how, saying it wasn’t necessary “considering BP is going to do this.”Obama’s two-day trip to Mississippi, Alabama and Florida launches a busy week for the government’s attempt to get control of the nation’s worst environmental disaster. The president plans to address the nation from the Oval Office tonight after his return, and he is to meet with BP executives face-to-face for the first time tomorrow. (AP)

