New
Orleans a Year After Katrina
By
Bill Quigley
08/22/06 "ICH" -- -- New Orleans
. -- -
Bernice Mosely is 82 and lives alone in New Orleans in a shotgun
double. On August 29, 2005, as Katrina hit the Gulf Coast, the
levees constructed by the U.S. Corps of Engineers failed in five
places and New Orleans filled with water.
One year ago Ms.
Mosely was on the second floor of her neighborhood church. Days
later, she was helicoptered out. She was so dehydrated she spent
eight days in a hospital. Her next door neighbor, 89 years old,
stayed behind to care for his dog. He drowned in the eight feet
of floodwaters that covered their neighborhood.
Ms. Mosely now
lives in her half-gutted house. She has no stove, no
refrigerator, and no air-conditioning. The bottom half of her
walls have been stripped of sheetrock and are bare wooden slats
from the floor halfway up the wall. Her food is stored in a
styrofoam cooler. Two small fans push the hot air around.
Two plaster
Madonnas are in her tiny well-kept front yard. On a blazing hot
summer day, Ms. Mosely used her crutches to gingerly come down
off her porch to open the padlock on her fence. She has had hip
and knee replacement surgery. Ms. Mosely worked in a New Orleans
factory for over thirty years sewing uniforms. When she retired
she was making less than $4 an hour. “Retirement benefits?” she
laughs. She lives off social security. Her house had never
flooded before. Because of her tight budget tight, Ms. Mosely
did not have flood insurance.
Thousands of people like Ms.
Mosely are back in their houses on the Gulf Coast. They are
living in houses that most people would consider, at best, still
under construction, or, at worst, uninhabitable. Like Ms.
Mosely, they are trying to make their damaged houses into homes.
New Orleans is still in
intensive care. If you have seen recent television footage of
New Orleans, you probably have a picture of how bad our housing
situation is. What you cannot see is that the rest of our
institutions, our water, our electricity, our healthcare, our
jobs, our educational system, our criminal justice systems – are
all just as broken as our housing. We remain in serious trouble.
Like us, you probably wonder where has the promised money gone?
Ms. Mosely, who lives in the
upper ninth ward, does not feel sorry for herself at all. “Lots
of people have it worse,” she says. “You should see those people
in the Lower Ninth and in St. Bernard and in the East. I am one
of the lucky ones.”
Housing
Hard as it is to believe, Ms.
Mosely is right. Lots of people do have it worse. Hundreds of
thousands of people from the Gulf Coast remain displaced. In New
Orleans alone over two hundred thousand people have not been
able to make it home.
Homeowners in Louisiana, like
Ms. Mosely, have not yet received a single dollar of federal
housing rebuilding assistance to rebuild their severely damaged
houses back into homes.
Over 100,000 homeowners in
Louisiana are on a waiting list for billions in federal
rebuilding assistance through the Community Development Block
Grant (CDBG) program. So far, no money has been distributed.
Renters, who comprised most of
the people of New Orleans before Katrina, are much worse off
than homeowners. New Orleans lost more than 43,000 rental units
to the storm. Rents have skyrocketed in the undamaged parts of
the area, pricing regular working people out of the market. The
official rate of increase in rents is 39%. In lower income
neighborhoods, working people and the elderly report rents are
up much higher than that. Amy Liu of the Brookings Institute
said “Even people who are working temporarily for the rebuilding
effort are having trouble finding housing.”
Renters in Louisiana are not
even scheduled to receive assistance through the Louisiana CDBG
program. Some developers will receive assistance at some point,
and when they do, some apartments will be made available, but
that is years away.
In the face of the worst
affordable housing shortage since the end of the Civil War, the
federal government announced that it refused to allow thousands
of families to return to their public housing units and was
going to bulldoze 5000 apartments. Before Katrina, over 5000
families lived in public housing – 88 percent women-headed
households, nearly all African American.
These policies end up with
hundreds of thousands of people still displaced from their
homes. Though all ages, incomes and races are displaced, some
groups are impacted much more than others. The working poor,
renters, moms with kids, African-Americans, the elderly and
disabled – all are suffering disproportionately from
displacement. Race, poverty, age and physical ability are great
indicators of who has and who has made it home.
The statistics tell some of the
story. The City of New Orleans says it is half its pre-Katrina
size – around 225,000 people. But the U.S. Post Office estimates
that only about 170,000 people have returned to the city and
400,000 people have not returned to the metropolitan area. The
local electricity company reports only about 80,000 of its
previous 190,000 customers have returned.
Texas also tells part of the
story. It is difficult to understand the impact of Katrina
without understanding the role of Texas – home to many of our
displaced. Houston officials say their city is still home to
about 150,000 storm evacuees – 90,000 in FEMA assisted housing.
Texas recently surveyed the displaced and reported that over
250,000 displaced people live in the state and 41 percent of
these households report income of less than $500 per month.
Eighty-one percent are black, 59 percent are still jobless, most
have at least one child at home, and many have serious health
issues.
Another 100,000 people displaced
by Katrina are in Georgia, more than 80,000 in metro Atlanta –
most of whom also need long-term housing and mental health
services.
In Louisiana, there are 73,000
families in FEMA trailers. Most of these trailers are 240 square
feet of living space. More than 1600 families are still waiting
for trailers in St. Bernard Parish. FEMA trailers did not arrive
in the lower ninth ward until June – while the displaced waited
for water and electricity to resume. Aloyd Edinburgh, 75, lives
in the lower ninth ward and just moved into a FEMA trailer. His
home flooded as did the homes of all five of his children.
“Everybody lost their homes,” he told the Times-Picayune, “They
just got trailers. All are rebuilding. They all have mortgages.
What else are they going to do?”
Until challenged, FEMA barred
reporters from talking with people in FEMA trailer parks without
prior permission – forcing a reporter out of a trailer in one
park and residents back into their trailer in another in order
to stop interviews.
One person displaced into a FEMA
village in Baton Rouge has been organizing with her new
neighbors. Air conditioners in two trailers for the elderly have
been out for over two weeks, yet no one will fix them. The
contractor who ran the village has been terminated and another
one is coming – no one knows who. She tells me, “My neighbors
are dismayed that no one in the city has stepped forward to
speak for us. We are “gone.” Who will speak for us? Does anyone
care?”
Trailers are visible signs of the displaced. Tens of thousands
of other displaced families are living in apartments across the
country month to month under continuous threats of FEMA cutoffs.
Numbers say something. But
please remember behind every number, there is a Ms. Mosely. Tens
of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of people each with a
personal story like Ms. Mosely are struggling to return, trying
to make it home.
Water and Electricity
New Orleans continues to lose
more water than it uses. The Times-Picayune discovered that the
local water system has to pump over 130 million gallons a day so
that 50 million gallons will come out. The rest runs away in
thousands of leaks in broken water lines, costing the water
system $2000,000 a day. The lack of water pressure, half that of
other cities, creates significant problems in consumption,
sanitation, air-conditioning, and fire prevention. In the lower
9th ward, the water has still not been certified as safe to
drink – one year later.
Only half the homes in New
Orleans have electricity. Power outages are common as hundreds
of millions of dollars in repairs have not been made because
Entergy New Orleans is in bankruptcy. Entergy is asking for a 25
percent increase in rates to help it become solvent. Yet Entergy
New Orleans’ parent company, Entergy Corporation reported
earnings of $282 million last year on revenue of $2.6 billion.
Health and Healthcare
Early this month, on August 1,
2006, another Katrina victim was found in her home in New
Orleans, buried under debris. The woman was the 28th person
found dead since March 2006. A total of 1577 died in Louisiana
as a result of Katrina.
A friend of mine, a lawyer with
health insurance and a family physician, went for an appointment
recently at 11am. The office was so crowded he had to sit out in
the hall on the floor to wait his turn for a seat in the waiting
room. Three hours later he met his doctor. The doctor thought
might have a gall stone. The doctor tried to set up an
ultrasound. None were available. He ordered my friend to the
emergency room for an ultrasound. At 4pm my friend went to the
hospital emergency room, which was jammed with people: stroke
victims, young kids with injuries, people brought in by the
police. At 5am the next morning, my friend finished his
ultrasound and went home. If it takes a lawyer with health
insurance that long to get medical attention, consider what poor
people without health insurance are up against.
Half the hospitals open before
Katrina are still closed. The state’s biggest public healthcare
provider, Charity Hospital, remains closed and there are no
current plans to reopen it anytime soon. Healthcare could
actually get worse. Dr. Mark Peters, board chair of the
Metropolitan Hospital Council of New Orleans said within the
next two to three months, “all the hospitals” will be looking
seriously at cutbacks. Why? Doctors and healthcare workers have
left and there is surging demand from the uninsured who before
Katrina went through now non-existent public healthcare. There
is a shortage of nurses. Blue Cross Blue Shield officials
reported “About three-quarters of the physicians who had been
practicing in New Orleans are no longer submitting claims.”
There is no hospital at all in
the city for psychiatric patients. While the metropolitan area
had about 450 psychiatric beds before the storm, 80 are now
available. The police are the first to encounter those with
mental illness. One recent Friday afternoon, police dealt with
two mental patients – one was throwing bricks through a bar
window, the other was found wandering naked on the interstate.
The elderly are particularly
vulnerable. Over 70 percent of the deaths from Katrina were
people over 60 years old. No one knows how many seniors have not
made it back home. Esther Bass, 69, told the New York Times,
after months of searching for a place to come home to New
Orleans, “If there are apartments, I can’t afford them. And they
say there will be senior centers, but they’re still being built.
They can’t even tell you what year they’ll be finished.” As of
late July 2006, most nursing homes in the 12 parish Gulf Coast
area of Louisiana are still not fully prepared to evacuate
residents in the face of a hurricane.
The healthcare community has
been rocked by the arrest of a doctor and two nurses after the
Louisiana Attorney General accused them of intentionally ending
the lives of four patients trapped in a now-closed local
hospital. The accusations now go before a local grand jury which
is not expected to make a decision on charges for several more
months. The case is complicated for several reasons. Most
important is that the doctor and nurses are regarded as some of
the most patient-oriented and caring people of the entire
hospital staff. It is undisputed that they worked day and night
to save hundreds of patients from the hospital during the days
it was without water, electricity or food. Others say that
entire hospital and many others were abandoned by the government
and that is what the attorney general should be investigating.
The gravity of the charges, though, is giving everyone in the
community pause. This, like so much else, will go on for years
before there is any resolution.
Jobs
Before Katrina, there were over
630,000 workers in the metropolitan New Orleans area – now there
are slightly over 400,000. Over 18,000 businesses suffered
“catastrophic” damage in Louisiana. Nearly one in four of the
displaced workers is still unemployed. Education and healthcare
have lost the most employees. Most cannot return because there
is little affordable housing, child care, public transportation
and public health care.
Women workers, especially
African American women workers, continue to bear the heaviest
burden of harm from the storm. The Institute for Women’s Policy
Research reports that the percentage of women in the New Orleans
workforce has dropped. The number of single mother families in
New Orleans has dropped from 51,000 to 17,000. Low-income women
remain displaced because of the lack of affordable housing and
traditional discrimination against women in the construction
industry.
Tens of thousands of migrant
workers, roughly half undocumented, have come to the Gulf Coast
to work in the recovery. Many were recruited. Most workers tell
of being promised good wages and working conditions and plenty
of work. Some paid money up front for the chance to come to the
area to work. Most of these promises were broken. A tour of the
area reveals many Latino workers live in houses without
electricity, other live out of cars. At various places in the
city whole families are living in tents. Two recently released
human rights reports document the problems of these workers.
Immigrant workers are doing the
dirtiest, most dangerous work, in the worst working conditions.
Toxic mold, lead paint, fiberglass, and who knows what other
chemicals are part of daily work. Safety equipment is not always
provided. Day laborers, a new category of workers in New
Orleans, are harassed by the police and periodic immigration
raids. Wage theft is widespread as employers often do not pay
living wages, and sometimes do not pay at all. Some of the
powers try to pit local workers against new arrivals – despite
the fact that our broken Gulf Coast clearly needs all the
workers we can get.
Public transportation to and
from low-wage jobs is more difficult. Over 200 more public
transit employees have been terminated – cutting employment from
over 1300 people pre-Katrina to about 700 now.
Single working parents seeking
childcare are in trouble. Before Katrina, New Orleans had 266
licensed day care centers. Mississippi State University surveyed
the city in July 2006 and found 80 percent of the day care
centers and over 75 percent of the 1912 day care spots are gone.
Only one-third of the Head Start centers that were open
pre-Katrina survived.
Public Education
Before Katrina, 56,000 students
were enrolled in over 100 public schools in New Orleans. At the
end of the school year there were only 12,500. Right after the
storm, the local school board gave many of the best public
schools to charter groups. The State took over almost all the
rest. By the end of the school year, four schools were operated
by the pre-Katrina school board, three by the State, and
eighteen were new charter schools.
After thirty-two years of
collective bargaining, the union contract with the New Orleans
public school teachers elapsed and was not renewed and 7500
employees were terminated.
For this academic year, no one
knows for certain how many students will enroll in New Orleans
public schools. Official estimates vary between a low of 22,000
and a high of 34,000.
There will be five traditional
locally supervised public schools, eighteen schools operated by
the State, and thirty-four charter schools. As of July 1, not a
single teacher had been hired for fifteen of the state-run
schools. As of August 9, 2006, the Times-Picayune reported there
are no staff at all identified to educate students with
discipline problems or other educational issues that require
special attention.
Whatever the enrollment in the
new public school system is in the fall, it will not give an
accurate indication of how many children have returned. Why?
Many students in the public charter schools were in private
schools before the hurricane.
Criminal Legal System
Consider also our criminal legal
system. Chaka Davis was arrested on misdemeanor charges in
October 2005 and jailed at the Greyhound station in New Orleans
in October of 2005.
Under Louisiana law, he was
required to be formally charged within 30 days of arrest or
released from custody. Because of a filing error he was lost in
the system. He was never charged, never went to court, and never
saw a lawyer in over 8 months – even though the maximum penalty
for conviction for one of his misdemeanors was only 6 months.
His mother found him in an out of town jail and brought his
situation to the attention of the public defenders. He was
released the next day.
Crime is increasingly a problem.
In July, New Orleans lost almost as many people to murder as in
July of 2005, with only 40 percent of the population back. There
are many young people back in town while their parents have not
returned. State and local officials called in the National Guard
to patrol lightly populated areas so local police could
concentrate on high-crime, low-income neighborhoods. Arrests
have soared, but the number of murders remain high.
Unfortunately, several of the National Guard have been arrested
for criminal behavior as well – two for looting liquor from a
home, two others for armed robbery at a traffic stop.
Criminal Court District Judge
Arthur Hunter has declared the current criminal justice system
shameful and unconstitutional and promises to start releasing
inmates awaiting trial on recognizance bonds on the one year
anniversary of Katrina. The system is nearly paralyzed by a
backlog of over 6000 cases. There are serious evidence problems
because of resigned police officers, displaced victims,
displaced witnesses, and flooded evidence rooms. The public
defender system, which was down to 4 trial attorneys for months,
is starting to rebuild.
“After 11 months of waiting, 11
months of meetings, 11 months of idle talk, 11 months without a
sensible recovery plan and 11 months tolerating those who have
the authority to solve, correct and fix the problem but either
refuse, fail or are just inept, then necessary action must be
taken to protect the constitutional rights of people,’ said
Hunter.
In the suburbs across the lake,
Sheriff Jack Strain told the media on TV that he was going to
protect his jurisdiction from “thugs” and “trash” migrating from
closed public housing projects in New Orleans. He went on to
promise that every person who wore “dreadlocks or che-wee
hairstyles” could expect to be stopped by law enforcement. The
NAACP and the ACLU called in the U.S. Justice Department and
held a revival-like rally at a small church just down the road
from the jail. Though the area is over 80 percent white, the
small group promised to continue to challenge injustice no
matter how powerful the person committing the injustice.
Recently, the same law enforcement people set up a roadblock and
were stopping only Latino people to check IDs and insurance. I
guess to prove they were not only harassing black people?
Finally, a grand jury has
started looking into actions by other suburban police officers
who blocked a group of people, mostly black, from escaping the
floodwaters of New Orleans by walking across the Mississippi
River bridge. The suburban police forced the crowd to flee back
across the two mile bridge by firing weapons into the air.
This is the criminal legal
system in the New Orleans area in 2006. None dare call it
criminal justice.
International Human
Rights
The Gulf Coast has gained new
respect for international human rights because they provide a
more appropriate way to look at what should be happening. The
fact that there is an international human right of internally
displaced people to return to their homes and a responsibility
on government to help is heartening even though yet unfulfilled.
The United Nations has blasted
the poor U.S. response to Katrina. The UN Human Rights Committee
in Geneva accepted a report from Special Reporter Arjun Sengupta
who visited New Orleans in fall of 2005 and concluded: “The
Committee…remains concerned about information that poor people,
and in particular African-Americans, were disadvantaged by the
rescue and evacuation plans implemented when Hurricane Katrina
hit the United States of America, and continue to be
disadvantaged under the reconstruction plans.”
Asian tsunami relief workers who
visited New Orleans over the summer were shocked at the lack of
recovery. Somsook Boonyabancha, director of the Community
Organisations Development Institute in Thailand, told Reuters
she was shocked at the lack of progress in New Orleans. “I’m
surprised to see why the reconstruction work is so slow, because
this is supposed to be one of the most rich and efficient
countries in the world. It is starting at such a slow speed,
incredibly slow speed.”
Warnings to the
Displaced
Local United Way officials see
the lack of housing, healthcare and jobs and conclude that
low-income people should seriously consider not returning to New
Orleans anytime soon.
United Way wrote: “Most of these people want to come home, but
if they do not have a recovery plan they need to stay where they
are. Some of these evacuees think that they can come back and
stay with families and in a few weeks have a place of their own.
But the reality is that they may end up living with those
relatives for years. Sending people back without a realistic
plan may have serious consequences: the crowding of families
into small apartments/homes/FEMA trailers is causing mental
health problems – stress, abuse, violence, and even death – and
this problem is going to get worse, not better. Also, when the
elderly (and others) are those returning and living in these
conditions, their health is impacted and then the lack of
medical facilities and hospital beds is a problem. Again the
result may be death….Basically if an evacuee says they have a
place to stay – like with relatives – those communities will
give them bus fare back or pay for U-hauls. If an evacuee was a
renter here and they want to return they should be told to plan
on returning in 3-7 years, and in the meantime stay there, get a
job, and be much better off.”
FEMA officials in Austin are
also warning people about returning to New Orleans. They wrote:
“Before you return….New Orleans is a changing place…you should
consider the conditions you may be returning to. Many
neighborhood schools will not be open by August. Your children
may have to travel some distance to get to school…Grocery and
supermarkets have been slow to return to many neighborhoods.
Sometimes there aren’t enough residents back in your
neighborhood for a store to open and be profitable. You may have
to travel a large distance to groceries. Walking to the store
might not be an option…If you or your family members require
regular medical attention, or if you are pregnant or nursing,
the services you received before the storm may be scattered and
in very different and distant locations. Depending on your
medical needs, you may have to drive across the river or even as
far away as Baton Rouge…If you or your family members have
allergies, remember that there is lots of dust and mold still in
the city. While you may have suffered from allergies before the
storm, please consider that being in the city will only worsen
your allergies. If you have asthma, other respiratory or cardiac
conditions, or immune system problems, you would be safer
staying out of flooded areas due to the mold, particles and dust
in the air. If you must return to the city, wear an approved
respirator when working in moldy or dusty areas. …Additionally,
police, fire and emergency personnel are stretched to their
limits…If you own a car, gas and service stations are limited in
many areas. You may need to purchase a gas can in the event you
cannot get gas near your home…Public transportation (busses) are
also limited and do not operate in all areas….Available and
affordable housing is extremely rare. Waiting lists for
apartments are as large as 300 on the list, depending on how
many bedrooms you need. Living inside your home could be
dangerous if mold has set in of if your utilities are not in top
working condition…Living in New Orleans may be easier said than
done until we have fully recovered from the storm.”
This is New Orleans, one year
after Katrina.
Where Did the Money Go?
Everyone who visits New Orleans
asks the same question that locals ask – where is the money?
Congress reportedly appropriated over $100 billion to rebuild
the Gulf Coast. Over $50 billion was allocated to temporary and
long-term housing. Just under $30 billion was for emergency
response and Department of Defense spending. Over $18 billion
was for State and local response and the rebuilding of
infrastructure. $3.6 billion was for health, social services and
job training and $3.2 for non-housing cash assistance. $1.9
billion was allocated for education and $1.2 billion for
agriculture.
One hour in New Orleans shows
the check must still be in the mail.
Not a single dollar in federal
housing rehab money has made it into a hand in Louisiana. Though
Congress has allocated nearly $10 billion in Community
Development Block Grants, the State of Louisiana is still
testing the program and has not yet distributed dollar number
one.
A lot of media attention has
gone to the prosecution of people who wrongfully claimed
benefits of $2000 or more after the storm. Their fraud is
despicable. It harms those who are still waiting for assistance
from FEMA.
But, be clear - these little
$2000 thieves are minnows swimming on the surface. There are
many big savage sharks below. Congress and the national media
have so far been frustrated in their quest to get real answers
to where the millions and billions went. How much was actually
spent on FEMA trailers? How much did the big contractors take
off the top and then subcontract out the work? Who were the
subcontractors for the multi-million dollar debris removal and
reconstruction contracts?
As Corpwatch says in their
recent report, “Many of the same ‘disaster profiteers’ and
government agencies that mishandled the reconstruction of
Afghanistan and Iraq are responsible for the failure of
‘reconstruction’ of the Gulf Coast region. The Army Corps,
Bechtel and Halliburton are using the very same ‘contract
vehicles’ in the Gulf Coast as they did in Afghanistan and Iraq.
These are ‘indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity’ open-ended
‘contingency’ contracts that are being abused by the contractors
on the Gulf Coast to squeeze out local companies. These are also
‘cost-plus’ contracts that allow them to collect a profit on
everything they spend, which is an incentive to overspend.”
We do know billions of dollars
in no-bid FEMA contracts went to Bechtel Corporation, the Shaw
Group, CH2M Hill, and Fluor immediately after Katrina hit. Riley
Bechtel, CEO of Bechtel Corporation, served on President Bush’s
Export Council during 2003-2004. A lobbyist for the Shaw Group,
Joe Allbaugh, is a former FEMA Director and friend of President
Bush. The President and Group Chief Executive of the
International Group at CH2MHill is Robert Card, appointed by
President Bush as undersecretary to the US Department of Energy
until 2004. Card also worked at CH2M Hill before signing up with
President Bush. Fluor, whose work in Iraq was slowing down, is
one of the big winners of FEMA work and its stock is up 65
percent since it started Katrina work.
Senator Byron Dorgan of North
Dakota has raised many protests and questions over inflated
prices. “It is hard to overstate the incompetence involved in
all of these contracts – we have repeatedly asked them for
information and you get nothing.” Republican U.S. Representative
Charles Bustany, who represents an area heavily damaged by
Hurricane Rita, asked FEMA for reasons why the decision was made
to stop funding 100 percent of the cost of debris removal in his
district. FEMA refused to tell him. He then filed a Freedom of
Information request to get the information, and was again
refused. When he asked to appeal their denial, he was told that
there were many appeals ahead of his and he would have to wait.
If a US Senator and a local U.S.
Republican Representative cannot get answers from FEMA, how much
accountability can the people of the Gulf Coast expect? There
are many other examples of fraud, waste and patronage.
How did a company that did not
own a truck get a contract for debris removal worth hundreds of
millions of dollars? The Miami Herald reported that the single
biggest receiver of early Katrina federal contracts was
Ashbritt, Inc. of Pompano Beach, FL, which received over $579
million in contracts for debris removal in Mississippi from Army
Corps of Engineers.
The paper reported that the
company does not own a single dumptruck! All they do is
subcontract out the work. Ashbritt, however, had recently dumped
$40,000 into the lobbying firm of Barbour, Griffith & Rogers,
which had been run by Mississippi Governor and former National
GOP Chair Haley Barbour. The owners of Ashbritt also trucked
$50,000 over to the Republican National Committee in 2004.
How did a company that filed for
bankruptcy the year before and was not licensed to build
trailers get a $200 million contract for trailers? Circle B
Enterprises of Georgia was awarded $287 million in contracts by
FEMA for temporary housing. At the time, that was the seventh
highest award of Katrina money in the country. According to the
Washington Post, Circle B was not even being licensed to build
homes in its own state of Georgia and filed for bankruptcy in
2003. The company does not even have a website.
FEMA spent $7 million to build a
park for 198 trailers in Morgan City Louisiana – almost 2 hours
away from New Orleans.
Construction was completed in
April. Three months later only 20 of the trailers were occupied.
One displaced New Orleans resident who lives there has to walk
three miles to the nearest grocery.
Hurricanes are now a booming
billion dollar business. No wonder there is a National Hurricane
Conference for private companies to show off their wares – from
RVs to portable cell phone towers to port-a-potties. One long
time provider was quoted by the Miami Herald at the conference
that there are all kinds of new people in the field - 'Some
folks here said, `Man, this is huge business; this is my new
business. I'm not in the landscaping business anymore, I'm going
to be a hurricane debris contractor.' "
On the local level, we are not
any better.
One year after Katrina the City
of New Orleans still does not have a comprehensive rebuilding
plan. The first plan by advisors to the Mayor was shelved before
the election. A city council plan was then started and the state
and federal government mandated yet another process that may or
may not include some of the recommendations of the prior two
processes. One of the early advisors from the Urban Land
Institute, John McIlwain, blasted the delays in late July. “It’s
virtually a city with a city administration and its worse than
ever…You need a politician, a leader that is willing to make
tough decisions and articulate to people why these decisions are
made, which means everyone is not going to be happy.” Without
major changes at City Hall the City will have miles of neglected
neighborhoods for decades. “We’re talking Dresden after World
War II.”
Signs of Hope
Despite the tragedies that
continue to plague our Gulf Coast, there is hope. Between the
rocks of hardship, green life continues to sprout defiantly.
Fifteen feet of water washed
through Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Elementary School for
Science and Technology in the lower 9th Ward. When people were
finally able to get into the building, the bodies of fish were
found on the second floor. Parents and over 90% of the teachers
organized a grass-roots effort to put their school back
together. Their first attempts to gut and repair the school by
locals and volunteers from Common Ground were temporarily
stopped by local school officials and the police. Even after the
gutting was allowed to resume, the community was told that the
school could not reopen due to insufficient water pressure in
the neighborhood.
But the teachers and parents are
pressing ahead anyway in a temporary location until they can get
back in their school. Assistant Principal Joseph Recasner told
the Times-Picayune: “Rebuilding our school says this is a very
special community, tied together by more than location, but by
spirituality, by bloodlines, and by a desire to come back.”
New Orleans is fortunate to have
a working newspaper again. The Times-Picayune won a
well-deserved Pulitzer for its Katrina coverage. Its staff
continues to provide quality documentation of the Gulf Coast
region’s efforts to repair and rebuild.
The New Orleans Vietnamese
people continue to inspire us. They were among the very first
group back and they have joined forces to care for their elders,
rebuild their community church, and work together in a most
cooperative manner to resurrect their community. Recently they
took legal and direct action to successfully stop the placement
of a gigantic landfill right next to their community. Their
determination and sense of community-building is a good model
for us all.
The only Republican running for
Congress in New Orleans is blasting President Bush over failed
Katrina promises. Joe Lavigne is running radio ads saying,
“Sadly, George Bush has forgotten us. He’s spending too much
time and money on Iraq and not enough living up to his promise
to rebuild New Orleans. His priorities are wrong. I’m running
for Congress to hold President Bush accountable.” Maybe other
Republicans will join in.
Tens of thousands of volunteers
from every walk of life have joined with the people of the Gulf
Coast to help repair and rebuild. Lawyers are giving free help
to Katrina victims who need legal help to rebuild their homes.
Medical personnel staff free clinics. Thousands of college, high
school and even some grade school students have traveled to the
area to help families gut their devastated homes. Churches,
temples, and mosques from across the world have joined with
sisters and brothers in New Orleans to repair and rebuild.
Despite open attempts to divide
them, black and brown and white and yellow workers have started
to talk to each other. Small groups have started to work
together to fight for living wages and safe jobs for all
workers. Thousands came together for a rally for respectful
treatment for Latino and immigrant workers. Seasoned civil
rights activists welcomed the new movement and pledged to work
together.
Ultimately, the people of the
Gulf Coast are the greatest sign of hope. Despite setbacks that
people in the US rarely suffer, people continue to help each
other and fight for their right to return home and the right to
live in the city they love.
On Sunday morning, a 70 year old
woman told a friend where her children are. “They are all
scattered,” she sighed. “One is in Connecticut, one in Rhode
Island, one in Austin.” When he asked about her, she said, “Me?
I am in Texas right now. I am back here to visit my 93 year old
mother and go to the second line of Black Men of Labor on Labor
Day. But I’m coming back. Yes indeed. I will return. I’m coming
back.”
Bill Quigley is a
human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University New
Orleans. You can reach him at
Quigley@loyno.edu
For more information see
www.justiceforneworleans.org
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