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Editor: Pay heed to New Orleans' plight

Politics Discuss Editor: Pay heed to New Orleans' plight in the Current forums; syscom says: If the city cannot rebuild after the billions in public and private money that it was given, then ...


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Old 08-26-2007, 06:31 PM   #1
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Editor: Pay heed to New Orleans' plight

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syscom says: If the city cannot rebuild after the billions in public and private money that it was given, then maybe we should say that the city is so dysfunctional, we might as well let it fail and whither away.

And forget about the warning about "your" town might suffer the same fate.....aside from St Louis being wiped out in an earthquake......not one city is at risk for failure. Not even Oakland.
Editor: Pay heed to New Orleans' plight - Yahoo! News

By BRIAN SCHWANER, Associated Press writer Sun Aug 26, 12:30 PM ET

NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans is my hometown. And it's dying. Despite billions of dollars in aid, recovery programs with catchy names and an outpouring of volunteer effort, New Orleans is not recovering from Hurricane Katrina.

Beyond the happy mayhem of the French Quarter, entire neighborhoods are in ruins and the business district sags from the shattered economy. Thousands of people are homeless and squatting in vacant and storm-damaged properties, some just a few blocks from City Hall.

More than 160,000 residents never returned. For those who did dare to come back home, little resembles normalcy.

For the people with the power to save it, New Orleans is a forgotten place.

It's a national disgrace. People should pay attention. The next time, it could be your town.

A VIEW OF THE CRISIS

Katrina struck Aug. 29, 2005, flooding 80 percent of New Orleans and laying waste to the Mississippi coast. The feared worst-case storm lived up to every promise of horror.

Local, state and federal disaster officials bungled the rescue effort from the start, but in the city's darkest hour a presidential promise offered hope.

Barely two weeks after Katrina, President Bush stood in deserted Jackson Square before the majestic, eerily lit St. Louis Cathedral and pledged the nation to a massive reconstruction effort.

"When communities are rebuilt, they must be even better and stronger than before the storm," Bush said. Earlier, Bush told relief volunteers that government would be the solution, not the problem. "Bureaucracy is not going to stand in the way of getting the job done for the people," he said.

Nearly two years later, New Orleans is neither better nor stronger, and a bureaucratic stranglehold is choking off its recovery.

From a tinted window 25 stories above the New Orleans business district, I can see the city rotting from the inside out.

Across the street, Dominion Tower, once bustling with office workers and sprinkled with upscale retailers, is abandoned.

The adjacent Hyatt Hotel, where Super Bowl, Sugar Bowl and NCAA Final Four fans relaxed, also is empty.

Rows of camouflaged Humvees wait in a nearby parking lot for the military police who patrol lawless neighborhoods.

Just out of sight are wastelands where people live in cramped trailers or try to rebuild as best they can.

The only attention the city gets these days is as a campaign prop for some of the presidential contenders.

Among citizens, there is anger. There should be. For those who see New Orleans as someone else's agony, a caution: This kind of governmental and political nonchalance could greet you at your most dire moment.

The main program to help homeowners rebuild from Katrina — the $8 billion federally funded, state-administered and inaptly named Road Home — is going broke and may be short as much as $4 billion. Public schools, firehouses, police stations and transit routes are closed. Hospitals have not returned to normal capacity, and those that are open say they are losing millions of dollars providing medical care for the poor. There is little political will to build a levee system that would prevent the kind of flooding Katrina caused.

Federal, state and city officials can't even agree on priorities, or get aid dollars to where they are needed now. Mayor Ray Nagin, Gov. Kathleen Blanco and White House recovery director Don Powell play a blame game for the failed recovery. There are even whispers among the leaders of the effort that the city's problems are overblown.

They are dead wrong.

OK, NEW ORLEANS HAS BAGGAGE

If Katrina was the perfect storm, New Orleans was the perfect victim. Political corruption and incompetence in city government and an anemic economy made the city as vulnerable to turmoil as the levees that failed.

Sadly, the situation has worsened, and many of the leaders New Orleans must count on are fading from the scene or mired in scandal.

Take, for example, the representatives closest to the seats of power. U.S. Rep. William Jefferson, D-La., has been charged in an alleged international bribery scheme. He has denied wrongdoing. U.S. Sen. David Vitter, R-La., has been caught up in a Washington sex scandal. Blanco has thrown in the towel and isn't running for re-election following the failure of state-led recovery programs and largely ineffective pleas to Congress for more aid.

Even the city's emerging leadership was dealt a shock when City Councilman Oliver Thomas, seen as one of the "good guys" of the recovery effort and maybe a future mayor, pleaded guilty this month to federal bribery charges,

Meanwhile, the police chief and district attorney are feuding while the city grapples with a murder rate that is the worst per capita in the nation.

Even the mayor may be checking out. Nagin is raising money to campaign for a new political office — perhaps governor or congressman, he won't say which. With three years left on his term, the city needs his undivided attention.

President Bush, the city's self-declared savior, has been here 10 times since Katrina, half the visits in the first six weeks after the storm. In the past year, as the true scope of the failure of the recovery unfolded, Bush visited only twice. The city didn't even get a mention in his State of the Union address last January.

PAINFUL REALITIES

Many of the 270,000 people now living in New Orleans wonder how the nation can spend a half-trillion dollars in Iraq while this city remains wrecked.

"I can't believe this is the United States and after so long, so much is still not fixed," said Melanie Ehrlich, a Tulane University researcher. "It's scandalous, unforgivable."

It's worse than that.

Not far from the Ehrlich home, the 6000 block of Paris Avenue is deserted. Weeds obscure gutted houses. Gruesome gang-like symbols painted on their doors tell cryptic tales of what rescuers found when they pushed through Katrina's floodwater.

"It's like looking at the rapture," said the Rev. Jeremy Evans, 31, as he gazed out from the nearby Edgewater Baptist Church. Like the biblical call of the faithful to Heaven, people seem to have vanished.

Paris Avenue is not an exception. Hard-hit neighborhoods across the city could rot for years at the mercy of process-oriented bureaucrats.

Ilene Powell has had her fill of it.

Powell's home in Lakeview was hit hard by Katrina's flood. She applied to Road Home for a rebuilding grant, then spent 16 months in a maddening process of confusing paperwork, interviews and phone calls. Like thousands of others, she is shaken by the experience. "Just who are the rocket scientists running this mess?" she quips.

Actually, New Orleans does have rocket scientists at the Lockheed-Martin plant that serves the space shuttle program. But the remainder of its economy is shaky.

Perhaps taking cues from the leaderless, chaotic recovery, a crisis of confidence has tainted the local corporate contingent. Companies have heaped charitable contributions on the city, but some are pulling jobs out. There are murmurs that more may do so. Companies have a hard time getting executives to transfer here. Meanwhile, a University of New Orleans poll showed public sentiment is so bad that 29 percent of the current resident population may leave.

America should not allow New Orleans to die a slow death.

"No one in government has a true sense of the reality of what is happening here," Powell observed.

A great American city is withering. The people with power must be made to care.

And you should care — that it could be your hometown that is abandoned when the crisis is yours.
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Old 08-26-2007, 06:59 PM   #2
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I just wonder where all the millions of dollars that were "allocated" for
hurricane relief actually went to ? Somebody or corporations got rich.

Charles
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Old 08-26-2007, 07:34 PM   #3
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well, here's a couple....

NPR : FEMA Sells Post-Katrina Trailers
FEMA Sells Post-Katrina Trailers
by Libby Lewis

March 16, 2007 · Thousands of mobile trailers originally procured for distribution to Hurricane Katrina victims are on the auction block. The federal government is selling them at rock-bottom prices through the Internet and live auctions.

Katrina ice being melted after two years - Boston.com

Katrina ice being melted after two years
July 14, 2007

GLOUCESTER, Mass. --Thousands of pounds of ice originally sent to Hurricane Katrina relief efforts are being melted after being stored in Gloucester for two years. A Federal Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman told the Gloucester Daily Times that the ice held at Americold Logistics and at 22 similar facilities nationwide is being melted to dispose of it for health reasons. The cost of storing the ice at all the facilities since Katrina is $12.5 million.

The ice was originally sent south to help Katrina victims, but in September 2005 the ice was sent back north by the federal government, and some of it ended up in the Gloucester.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers acknowledged at the time that it had ordered too much ice due to faulty estimates by local officials. Truckers received up to $900 a day to move the ice to storage sites around the country.

Gloucester received 118 truckloads of ice in September 2005, but 99 of those were sent to Florida in October 2005 to help with relief efforts after Hurricane Wilma. By November 2005, only four truckloads, weighing between 40,000 and 84,000 pounds each, remained in Gloucester.

FEMA contracts required disposal of the ice three months after purchase. But FEMA spokeswoman Alexandra Kirin told the Times that the agency decided to keep the excess ice for the 2006 hurricane season. With fewer storms than expected, the ice was not needed, and the agency decided not to save the ice for the 2007 season because it couldn't determine if the ice was safe for human consumption.

"We just didn't take any chances," Kirin said.

She added FEMA tried to donate the ice, but "had no takers."

FOXNews.com - Transcript: Katrina Waste - Neil Cavuto | Your World
Katrina Waste
Right now, your money being used to pay for expensive hotel rooms, beachfront condos on the Gulf of Mexico, and luxury suites with flat-panel TV screens — it's all for victims of Hurricane Katrina, but so much of it has been literally wasted. The question is, how much?

Four hundred thirty-eight dollars per night per room at New York's swanky Millenium Hilton hotel in Manhattan, while the average price for a room in the U.S. is closer to 60 bucks — and over $300 million for nearly 11,000 manufactured homes in Arkansas they are unused because they are sinking in the mud.

Why did the government not do a better job with your money?


And with all the sewage and mud and graft I guess Ray Nagin got his "chocolate" city.
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Old 08-26-2007, 07:44 PM   #4
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How can a country with the richest economy leave one the most renowned city in a 3rd world state 2 years after a disaster???
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Old 08-26-2007, 08:31 PM   #5
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How can a country with the richest economy leave one the most renowned city in a 3rd world state 2 years after a disaster???
Simple - aside from the french quarter, the place was and is a bloody crime ridden shithole - maybe the place will die. Those who are attempting to rebuild it are finding that there are some inhabitants who could care less and there are many who refuse to re-invest in a loosing situation.

Z - maybe in Europe New Orleans may be considered "renowned." In actuality there are cities in Albania in better shape, and that was before Katrina.
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Old 08-26-2007, 09:24 PM   #6
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New Orleans had one of the most corrupt police departments and governments in the country and this was before Katrina. Only thing it had going for it was Mardi Gras and music.


Shielded from Justice: New Orleans

The New Orleans Police Department has been rocked by successive scandals during the past several years: an officer was convicted in April 1996 of hiring a hit man to kill a woman who had lodged a brutality complaint against him and another officer was convicted in September 1995 for robbing a Vietnamese restaurant and shooting, execution style, a brother and sister who worked there, as well as an off-duty officer from her precinct working as security at the restaurant. In addition, at least fifty of the 1,400-member force have been arrested for felonies including homicide, rape, and robberies since 1993. As astutely noted by police abuse expert Prof. James Fyfe, some cities' police departments have reputations for being brutal, like Los Angeles, or corrupt, like New York, and still others are considered incompetent. New Orleans has accomplished the rare feat of leading nationally in all categories.
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Old 08-28-2007, 09:29 AM   #7
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The only thing I liked about New Orleans before Katrina was the French Quarter as FBJ said.

The only thing that kept that city alive was Mardi Gras.
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Old 08-28-2007, 10:30 AM   #8
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That's one city I never got to while in the Navy..... and, for some reason,
I just don't care to go there. "Chocolate City", indeed......
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Old 08-28-2007, 11:06 AM   #9
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One of the saddest things is that the Goverment haven't repaired the barriers and other preventative measures.
Business knows this and its the single main reason why insurance companies will either refuse to insure, or will charge huge premiums for cover. Due to this, companies are pulling out and refusing to invest. Therefore there is no work for the people with few skills.
The people who left generally were the people who could afford to go leaving the poorest behind, result, even more chaos than before.

Bush knows what needs to be done. He employed a team of experts from around the world for advice, headed by a Dutchman who was previously responsible for the flood defences in Amsterdam. One of Europes main ports and a city largely below sea level. So he had the right team, headed by someone with the right experience, but has refused to follow their advice.

The infrastructure is now poor and so many key skills are missing, that if another hurricane hits the actual Port of New Orleans is at serious risk. Should that go, then you will have an economic disaster on your hands.

If Bush were to spend the money on the defences the population of New Orleans would have a chance of work (as a lot of it is manual or low skilled). This would
a) Make the City safe
b) Start rebuilding the economy of the city
c) Ensure the safety of the Port

In case your wondering, the cost was estimated at $8 billion
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Old 08-28-2007, 11:27 AM   #10
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One of the saddest things is that the Goverment haven't repaired the barriers and other preventative measures.
Business knows this and its the single main reason why insurance companies will either refuse to insure, or will charge huge premiums for cover. Due to this, companies are pulling out and refusing to invest. Therefore there is no work for the people with few skills.
The people who left generally were the people who could afford to go leaving the poorest behind, result, even more chaos than before.

Bush knows what needs to be done. He employed a team of experts from around the world for advice, headed by a Dutchman who was previously responsible for the flood defences in Amsterdam. One of Europes main ports and a city largely below sea level. So he had the right team, headed by someone with the right experience, but has refused to follow their advice.

The infrastructure is now poor and so many key skills are missing, that if another hurricane hits the actual Port of New Orleans is at serious risk. Should that go, then you will have an economic disaster on your hands.

If Bush were to spend the money on the defences the population of New Orleans would have a chance of work (as a lot of it is manual or low skilled). This would
a) Make the City safe
b) Start rebuilding the economy of the city
c) Ensure the safety of the Port

In case your wondering, the cost was estimated at $8 billion
Glider...."Bush" doesnt have the power to do much.

Multiple federal/state/city agencies have legal jurisdiction of many aspects of the rebuilding. If they dont talk or cooperate with one another, then thats life.

The main issue, is why does the City of New Orleans refuse to spend money that is available for immediate use, to upgrade the dikes?
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Old 08-28-2007, 11:44 AM   #11
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There was federal money allocated since 1992 for New Orleans to repair the levies at Lake Pontchartrain. Our federal government allocates money to each state for infrastructure repairs and sometimes they divert those funds to other projects. Louisiana's 2005 GNP was 168 billion - somewhere in there someone should of had the foresight to look into this problem, but after it happened it was very easy to blame the federal Government. You folks across the pond have to realize how our government works but at the same time understand that there is an element within our population that wants a handout for everything, blames everyone for their problems, but yet will not do any work or accept responsibility for their own existence.
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Old 08-28-2007, 12:47 PM   #12
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One of the saddest things is that the Goverment haven't repaired the barriers and other preventative measures.
Thats not true. The other day the US Army Corps of Engineers anounced that the Levies were back up to full strength.
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Old 08-28-2007, 01:23 PM   #13
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Adler, what they say and what is actually happening are two different things. Just watched on the news where several key levees haven't even been touched by the Corps and a few have just had loose soil piled up. There is still a problem.

And Glider, how is Bush responsible for the design and inaction of the Corps and local government? Is he sitting down and figuring out each and every spot that needs replacing or is his team ADVISING the Corps as to whats to be done? And the top brass of the Corps spends more money to study the proposal and see if it will work, etc, etc, etc. It sounds like, once again government wastes millions spent for someone to study a hill and nothing gets done. How much of that $8 billion is spent on engineers walking around doing "studies"? I'm sure the grunts and construction workers are getting the scraps of that money and making do with it.

The county and city spend several million dolloars studying the problem. They come up with a neat answer, like a wonderful, 2000 foot high levee with a Star Bucks for good measure. But by now the money is spent coming up with it, so whats left is spent on substandard levees and defenses. Happens all around the country. But to blame Bush is to ignore the real problem and thats the idiots that keep getting elected who create this mess and then "Blame Bush".
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Old 08-28-2007, 01:28 PM   #14
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Adler, what they say and what is actually happening are two different things. Just watched on the news where several key levees haven't even been touched by the Corps and a few have just had loose soil piled up. There is still a problem.
Ahh I did not see that.


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Old 08-28-2007, 01:58 PM   #15
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I know this sounds intrusive in particular as I am from the UK but I ask you to continue.
Bush does have the power to force the state / muicipal authorities to do things but hasn't used them. He is the one who set up the group to advise the goverment on what action needed to be undertaken and he is the one who has not listened to the advice. Of course there are others such as the Mayor and the Corp of Engineers who believe they know best and have ignored the input.

The levees that were damaged have been repaired but generally not improved but most importantly the ones that were not damaged have not been improved to cater for the lessons of the flood. In effect, the weak spot has been transferred from one place to another and these will break. The chief adviser has told Bush in very blunt terms that what has been done has not been effective.
The $8 billion was the estimate to complete the work properly.

Maybe I should give some background. I worked in Insurance for 19 years and around 10 of these were in marine insurance specialising in ports and cargo. My brother is a senior underwriter in the USA specialising in Catastrophe insurance including tornado's, floods, earthquakes etc. He has written papers on the effect of Katrina and one of these was used in a Senate Congressional hearing. He has assisted the group advising President Bush on insurance matters and had meetings with others with the Mayor on the recovery.

The following link may be of interest

Kenneth Slack: ZoomInfo Business People Information
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