Saturday, January 20, 2007
Quote of the Day
Friday, January 19, 2007
New Orleans remains a shattered city is a sad monument to impotence for the most powerful country in the world
Nowhere to Turn for Shelter
In the long and sordid story of Hurricane Katrina, a new low may be approaching. In Louisiana alone, tens of thousands of displaced families who rely on the government to provide trailers or rent will lose their temporary housing next month — unless the Bush administration extends the standard 18-month time limit for their federal aid.
A year and a half is a long time for anything that is supposed to be transitional, as the families still trapped in cramped, flimsy trailers can testify.
Thursday, December 21, 2006
America’s Open Wound: BOB HERBERT
The New York Times
OP-ED COLUMNIST
America’s Open Wound
By BOB HERBERT
Published: December 21, 2006
The recovery in New Orleans has gone about as well as the war in Iraq.
New Orleans
It's eerie. The air is still. There is no noise. Night is falling.
The five stone steps in front of me once led to a porch, or maybe directly to the front door of a house. There is no way to be sure. The house is completely gone. All that's left are the five steps, one of which is painted with the address, 1630 Reynes St. The steps sit alone, like a piece of minimalist art, at the front of a small vacant lot full of weeds and rubble. Next door is a house that is completely capsized, fallen over on its side like a sunken ship.
Welcome to the Lower Ninth Ward. You won't find much holiday spirit here. In every direction, as far as it is possible to see, is devastation.
On another lot, piled high with the rubble of a ruined house, I saw a middle-aged man standing in the front yard weeping. He wore a dirty white baseball cap and he was sobbing like a child. I walked toward him to ask a question but he waved me away.
Whatever you've heard about New Orleans, the reality is much worse.
--MORE--
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
Government abuses hurricane victims
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
By ANN MCFEATTERS
GUEST COLUMNIST
WASHINGTON -- The judge's outrage comes hurtling through his words, demanding the government respond to his order that cutting off rental aid for thousands of Hurricane Katrina victims just weeks after the deadly storm struck was unconstitutional, premature, incredible and "Kafkaesque."
But his fury is not new. It's been building for months. And all that seems to happen is that government lawyers file appeals.
U.S. District Judge Richard Leon is no liberal and no maverick. A well-to-do establishment lawyer, he was appointed to the federal bench in 2002 by President Bush. Probably his most famous decision was siding with the Bush administration in refusing to order the release of seven detainees held without charges or trials at Guantanamo Bay. He denied their petition to be freed saying the detainees had no legal rights except what the administration wished to give them even if they alleged mistreatment or torture.
But when it comes to the administration's handling of the victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which devastated the Gulf Coast last year, the judge says he is fed up.
In November he ruled that the Federal Emergency Management Agency ("You're doing a heckuva job, Brownie") violated the constitutional rights of evacuees by abruptly ending their housing payments. He ordered the government to restart the housing program for thousands of homeless refugees.
The government responded by appealing, hoping that an appeal would paper over the fact that the agency did not intend to comply.
A few days ago, Leon ordered the government lawyers back to his courtroom in Washington, D.C. "Let me make this clear," he said, according to a report by The Associated Press. "Tell FEMA that I'm expecting them to get going on this. Like, immediately."
He said there is no reason that FEMA employees can't write letters, by hand, if necessary, explaining what is going on with their expired housing assistance to at least 5,500 people made homeless by the storms.
FEMA issued a statement that it did the best it could in the aftermath of the hurricanes. "Our efforts were not perfect. We did not have a computer system that could account for displaced evacuees. We did not have the preferred financial controls and data processing systems in place; they did not exist. However, we created an emergency sheltering program that, with all its faults, provided shelter for unparalleled numbers of displaced evacuees. We used the authorities, programs and policies that we had to work with and we did the right thing."
As for the lawsuits that thousands of desperate people have been forced to bring against the government for terminating the housing program, such as it was, without proper notice, and the judge's resulting ire, FEMA says, "FEMA is proud of the assistance it was able to provide in the aftermath of the catastrophic hurricanes of 2005 ... This case remains in litigation and the agency's policy is that we do not comment on any case in pending litigation."
But more than a year after the hurricanes, thousands of evacuated residents of the Gulf Coast are facing their second Christmas without permanent housing, without jobs, without adequate medical care and, increasingly, without hope that their government, overwhelmed by fighting a losing war in Iraq, will do anything to help. News reports say that some refugee families, at their wits end, have sent their children back to New Orleans to live and go to school on their own, praying that nothing more disastrous happens to them.
The judge is frustrated. Thousands of Americans are frustrated. Many caring government workers are frustrated.
But the government itself, that plodding, massive, often unresponsive behemoth, seems unfazed. A president who wasn't bogged down in other issues, many of his own making, might shine a beacon through the fog and demand that a government that is supposed to be taking democracy to the Middle East get some justice for its own citizens.
Last August, one year after Katrina struck, Bush pledged again its victims would not be forgotten. "In keeping with the tradition of this city, New Orleans again looks to music to express her feelings. And these feelings were captured on a benefit album called, "Higher Ground." One of those songs is called, "Come Sunday," written by Duke Ellington. In her rendition, Cassandra Williams implores a loving God to "please look down and see my people through."
"Sunday has not yet come to New Orleans, but you can see it ahead. And as you approach that joyful day, you can move forward with confidence in your abilities, trust in the compassion of your fellow Americans, and faith in a loving God who makes the path through mighty waters. God bless."
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Judge Chastises FEMA as Botching Katrina Housing Program
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (AP) — A federal judge on Wednesday called the Bush administration’s handling of a Hurricane Katrina housing program “a legal disaster” and ordered officials to explain a computer system that cannot count evacuees with precision or explain why they were denied aid.
The judge, Richard J. Leon of Federal District Court, ruled last month that the Federal Emergency Management Agency had violated evacuees’ constitutional rights by eliminating their housing payments without notice. On Wednesday, he admonished the government for not moving fast enough to restart the program for 3,600 to 5,500 storm victims.
“Let me make this clear,” Judge Leon told Michael Sitcov, a lawyer for the government. “Tell FEMA that I’m expecting them to get going on this. Like, immediately.”
Judge Leon ruled that the agency last spring and summer had mishandled the transition from a short-term housing program to a longer-term program. Instead of explaining why financing was being cut, the agency provided only computer-generated and sometimes conflicting program codes, Judge Leon said.