Help me write a platform for New Orleans

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And now it looks as if FEMA's kicking out the volunteers who are actually doing something:

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/4/3/13938/09595

Pete Scholtes (Pete Scholtes), Thursday, 6 April 2006 16:33 (eighteen years ago) link

I watched the debate on C-Span. The Rev. Thomas Watson forced the issue of bringing people back home very well. Nagin was a pompous ass. The Republicans are on the moon if they think the private sector will play Superman. On a gut level, I liked these two the best:

Virginia Boulet
http://www.virginiabouletformayor.com
Rev. Tom Watson
http://www.tomwatsonformayor.com

Pete Scholtes (Pete Scholtes), Thursday, 6 April 2006 16:42 (eighteen years ago) link

Amy Goodman on Pacifica had a story this morning on the collapse of the New Orleans criminal law system. Folks being held too long, not enough public defenders, evidence gone, witnesses unavailable, etc.

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 10 April 2006 15:04 (eighteen years ago) link

I do not usually even listen to Amy Goodman but I just heard her interviewing more folks in New Orleans. What a mess--lots of candidates for mayor, lots of folks in exile unable to vote, ongoing problems for renters to find homes and apartments to rent at reasonable rates, electricity and phone connection problems...

curmudgeon (Steve K), Tuesday, 11 April 2006 02:28 (eighteen years ago) link

two weeks pass...
Not making much progress, but I'll bump with this, anyway:

http://blogs.citypages.com/pscholtes/2006/05/a_platform_for.asp

Pete Scholtes (Pete Scholtes), Monday, 1 May 2006 17:44 (eighteen years ago) link

I just got back from a weekend in New Orleans for the 1st weekend of Jazzfest. I also drove through the 9th Ward and a more middle-class area and saw some of the devastation. In the 9th Ward very little appears to have been done. There is still debris everywhere, trees everywhere, smashed open houses just sitting. We saw no workers cleaning up, just firemen with axes at one site. There appears to be no electricity. Someone cut out the word "No" from an ACORN "no bulldozing" poster. In a ward with an average income of only $25,000 there are few trailers and with the lack of electricity and and food and shopping options, it seems nearly impossible for folks to rebuild (to the new 3 feet higher FEMA rules) without sizeable assistance from governments at all levels. But that does not seem to be happening.
In the more middle-class neighborhood, shopping centers, gas stations and fast food restaurants sit empty. The traffic lights are out. We saw some work being done on certain homes. In the French Quarter which had little damage there are still many restaurants and other shops that are closed. Near Harrah's casino on the edge between the Quarter and the Central Business District there are still windows in buildings covered with plywood. The letter 'r" is still missing from the Doubletree Hotel sign. Under an overpass near downtown you can see lots of flood-destroyed and trashed cars just sitting. Up by the fairgrounds where Jazzfest took place you can see the waterline on some homes. There are a fair number of damaged homes up there as well. At a restaurant, a waiter vented to us about how hard it is to try to repair his New Orleans home while living out-of-town and working long hours as a waiter.

At Jazzfest Charmaine Neville railed against FEMA, many others bemoaned the state of things, and Springsteen criticized "President Bystander" and noted in regards to his visit to the 9th Ward that "The criminal ineptitude makes you furious."

Bush and company keep insisting they are spending money down there and will bring the levees back up to level 3 scale (!) but I did not see much tangible results in the neighborhoods (the Times-Picayune keeps running articles on the Army Corps of Engineers failures both historic and current). It all seems very grim to me. The New Orleans culture that gave us Creole cooking, sucessive generations of new and different brass bands, Mardi Gras Indians, Fats Domino, Louis Armstrong, and more jazz, r'n'b, and rock performers is now spread out and dissipated throughout the country. Rents and housing costs in higher ground 'better' neighborhoods are out of the reach of many. A research scientist who lives in uptown New Orleans told me at the Fest that it looks like New Orleans will simply become "a port and a resort," but will no longer be a multicultural, multi-class vital living city.

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 3 May 2006 12:17 (eighteen years ago) link

Thank God I was able to spend as much time there as I was. I know that I have to go back as soon as I can, because of my deeply-held feelings for the place, but I dread what seems to be an inevitable feeling of permanent loss.

Damnit. Wouldn't it be cool if this were to serve as a step in the right direction for rebuilding - actually attempting to reclaim as close to the original, and not just simulating or totally refacing?

Big Loud Mountain Ape (Big Loud Mountain Ape), Wednesday, 3 May 2006 12:44 (eighteen years ago) link

"Restore 15 percent of the city to wetlands in a socially equitable manner."

This is the hard part of Pete's plan. For now the 9th Ward is not being bulldozed, but nor is it being restored. How do you decide to move people or where they should have to move to? The way it looks right now, a large chunk of the 9th Ward is just going to sit--neither as a true wetland or as a redeveloped neighborhood. The long-standing issues of race and class and how they play out, plus the city's longstanding crime and education problems factor in heavily. Someone(white guy) working at one restaurant told us they need to just bulldoze, and that venting waiter (white guy) I referred to above noted that while the city went without any murders for months after Katrina, recently a local had been murdered on the street not far from the tourist area of Jackson Square with a shotgun. The waiter complained "the trash are coming back."

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Wednesday, 3 May 2006 13:12 (eighteen years ago) link

I figure that even if you're one of those folks who says that rebuilding should not be done in certain areas because another storm is likely to come through, I think you should still recognize the resposibility and failure of governments here. The Army Corps of Engineers screwed up, and various governments failed to rescue people, and now those governments are not actively creating and implementing a plan (they're not even getting the electricity on or the debris cleaned up 8 months later).

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Thursday, 4 May 2006 03:56 (eighteen years ago) link

""Housing is the big one," said Taylor, whose foundation has donated more than $500,000 for replacement instruments.

"A lot of people are on hold," Floyd said. "We're coming into hurricane season. The levees aren't anywhere where they need to be. It's just a kind of wait-and-see attitude."

Some musicians who have tried to find housing report that rents have doubled." excerpt from "New Orleans musicians come home — for now"
By Paul de Barros, Seattle Times jazz critic
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002977610_nola07.html

There have been other sad articles in the Times-Picayune, plus a sad piece on media coverage 8 months later in the Washington Post.


curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 8 May 2006 14:23 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/05/AR2006050501744.html

Katrina Fatigue The Media's New Orleans Burnout

By Howard Kurtz
Sunday, May 7, 2006; Page B01

"I walked down the street next to a failed levee here the other day and saw house after house that had been pulverized by Hurricane Katrina. Eight months after the storm, and nothing, not a single cinder block, had been touched. An exterior wall of one home had been ripped away, revealing, amid the rubble, a sneaker, some batteries and a cardboard box for an NFL football. A thriving family once lived here, and in the next house, and in the house after that.

But it's old news, this tableau of destruction. Even if a reporter could track down the families on this block and recount each tale of woe, the camera lens would still be too close; it simply could not capture the magnitude of what happened to New Orleans last summer. And if you pull back the camera too far, you get those aerial shots we've all seen so many times, which provide a sense of the hurricane's scale but not of the human misery that each ruined home represents."

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 8 May 2006 20:36 (eighteen years ago) link

Pete, where are you?

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Tuesday, 9 May 2006 04:53 (eighteen years ago) link

I'm here! There are heroic stories as well as sad ones, like this on the 9th Ward (if this wasn't already posted):
http://www.nola.com/search/index.ssf?/base/library-101/114648651382840.xml?nola

Nagin has at least unveiled an evacuation plan, which takes care of #6, maybe.

I'm sending money, once I catch up on bills, to Common Grounds.

Pete Scholtes (Pete Scholtes), Tuesday, 9 May 2006 07:32 (eighteen years ago) link

Yea, Common Grounds and a few other non-profits seem to be the only ones doing anything. No governments at any level seem to be doing anything about the electricity, water, or cleaning up in the poor neighborhoods (and not much better in the middle class hoods).

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Tuesday, 9 May 2006 19:54 (eighteen years ago) link

Par for the Corps
A Flood of Bad Projects

By Michael Grunwald
Sunday, May 14, 2006; B01

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/13/AR2006051300037_pf.html

"....Then the Corps failed to protect New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina, despite spending more in Louisiana than in any other state. Last month, the Corps commander acknowledged that his agency's "design failure" led to the floodwall collapses that drowned New Orleans. So why isn't everyone asking questions about the Corps and its patrons in Congress?

Somehow, America has concluded that the scandal of Katrina was the government's response to the disaster, not the government's contribution to the disaster. The Corps has eluded the public's outrage -- even though a useless Corps shipping canal intensified Katrina's surge, even though poorly designed Corps floodwalls collapsed just a few feet from an unnecessary $750 million Corps navigation project , even though the Corps had promoted development in dangerously low-lying New Orleans floodplains and had helped destroy the vast marshes that once provided the city's natural flood protection."

Pete:
Doing something about the Corps of Engineers needs to be a platform item (although it seems to enjoy Congresional and Presidential and military patronage and support that makes it untouchable).

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 15 May 2006 21:48 (seventeen years ago) link

Who will win the runoff for Mayor of New Orleans, and will it matter?

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Tuesday, 16 May 2006 12:44 (seventeen years ago) link

http://www.gumbopages.com/looka/

See the May 22nd posting for one recent view

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Tuesday, 23 May 2006 12:42 (seventeen years ago) link

eight months pass...
Pete:

The million dollar complicated question: How do you change the education system, pre-care for kids issues, labor/work issues, mindset issues, policing issues, gun issues, drug issues etc. in New Orleans so as to decrease the violence?

Check out this depressing N.Y. Times article.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/05/us/05crime.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin

"In New Orleans, Dysfunction Fuels Cycle of Killing"

excerpt:
"Other cities have plenty of murders. But only in New Orleans has there been the uniquely poisoned set of circumstances that has led to this city’s position at the top of the homicide charts. Every phase of the killing cycle here unfolds under the dark star of dysfunction: the murderers’ brutalized childhoods, the often ineffectual police intervention, a dulled community response, and a tense relationship between the police and prosecutors that lets many cases slip through the cracks."

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Monday, 5 February 2007 15:20 (seventeen years ago) link

I think Pete's too busy worrying about New Times/VV Media inflicted changes at his job right now, to look at this.

curmudgeon (DC Steve), Tuesday, 6 February 2007 16:05 (seventeen years ago) link

four years pass...

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2011/05/appalling_conditions_at_new_or.html

excerpt below
Appalling conditions at New Orleans coroner's office reveal a crude, understaffed operation

Published: Sunday, May 22, 2011, 7:00 AM

By Laura Maggi, The Times-Picayune

In New Orleans, the murder capital of the United States, the local agency tasked with investigating exactly how people die is a crude operation at best, with pathologists performing autopsies in a dingy former funeral parlor, half of which was recently rendered useless by fire.

Without a proper ventilation system inside the autopsy area, the smell of dead bodies and cleaning supplies lingers in the air. Corpses are stored in refrigerated trucks out back.

Making problems worse, Coroner Frank Minyard is far from a vocal advocate for his office, rarely asking the city for money to alleviate the burdensome caseload of his staff. Despite holding the office for more than 30 years, Minyard blames his failure to land a state-of-the-art facility on a kind of political naivete.

curmudgeon, Monday, 23 May 2011 13:33 (twelve years ago) link

Adam (New Orleans resident), any thoughts?

curmudgeon, Monday, 23 May 2011 16:02 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

Rising Tide 6 Conference on New Orleans' future is at Xavier University on Aug. 27

Check RisingTideNola.com, the Rising Tide Blog & this page for details, y'all.

Friday Night Party Aug. 26 (TBA)

Amazing Speakers and Panels all day Saturday, Aug. 27.

Registration includes morning pastries & beverages and lunch by J'Anita's

Everyone is welcome!

The Rising Tide Conference is an annual gathering for all who wish to learn more and do more to assist New Orleans' recovery. It's for everyone who loves New Orleans and is working to bring a better future to all its residents.

Leveraging the power of bloggers and new media, the conference is a launch pad for organization and action. Our day-long program of speakers and presentations is tailored to inform, entertain, enrage and inspire.

We come together to dispel myths, promote facts, highlight progress and regress, discuss recovery ideas, and promote sound policies at all levels. We aim to be a "real life" demonstration of internet activism as we continue to recover from a massive failure of government on all levels.

This year's featured guests include the creator of HBO series The Wire and Treme, David Simon, and author of six critically acclaimed books on the physical and human geography of New Orleans, Richard Campanella. Past featured speakers have included Mac McClellan (blogger and writer for Mother Jones) Harry Shearer (writer, actor, host of the weekly radio show Le Show), John Barry (author of Rising Tide), Dave Zirin (author of Welcome to the Terrordome) and authors Christopher Cooper and Robert Block (Disaster: Hurricane Katrina and the Failure of Homeland Security).

This year's main stage panel discussions include:

Social Media, Social Justice Panel – Cherri Foytlin, contributor to the Bridge the Gulf project; Jimmy Huck, Jr., Executive Committee member of Tulane University’s Center for Public Service; Jordan Flaherty, author of Floodlines: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six; Stephen Ostertag, creator of PublicSphereNOLA; and moderated by Bart Everson from Xavier's Center for the Advancement of Teaching.

Louisiana’s Coastal Health Panel – Moderated by Alex Woodward, writer for Gambit, panelists include Len Bahr, founding editor of LACoastPost; David Hammer, contributing writer for the New Orleans Times-Picayune; Ann Rolfes, founding director of the Louisiana Bucket Brigade; Drake Toulouse, blogger at Disenfranchised Citizen; and Bob Marshall, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist for the Times-Picayune.

New Orleans Food Writing Panel - Guests Peter Thriffley and Rene Louapre of Blackened Out and Offbeat Magazine will join Todd Price, author of A Frolic of My Own to discuss the eating out in New Orleans and writing about it, and the new generation of great online New Orleans food writers. Chefs and Restauranteurs: Green Goddess' Chris Debarr as well as Adolfo Garcia and Alex del Castillo.

Brass Bands Panel - featuring Lawrence Rawlins, band director of Roots of Music; Alejandro de los Rios, producer of the Brass Roots documentary; members of the TBC Brass Band Edward “Juicy” Jackson, Joe Maize and Sean Michael Roberts; moderated by writer Deborah Cotton; followed by a performance by the TBC Brass Band.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 11 August 2011 15:09 (twelve years ago) link

nine months pass...

No more daily newsprint paper in new orleans

http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/24/new-orleans-times-picayune-to-cut-staff-and-cease-daily-newspape/?hp

Also this fall, The Times-Picayune will begin publishing a more robust newspaper on a reduced schedule of Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays only.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 May 2012 16:33 (eleven years ago) link

Oh man, that really sucks.

Soccer mom, hopeless and lost, in utter despair (Dan Peterson), Thursday, 24 May 2012 16:57 (eleven years ago) link

At least their restaurant critc (and sometimes music critic) can do this I guess:

Times-Picayune restaurant critic Brett Anderson has been selected as a member of the Nieman Foundation Fellows Class for 2013. He is one of 24 journalists chosen, the Nieman Foundation announced Friday.

The Nieman Foundation administers the prestigious fellowship program, which allows accomplished and promising journalists a year of study at Harvard, with time to pursue individual areas of interest, along with integrated class work to enhance their expertise.

curmudgeon, Thursday, 24 May 2012 17:16 (eleven years ago) link

three years pass...

African-American New Orleans banker Alden McDonald has done what he can, but ...

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/23/magazine/why-new-orleans-black-residents-are-still-under-water-after-katrina.html?&moduleDetail=section-news-3&action=click&contentCollection=Magazine®ion=Footer&module=MoreInSection&version=WhatsNext&contentID=WhatsNext&pgtype=article

The city had a population of 455,000 before the storm, two-thirds of whom were black; by 2010 there were 24,000 fewer whites and 118,000 fewer blacks.

You could say Alden McDonald triumphed over adversity, too. Today he runs the country’s third-largest black-owned bank, according to the Federal Reserve. But despite his personal success, McDonald is still focused on the eastern half of that map that he marked up at our first meeting. There, the recovery is far from complete — and in some areas things are worse than before the storm. In this frustration, he represents what might be called the black Katrina narrative, a counterpoint to the jubilant accounts of Landrieu and other New Orleans boosters. This version of the story begins by noting that an African-American homeowner was more than three times more likely than a white one to live in a flooded part of town. Where Landrieu sees black and white coming together, many African-Americans recollect a different New Orleans: rifle-carrying sheriffs and police officers barricading a bridge out of an overwhelmed city because they didn’t want the largely black crowds walking through their predominantly white suburbs; a white congressman overheard saying that God had finally accomplished what others couldn’t by clearing out public housing; a prominent resident from the Uptown part of the city telling a Wall Street Journal reporter that in rebuilding, things would be ‘‘done in a completely different way, demographically, geographically and politically’’ — or he and his friends weren’t moving back.

Now there are still 100,000 fewer black residents living in New Orleans than at the time of Katrina. McDonald estimates that one-third of his friends have not returned, because their homes were destroyed. ‘‘I still have family members stuck in Houston, some cousins,’’ McDonald says. ‘‘They’re terribly homesick.’’ Only about 80 percent of the residents of New Orleans East, where a good portion of the city’s African-American middle class as well as a large share of the city’s black elite lived, have returned. In the Seventh Ward, he says, where he grew up, only about half of the homes are restored a decade after Katrina. ‘‘There was never a plan to bring people back home,’’ he says. ‘‘There was never a plan of any kind.’’

curmudgeon, Thursday, 20 August 2015 02:29 (eight years ago) link


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