Dear Mayor Ray Nagin,
You are in the midst of a daunting task: working to revive a devastated
city amidst loss of life, physical destruction and the scattering
of your population across the United States. Though the odds of nature,
topography and economic reality appear to be against you, the advantage
you have is the memory of New Orleans’ unique and vibrant culture
and the availability of massive federal dollars to support the recovery.
The political challenge of the funds will be that the federal government
will want to control the process just enough to take the credit if
rebuilding succeeds or be able to point the finger of blame at you
if the rebuilding fails. You were right, therefore, to get out there
quickly and early to set the tone for the process by appointing a
working committee to guide the rebuilding. I write to urge that the
way the process of rebuilding unfolds will be as important as the
result.
Right now your working committee follows the traditional local
economic development model – it is privatized, democratically unaccountable
and elite-driven. From the outside looking in, it seems that you are
overly influenced by the common inner city, urban reality of feeling
obligated to always demonstrate a willingness to be business-friendly.
Structuring favorable deals and arrangements outside of the view of
public scrutiny and accountability appears to be the only way for
a city to meet the needs of its most influential constituency, the
business community. But you will not have the luxury of a shield from
public gaze. The scale of Katrina’s televised destruction means that
your rebuilding process will possibly be the most watched redevelopment
process in history. So, what should you do?
You should follow a principle of inclusion in the planning and decision-making
process of all stakeholders in New Orleans – ordinary citizens of
a variety of race and socioeconomic status, low and moderate income
as well as wealthy. How, you might ask, could you even take the time
to consider such a prospect in light of the city’s desperate financial
situation? Why would you ever want to adopt an approach that will
slow down the rebuilding process? When opinions differ, as they inevitably
will in an inclusive process, it definitely takes time to resolve
the conflicts. A more exclusive, elite driven process would definitely
run more quickly, smoothly and predictably. Yet the result promises
to be much better when the future plans for New Orleans reflect the
knowledge and expertise of the variety of life styles and culture
that go into city living and into what made New Orleans great.
Both Race and Class Matter in Participation
Even though your current board may be racially integrated, it is not
integrated by expertise or focus. The presence of black elites on
the board does not mean that you have a sufficient diversity of views,
focus and expertise represented. What the makeup of the current board
really allows is to pretend that the interests of citizens
of non-elite, moderate and low income are represented. The people
who are on the board bring mainly a profit motive and hostility to
those who are not affluent to the table. While the profit-motive is
an important component, you must have the other half, which is the
community component, the variety of people who may not be affluent
but will actually be affected by the decisions that are made about
where, what or how to rebuild.
Democracy and Meaningful Participation in the Rebuilding
With all that you’ve been through, with much of the city laying in
ruins, many will wonder how can there be time for democracy? When
we think of democratic participation, we usually think of elections
and voting for representatives, but there is another form of democracy
that involves the more involved and direct participation most commonly
associated with schools and land use issues like zoning and development.
These are often legally protected opportunities for citizens to attend
hearings, offer testimony or, most applicable here, participate in
planning working groups to formulate plans for communities.
I will be honest and admit that having meaningful participation means
injecting a decisive voice that will redirect the emphasis away from
uses and developments that gentrify neighborhoods and displace poorer,
mostly black, residents. Participation will also counter the channeling
of city resources disproportionately to the downtown business district
to the detriment of black neighborhoods that could also benefit from
the infusion of a balanced and fair share of resources. In other
words, meaningful participation in the rebuilding means popular participation
that ultimately will involve resistance on the part of non-wealthy
black people to the marginalization that their concerns and interests
usually experience when economic development dominates.
Flipping the Script
Therefore, when the community groups fight their way into your rebuilding
planning process, don’t be dismayed. They will flip the local economic
development script by shifting the focus and emphasis in ways that
will ultimately be good for New Orleans. It will be the antidote to
the Disneyfication that will take place from the corporate, cookie-cutter
development approaches that are dominating retail and tourism concepts
in every city in America. Don’t be blinded by the corporate
economic development or jobs rhetoric. Don’t fall for the threats
from business interests or developers that they will walk away unless
you structure a deal exactly as they like it. With the federal money
at the table, they’ll hang around to get their subsidy, their share
of the gravy train.
What you and the City will get for this participation is buy-in from
the people who see themselves reflected in the process and, even more
importantly, you will come out with a more balanced result that will
be attractive and beneficial to maintaining community in New Orleans.
Ultimately, you stand a good chance to create a model of healthy attractive
livable neighborhoods and businesses that will be attractive, not
just to entertainment-seeking tourists but, to long-term residents
of an important variety of age, wealth and race. And having the community
meaningfully participate will shift the focus of rebuilding to ensuring
housing, services and amenities necessary for true community. Only
in this way will you stand a chance of rebuilding a viable, balanced
and enduring new New Orleans.
Audrey McFarlane teaches law at the University of Baltimore School
of Law. She writes on issues of local economic development, eminent
domain, gentrification and land use. She can be contacted at [email protected].