Each morning, Debra South Jones drives 120 miles into New Orleans
to cook and serve over 300 hot free meals each day to people in
New Orleans East, where she lived until Katrina took her home.
Ms. Jones and several volunteers also distribute groceries to
18,000 families a month through their group, Just the Right Attitude.
Who comes for food? "Most of the people are working on their
own houses because they can't afford contractors," Ms. Jones
said. "They are living in their gutted-out houses with no
electricity."
Why do thousands of people need food and why are people living
in gutted-out houses with no electricity? Look at New Orleans
eighteen months after Katrina and you will realize why it is so
difficult for people to exercise the human right to return to
their homes.
Half the homes in New Orleans still do not have electricity.
Eighteen months after Katrina, a third of a million people in
the New Orleans metro area have not returned.
FEMA told Congress that 60,000 families in Louisiana still live
in 240 square foot trailers – usually at least 3 to a trailer.
The Louisiana Hurricane Task Force estimated in December 2006
that there was an “urgent need” for 30,000 affordable
rental apartments in New Orleans alone – and another 15,000
around the rest of the state.
Eighteen months after Katrina, over 80 percent of the 5100 New
Orleans occupied public housing apartments remained closed by
order of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) which controlled the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO)
since 2002. HUD pressed ahead even though internal HANO documents
revealed the cost for repair and renovation was significantly
less than for demolition and redevelopment. A professor from MIT
inspected the buildings and declared them structurally sound.
Architecture critics applaud the current garden-style buildings.
Yet HUD plows ahead planning to spend tens of millions of Katrina
dollars to tear down millions of dollars of habitable housing
and end up with far fewer affordable apartments – a clear
loss for the community.
Over $100 billion was approved by Congress to rebuild the Gulf
Coast. Over $50 billion of that money 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.
Louisiana received $10 billion to fix up housing. Over 109,000
homeowners applied for federal funds to fix up their homes. Eighteen
months later, less than 700 families have received this federal
assistance. Renters, who comprised a majority of New Orleans,
are worse off – they get nothing at all. Some money is scheduled
to go to some landlords and apartment developers for some apartments
at some time. There were uncountable generous and courageous and
heroic acts of people and communities who stretched themselves
to assist people displaced by the hurricane. Many of these continue.
However, there are several notable exceptions.
Obstacles to public funding of affordable housing came from
within New Orleans and in neighboring parishes. Many in New
Orleans do not want the poor who lived in public housing to
return.
St. Bernard Parish, a 93 percent white suburb adjoining New
Orleans, enacted a post-Katrina ordinance which restricted home
owners from renting out single-family homes “unless the
renter is a blood relative” without securing a permit
from the government.
Jefferson Parish, another adjoining majority-white suburb,
unanimously passed a resolution opposing all low-income tax
credit multi-family housing in the areas closest to New Orleans
– effectively stopping the construction of a 200 unit
apartment building on vacant land for people over the age of
62 and any further assisted housing.
Across Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans, the chief law enforcement
officer of St. Tammany Parish, Sheriff Jack Strain, complained
openly about the post-Katrina presence of “thugs and trash”
from “New Orleans public housing” and announced
that people with dreadlocks or “chee wee hairstyles”
could “expect to be getting a visit from a sheriff’s
deputy.”
With rebuilding starting up and the previous work force still
displaced, tens of thousands of migrant workers 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.
Many former residents of New Orleans are not welcome back. Race
is certainly a factor. So is class. As New Orleans native and
professor Adolph Reed notes: “With each passing day, a crucially
significant political distinction in New Orleans gets clearer
and clearer: Property owners are able to assert their interests
in the polity, while non-owners are nearly as invisible in civic
life now as in the early eighteenth century.”
New Orleans is now the charter capital of the U.S. All the public
schools on the side of the Mississippi which did not flood were
turned into charters within weeks of Katrina. The schools with
strongest parental support and high test scores were flipped into
charters. The charters have little connection to each other and
to state or local supervision. Those in the top half of the pre-Katrina
population may be getting a better education. Kids without high
scores, with disabilities, with little parental involvement who
are not in charters are certainly not getting a good education
and are shuttled into the bottom half - a makeshift system of
state and local schools.
John McDonogh, a public high school created to take the place
of five pre-Katrina high schools, illustrates the challenges facing
non-charter public education in New Orleans. Opened by the State
school district in the fall, as of November, 2006, there were
775 students but teachers, textbooks and supplies remained in
short order months after school opened. Many teens, as many as
one-fifth, were living in New Orleans without their parents. Fights
were frequent despite the presence of metal detectors, twenty-give
security guards and an additional eight police officers. In fact
several security guards, who were not much older than the students
were injured in fights with students. Students described the school
as having a “prison atmosphere.” There were no hot
lunches and few working water fountains. The girls’ bathrooms
did not have doors on them. The library had no books at all, not
even shelves for books in early November. One 15 year old student
caught the 5am bus from Baton Rouge to attend the high school.
“Our school has 39 security guards and three cops on staff
and only 27 teachers,” one McDonogh teacher reported.
It took two federal civil rights actions in January 2007 to force
the state to abolish a waiting list for entry into public school
that stranded hundreds of kids out of school for weeks.
Healthcare is in crisis. The main public healthcare provider,
Charity Hospital, which saw 350,000 patient visits a year, remains
closed, as do half the hospitals in the city. It is not clear
it will reopen. Plans are being debated which will shift indigent
care and its state and federal compensation to private hospitals.
Much of the uncompensated care provided by Charity has shifted
to other LSU hospitals with people traveling as far as 85 miles
to the Earl K. Long Hospital in Baton Rouge – which reports
a 50 percent increase in uncompensated care. Waiting lines are
long in emergency rooms for those who have insurance. When hundreds
of thousands lost their jobs after Katrina, they lost healthcare
as well. A recent free medical treatment fair opened their doors
at 6 am and stopped signing people up at 8 am because they had
already filled the 700 available slots for the day.
Mental health is worse. A report by the World Health organization
estimates that serious and mild to moderate mental illness doubled
in the year after Hurricane Katrina among survivors. Despite a
suicide rate triple what it was a year ago, the New York Times
reported ten months after the storm New Orleans had still lost
half of its psychiatrists, social workers, psychologists and other
mental health care workers. In the months after Katrina, the 534
psychiatric beds that were in metro New Orleans shrank to less
than 80. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention surveyed
the area and found 45 percent of residents were experiencing “significant
stress or dysfunction” and another 25 percent were worse.
By default, the lack of mental health treatment facilities has
forced more of these crises towards law enforcement. “The
lack of mental health options forced the New Orleans Police Department
to incarcerate mentally ill people who normally would have been
taken to Charity,” said James Arey, commander of the NOPD
crisis negotiation team. “The only other option is to admit
them into emergency rooms ill-equipped to handle psychotics who
may have to wait days for care. This is past the point of being
unsafe," Arey said. "It's just a matter of time before
a mental patient goes berserk in one of the ERs and hurts some
people."
With day care scarce – down 70 percent, and public transportation
down 83 percent of pre-Katrina busses, there is little chance
for single moms with kids.
It is impossible to begin to understand the continued impact
of Katrina without viewing through the lenses of race, gender
and poverty. Katrina exposed the region’s deep-rooted inequalities
of gender, race, and class. Katrina did not create the inequalities;
it provided a window to see them more clearly. But the aftermath
of Katrina has aggravated these inequalities. In fact if you plot
race, class and gender you can likely tell who has returned to
New Orleans. The Institute of Women’s Policy Research pointed
out “The hurricanes uncovered America’s longstanding
structural inequalities based on race, gender, and class and laid
bare the consequences of ignoring these underlying inequalities.”
The pre-Katrina population of 454,000 people in the city of New
Orleans dropped to 187,000. The African-American population of
New Orleans shrank by 61 percent or 213,000 people, from a pre-Katrina
number of 302,000 down to 89,000. New Orleans now has a much smaller,
older, whiter and more affluent population.
Crime plagues parts of the city and every spoke of the criminal
justice wheel is broken. Hundreds of police left the force and
several were just indicted for first degree murder of an unarmed
mentally retarded man during Katrina. When the accused police
reported to jail, they were accompanied by hundreds of fellow
officers holding up signs calling them heroes. The DA and the
police are openly feuding and pointing fingers at each other.
The judges are fighting with the new public defender system. Victims
and witnesses are still displaced. People accused of serious crime
walk out of jail because of incompetence and the fear of witnesses
to cooperate with police.
Others are kept in jail too long because they are lost in the
system. For example, Pedro Parra-Sanchez was arrested six days
after he arrived in New Orleans to find work in October 2005.
He got in a fight and allegedly stabbed a man with a beer bottle.
He went through the local temporary jail in a bus station and
two other Louisiana prisons. Under Louisiana law he was supposed
to be charged within 60 days or released. However, he never went
to court or saw a lawyer. When he did not show up for his original
arraignment date last May, a warrant was put out for his arrest,
but he was already incarcerated. He was found by a Tulane Law
Clinic attorney and was released in November 2006. Lost in the
system, he was doing what they call in the courthouse “Katrina
time".
Though crime is issue one in most of the city, crime is not the
cause of a city dying. Crime is a symptom of a city dying. Crime
is the sound of a city dying.
There are major problems with the drinking water system eighteen
months after Katrina. According to the City of New Orleans, hundreds
of miles of underground pipes were damaged by 480 billion pounds
of water that sat in the city after Katrina. They were further
damaged by the uprooting of tens of thousands of trees whose roots
were wrapped around the pipes.
The city of New Orleans now loses more water through faulty pipes
and joints in the delivery system than it is uses. More than 135
million gallons are being pumped out daily but only 50 million
gallons are being used, leaving 85 million gallons “unaccounted
for and probably leaking out of the system.” The daily cost
of the water leaking away in thousands of leaks is about $200,000
a day.
The second major water problem is that the leakage makes maintaining
adequate water pressure extremely difficult and costly, particularly
in tall office buildings. Water pressure in New Orleans is estimated
at half that of other cities, creating significant problems in
consumption, sanitation, air-conditioning, and fire prevention.
Insurance costs are skyrocketing for homes and businesses. So
are rents. Though low-wage jobs pay a little more than before
Katrina, they do not pay enough for people to afford rent.
The overall planning process for the rebuilding of New Orleans
has been derailed by several competing planning operations. The
Mayor initially created a Bring New Orleans Back Commission, which
met for months. While the Bring Back New Orleans Commission was
underway, the Urban Land Institute, a D.C. based think tank, created
and released a report of recommendations in January 2006. After
several months of hearings, the Bring New Orleans Back Commission
issued a report from the Mayor’s Office, but it was never
funded. In April 2006, the New Orleans City Council awarded a
$2.9 million grant, funded by federal grant money, to a Miami
consultant to create a plan for the 49 neighborhoods of New Orleans.
A fourth planning process, the Unified New Orleans Plan, was launched
in spring 2006 with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation to
integrate all the planning processes. In September 2006, the City
Council plan was released, while the UNOP process was just getting
underway – that fourth plan is starting to wind up now.
These problems spread far beyond their most graphic illustrations
in New Orleans throughout the Gulf Coast. As Oxfam documented,
government neglect has plagued the rebuilding of smaller towns
like Biloxi Mississippi, and rural parishes of Louisiana, leaving
the entire region in distress. In Biloxi, the first to be aided
after the hurricane were the casinos, which forced low-income
people out of their homes and neighborhoods. In rural Louisiana,
contradictory signals by government agencies have slowed and in
some cases reversed progress. Small independent family commercial
fishing businesses have been imperiled by the lack of recovery
funds. The federal assistance that has occurred has tended to
favor the affluent and those with economic assets.
Visitors to New Orleans can still stay in fine hotels and dine
at great restaurants. But less than a five minute drive away lie
miles of devastated neighborhoods that shock visitors. Locals
call it “the Grand Canyon effect” - you know about
it, you have seen it on TV, but when you see it in person it can
take your breath away.
Our community continues to take hope from the resilience of
our people. Despite lack of federal, state and local assistance,
people are living their lives and repairing their homes. People
are organizing. Many fight for better levee protection. Some work
for affordable housing. Some are workers collectively, seeking
better working conditions. Neighborhoods are coming together to
fight for basic services. Small business owners are working together
to secure grants and low-cost rebuilding loans. Others organize
against crime.
We graciously accept the kindnesses of strangers who come by
the hundreds every day to help us gut and rebuild our homes. Churches,
synagogues, and mosques from around the country come to partner
with local congregations to rebuild and resource their sisters
and brothers.
The new Congress appears poised to give us a hand. Congresswoman
Maxine Waters, head the House Subcommittee overseeing HUD, delivered
pointed questions and criticisms to federal, state and local foot-draggers
recently and promised a new day.
Young people are particularly outraged and activated by what
they see – they give us hope. Over a thousand law students
alone will come to the gulf to volunteer over spring break with
the Student Hurricane Network.
The connections between the lack of resources for Katrina rebuilding
and Iraq and Afghanistan are clear to everyone on the gulf coast.
Despite the guarantees of the United Nations Guiding Principles
on Internal Displacement that people displaced through no fault
of their own have the right to return to their homes and have
the right to expect the government to help them do so, far too
little progress has been made.
As U.S. Congressman Emmanuel Cleaver of Kansas City observed
in a recent public hearing, “When it is all said and done,
there has been a lot more said than done.”
But still each day, Ms. Debra South Jones and her volunteers
drive into New Orleans east to dish out hot food and groceries
to people in need. In the past eighteen months, they have given
out over 3 million pounds of food to over 130,000 families. We
never dreamed we would be still be so needy eighteen months after
Katrina. We look forward to the day when she will not have to
feed us, when we will not need volunteers to gut and fix up our
homes, when we can feed ourselves in our own fixed up homes in
a revitalized New Orleans.
If you would like to learn more about Ms. Debra South Jones
and the work of her organization Just the Right Attitude, see
www.jtra.org
Bill is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola
University New Orleans. He can be reached at [email protected]. |