Government reports confirm that half of the working
poor, elderly and disabled who lived in New Orleans before Katrina have not returned. Because
of critical shortages in low cost housing. Few now expect tens
of thousands of poor and working people to ever be able to return
home.
The Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals
(DHH) reports Medicaid, medical assistance for aged, blind,
disabled and low-wage working families, is down 46% from pre-Katrina
levels. DHH reports before Katrina there were 134,249 people
in New Orleans on Medicaid. February 2008 reports show
participation down to 72,211 (a loss of 62,038 since Katrina).
Medicaid is down dramatically in every category: by 50% for
the aged, 53% for blind, 48% for the disabled and 52% for children.
The Social Security Administration documents
that fewer than half the elderly are back. New Orleans was home to 37,805 retired workers who
received Social Security before Katrina, now there are 18,940
- a 50% reduction. Before Katrina, there were 12,870 disabled
workers receiving Social Security Disability in New Orleans,
now there are 5,350 - 59% less. Before there were 9,425 widowers
in New Orleans receiving Social Security Survivor’s Benefits, now there
are less than half, 4,140.
Children of working class families have not
returned. Public school enrollment in New Orleans was 66,372 before Katrina. Latest figures are 32,149 -
a 52% reduction.
Public transit numbers are down 75% since Katrina.
Prior to Katrina there were frequently over 3 million rides
per month. In January 2008, there were 732,000 rides. The Regional
Transit Authority says the reduction reflects that New
Orleans has far fewer poorer, transit dependent residents.
Figures from the Louisiana Department of Social
Services show the number of families receiving food stamps in
New Orleans has dropped
from 46,551 in June of 2005 to 22,768 in January 2008. Welfare
numbers are also down. The Louisiana Families Independence Temporary
Assistance Program was down from 5,764 recipients (mostly children)
in July 2005 to 1,412 in the latest report.
While
there are no precise figures on the racial breakdown of the
poor and working people still displaced, indications strongly
suggest they are overwhelmingly African American. The black
population of New Orleans
has plummeted by 57 percent, while white population fell 36
percent, according to census data. The areas which are fully
recovering are more affluent and predominately white. New Orleans, which was 67 percent black before Katrina, is estimated
to be no higher than 58 percent black now.
The reduction in poor and low-wage workers in
New Orleans is no surprise
to social workers. Don Everard, director of social service agency
Hope House, says New
Orleans is a much tougher town for poor people than before Katrina.
“Housing costs a lot more and there is much less of it,” says
Everard. “The job market is also very unstable. The rise in
wages after Katrina has mostly fallen backwards and people are
not getting enough hours of work on a regular basis.”
The displacement of tens of thousands of people
is now expected to be permanent because there is both a current
shortage of affordable housing and no plan to create affordable
rental housing for tens of thousands of the displaced.
In the most blatant sign of government action
to reduce the numbers of poor people in New
Orleans, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) is demolishing thousands of intact public housing apartments.
HUD is spending nearly a billion dollars with questionable developers
to end up with much less affordable housing. Right after Katrina,
HUD Secretary Alphonso Jackson predicted New Orleans was “not going to be as black as it
was for a long time, if ever again.” He then worked to make
that prediction true.
According to Policy
Link, a national research institute, the crisis in affordable
housing means barely 2 in 5 renters in Louisiana can return to affordable homes. In New
Orleans, all the funds currently approved by HUD and other government
agencies (not spent, only approved) for housing for low-income
renters will only rebuild one-third of the pre-Katrina affordable
rental housing stock.
Hope
House sees four to five hundred needy people a month. “Most
of the people we see are working people facing eviction, utility
cutoffs, or they are already homeless,” reports Everard. The
New Orleans homeless population has already doubled from pre-Katrina
numbers to approximately 12,000 people.
Everard noted that because of FEMA’s recent announcement
that it was closing 35,000 still occupied trailers across the
gulf, homelessness is likely to get a lot worse.
United
Nations officials recently called for an immediate halt to the
demolitions of public housing in New
Orleans, saying demolition is a violation of human rights and
will force predominately black residents into homelessness.
“The spiraling costs of private housing and rental units, and
in particular the demolition of public housing, puts these communities
in further distress, increasing poverty and homelessness,” said
a joint statement by UN experts in housing and minority issues.
“We therefore call on the Federal Government and State and local
authorities to immediately halt the demolitions of public housing
in New Orleans.” Similar
calls have been made by Senators Clinton and Obama. Despite
these calls, the demolitions continue.
The rebuilding has gone as many planned. Right
after Katrina, one wealthy businessman told the Wall Street
Journal, “Those who want to see this city rebuilt want to see
it done in a completely different way: demographically, geographically
and politically.” Elected officials, from national officials
such as President Bush and HUD Secretary Jackson to local city
council members, who are presumably sleeping in their own beds,
apparently concur. Policies put in place so far do not appear
overly concerned about the tens of thousands of working poor,
the elderly and the disabled who are not able to come home.
The political implications of a dramatic reduction
in poor and working mostly African American people in New
Orleans are straightforward. The reduction directly helps Republicans
who have fought for years to reduce the impact of the overwhelmingly
Democratic New Orleans on state-wide politics in Louisiana. In the jargon of political experts, Louisiana,
before Katrina, was a “pink state.” The state went for Clinton
twice and then for Bush twice, with U.S. Senators from each party. The forced relocation
of hundreds of thousands, mostly lower income and African-American,
could alter the balance between the two major parties in Louisiana and the opportunities for black elected officials in New
Orleans.
Given the political and governmental officials
and policies in place now, one of the major casualties of Katrina
will be the permanent displacement of tens of thousands of African
Americans, the working poor, their children, the elderly, and
the disabled.
Those who wanted a different New
Orleans rebuilt probably see the concentrated displacement as
a success. However, if the test of a society is how it treats
its weakest and most vulnerable members, the aftermath of Katrina
earns all of us a failing grade.
BlackCommentator.com Columnist
Bill Quigley is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola
University, New Orleans. He has been an active public interest lawyer since
1977 and has served as counsel with a wide range of public interest
organizations on issues including Katrina social justice issues,
public housing, voting rights, death penalty, living wage, civil
liberties, educational reform, constitutional rights and civil
disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases with the NAACP
Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., the Advancement
Project, and with the ACLU
of Louisiana, for which he served as General Counsel for over 15 years.
Bill is one of the lawyers for displaced residents. Click
here to contact Mr. Quigley.