The
elegant-sounding address of 2000
Groom Road belies the reality. “A cow pasture, that’s what I like
to call our home” Lena Beard declared back in December 2006, referring
to the country’s largest FEMA trailer park in which she had lived
since October 2005. The 62 acre field, with its orderly rows of
little white trailers in the city of Baker,
Louisiana, was home
to grazing cows before the devastating 2005 hurricane. In the
months after the storm, with a $100 million no-bid contract awarded
by the federal government, a well known and politically-connected
Louisiana company, the Shaw Group, cleared the land and the cattle,
and erected a vast FEMA trailer park. “We ended up here after
being housed in a church where I lived on a mattress since I had
to evacuate from New
Orleans. This is the next step up from the mattresses.” Lena’s
home in New Orleans, the city in which she was born and raised, was damaged
by the flooding after the levies burst. Lena lost her home, she
lost most every belonging she owned, and she relocated her life
to a FEMA trailer in “Renaissance
Village,” located 90 miles from her home
town.
“That’s
President Bush hugging me. See how tightly he’s hugging me?” Lena
asked me in late 2006 as she proudly dangled a newspaper clipping
at me. When President Bush didn’t hesitate to throw his arms around
Lena and embrace her in the days after the storm as she took refuge
on a mattress in a church, Lena really thought that she was going to be ok. “I’m a veteran who
has served my country and put my life on the line. I wasn’t scared
when the hurricane hit, I believed my country would take care
of me and my family.”
It’s
been three years since the devastating storms of Katrina and Rita
hit the Gulf Coast region and the ensuing floods rendered hundreds
of thousands homeless. In the early weeks and months, and even
up to the first anniversary of the storms, the nation heard stories
of hardship and loss. We watched the FEMA screw-ups, the excruciatingly
slow and inadequate response from the Bush Administration, and
heard prominent elected officials muse over whether it actually
made sense to rebuild a city like New
Orleans. Reality TV shows featured home make-overs for destitute
families and citizens nationwide opened their homes and wallets
to give to the cause. Slowly the plight of life-long residents
of Gulf Coast
cities disappeared from the news. Yet the displacement, government
neglect and suffering continued. Lena and
her family have received little help, despite the highest level
promises made to them by President Bush himself.
Baker
is 90 miles away and a world apart from the vibrant French Quarter
of New Orleans where the 2005 floods seem to be a distant memory.
Bars and restaurants on the main drag of Canal street very quickly
returned to their customary party mode; street vendors and performers
were back on the sidewalks within months, and with a short time
period it once again became impossible to get a table at the famous
24-hour Café Du Monde. But just a short distance away, the rest
of the city festered. Whole neighborhoods remained rotting ghost
towns while in others, life only returned at every fourth home.
Ray Nagin was returned to office as Mayor and Democratic governor
Kathleen Blanco was ousted by a much diminished electorate to
be replaced by an arch-conservative republican. Things in New Orleans have changed.
Hurricane
Katrina was an ecological disaster, heightened by a planning and
engineering disaster. What has resulted is nothing short of a
social disaster. Almost three years later, while some areas of
the city have bounced back, it is now possible to discern a pattern
emerging of what the new New
Orleans looks like: On the one hand, witness the city’s rebirth.
The tourist areas, as well as the middle and high-income parishes
of New Orleans, which
are mostly white areas, have been rebuilt. On the other hand,
consider the massive, quasi-permanent displacement of a sizeable
number of poor, mostly black residents. Tens of thousands were
assigned a travel trailer, either on a FEMA group site or to place
in front of their damaged home. Trailers became the disaster recovery
housing of choice for the government. As the months and years
passed, with little hope of return, many formally displaced residents
began to adapt to life in their small tin box. The numbers tell
the story.
As
of June 2007, 92% of hotels in New
Orleans were rebuilt and operational. Meanwhile, a full year later,
in May 2008, 40% of public schools still remained closed. [1] The repopulation of the New
Orleans area peaked in mid 2007 but then declined dramatically
in late 2007 and early 2 008. While in the majority white Jefferson
Parish, 98.1% of pre-Katrina households have begun receiving mail
again, in St. Bernard parish that same figure is only 44.5% of
pre-Katrina levels. [2] St Bernard Parish was home to
African American public housing residents whose homes were bulldozed
earlier this year. There is no data to show where these families
have gone. [3]
The
statistics for childcare centers, public transportation and employment,
all markers of infrastructure that allow for the return of lower-income
residents, tell a stark story. Only 117 childcare centers have
reopened since the hurricane, compared with 275 before the 2005
flooding. [4] By mid 2007, almost 10,000 employers
had closed or moved out of the region, while only 6,000 new businesses
replaced them. And by February 2008, only 19% of the numbers of
pre-Katrina public buses are back and running.
[5]
So
where have people gone?
At
its height, there were almost 75,000 trailers being used by families
from the New Orleans area. By the fall of 2007 the number of active trailers
still numbered over 50,000. People lived in their temporary homes
so long it began to seem like they would never leave. That was
until early 2008, with mounting criticism over the excessively
high levels of the cancer causing toxin formaldehyde found in
these FEMA trailers, the rapid decommissioning of the trailers
began. In the first quarter of 2008, FEMA displaced over 10,000
trailer residents. [6] There is no data available to
show where these families went.
By
June 2008, FEMA spokesperson Gina Cortez told Mother Jones, “FEMA
has closed 106 of its 111 group sites in Louisiana.
Renaissance Village is one of them.” Lena received a knock at her trailer door one June morning, was told
she had two days to pack her things, and was promptly sent to
a hotel where she was given 30 days to find alternative accommodation.
Two years and ten months after the most devastating natural disaster
to hit the United States in modern history stripped Lena and
her sons of their life in New
Orleans, the Beard family are again looking at imminent homelessness.
When
I first met Lena, it was over a year since President Bush hugged
her in the shelter and it was the first time she had come out
of her FEMA trailer at Renaissance Village in almost one month. Lena was addressing a meeting, “people’s been here so long they don’t
even remember what their life was like before Katrina.” Heads
nodded in agreement with Lena’s forthright
and emotional statement. It was a resident’s meeting, called by
community organizers from the New Orleans
Workers Center for Racial Justice, which Lena
learned about that day and decided to attend. The nodding heads
and vocal appreciations, “you tell it sister” and “uh-huh, uh-huh,”
confirmed her feelings to be very much shared and understood by
the gathered residents. Lena concluded, “and
there sure ain’t much of anything to do here all day besides watch
TV in your trailer. I’m not proud that this is my first time out
in almost one month. And I’m not proud that my children see me
staying in bed all day, but I don’t know what to do. I just don’t.”
“I feel you honey, I feel you” came a sympathetic response.
Renaissance Village was
constructed by the Shaw Group and is the largest FEMA trailer
park in the country. It was hurriedly erected in the months after
Katrina as it became clear that the church halls and motel rooms
where evacuees where housed could not sustain them much longer.
The Shaw Group also outfitted three other trailer parks near the
Baton Rouge airport as well as 15 smaller
sites in New Orleans with temporary housing. The initial $100 million dollar
no-bid contract was increased in October 2005 to $500 million.
Shaw deflected the criticism that it did not have to compete with
other companies to win the contract, telling the Times-Picayune
that “we’ve performed for them before…we’re a known quantity.” [7] The known quantity for Shaw was
its key lobbyist, Joe Allbaugh, who not only worked as the former
FEMA director, but is also a close friend of President Bush.
Shaw
lobbied fast and hard in the weeks after the storm, and was a
major presence at the September 26 “Katrina Reconstruction Summit”
hosted in the Hart building on Capitol Hill. Barely one month
after Katrina, this summit gathered 300 corporate lobbyists and
lawyers to learn how they could access federal contracts. Shaw’s
executive vice president is Edward Badolato, who served as former
deputy assistant energy secretary under Ronald Reagan and George
H.W. Bush. In a Rolling Stone article titled, “Looting Homeland
Security,” authors Eric Klinenberg and Thomas Frank document how
Badolato not only maneuvered to get his company the no-bid contract,
but also actively reassured other lobbyists that the disaster
would be a bounty for all of them.
Lena
received one of the Shaw trailers in Renaissance
Village for herself and her two sons.
The trailer was approximately 8 foot by 32 foot, with two sectioned-off
ends that served as bedrooms. Each time I was in Lena’s trailer, even if she was watching TV in her “room,” with the
flimsy door shut, everyone in the trailer could hear what the
other was doing. “There’s no such thing as a private conversation
anymore” Lena’s eldest son Victor told me. From the other room, Lena’s TV blasted
a talk show featuring a woman whose finger and toe nails were
excessively long like witches claws causing Lena
to gasp in horror. This provided enough background noise for Victor
and I to have a somewhat private conversation about private conversations.
On
that December day when I met Lena she was
sitting at a resident’s meeting of the “Baker Survivors Council,”
in the big white tent. “Things have gotten so bad here that no
one wants to do anything,” Lena told the
meeting. As the chilly winter winds whipped past the flaps, it
was clear that few saw the possibility of returning home any time
soon. 90 miles away from New
Orleans, Renaissance residents struggled to find work that would
ultimately help them relocate back to their home city. As they
were turned down for jobs or struggled with the 3 hour commute
in each direction, few were able to leave the trailer park.
75%
of Renaissance residents, according to the Joe Meyer of the security
firm Knight Protective Services, that patrols the trailer park,
came from the lower 9th ward in New Orleans. According to the 2000 Census, pre-Katrina,
one quarter of residents in this ward earned less than $10,000
and 36% lived in poverty. [8] 98.3% of residents were African
American. [9] There was substantial home ownership
in the Lower Nine because homes had been passed down through the
generations. Yet most residents were unable able to afford the
cost of rebuilding and sold their properties for a pittance or
simply could not make it back to claim them before the City bulldozed
them. Meyer believes some of the former Renaissance residents
relocated to apartments in Baker but he shrugs when asked where
most went, “I don’t think anybody knows.”
From
February of 2007 through the summer months, Lena actively pursued
various options to move her family back to New
Orleans. She commuted in on weekends to work a bar job on Canal
St which didn’t last long due to her extremely poor health that
made it hard for her to stand for eight consecutive hours. In
July 2007, just one month shy of her two year displacement anniversary,
a final housing option fell through. With no job and having spent
down the last of her precious saved dollars in the years since
the storm, Lena was unable to come up with
the money to cover a security deposit and the first and last months’
rent. She was devastated.
Renaissance Village sits
at the end of Groom Road, which runs right off the main drag of Baker, a fifteen
minute walk from the office of Mayor Rideau, a four-term African
American mayor, who used to be an oil executive. In fact, as you
enter the town limits of Baker from Baton
Rouge, the huge oil storage tanks that proliferate on either side
of the main road point to a wealth that most town residents don’t
enjoy.
Mayor
Rideau says he wasn’t consulted in any meaningful manner by the
federal government about the influx of storm-affected people to
his small town, nor has he been privy to any proposal for moving
people back to New Orleans.
“If there is a plan no one has shared it with me… As far as I
know there is no plan.” Mayor Rideau is adamant that the plan
should come from FEMA. He further decried the vast expenditure
of money to keep the trailer park running, at the expense, he
believes, of building permanent housing. “The money spent on this
trailer facility is unbelievable. We’re looking at $50,000 per
unit to do the work and get people in there. And if you look at
the cost since -- security, utility and maintenance costs -- you
are probably looking at $75 to $80,000 per unit if you average
it out. With that you could really build a house.”
So
why not spend that money and construct permanent housing for people?
“Well,” the Mayor responded, “it’s the time factor.” FEMA operates
to meet emergency and temporary needs. The federal government
agency, by its own mission, does not deal with long-term planning.
Mayor Rideau had pushed for permanent housing with Bush Administration
officials, which he says there was some agreement about. Yet months
shy of Katrina’s two year anniversary, the Mayor lamented, “I
can honestly say that not one nail has been driven” towards the
construction of permanent homes.
FEMA
reiterates that its mission, beyond meeting emergency needs, is
to simply complete repairs to infrastructure to get a disaster
area back to the exact state it was in before the disaster.5 FEMA
won’t build new housing for displaced residents, even if it could
be done for less money than what it costs to temporarily house
people, because it is simply outside of its stated job description.
So if FEMA is not responsible because of it only deals with temporary
solutions, and the Mayor of Baker has no budget or political power
to make it happen, then who should?
At
the heart of the rebuilding debate is the question of whose interests
are primarily being served, former residents or the corporations
doing the rebuilding? Displaced low-income residents have lost
their social networks and their structured political voice. As
they scramble to recover both, their city is being rebuilt without
them.
By
January 2007 at a meeting of the Baker Survivor Council, talk
about going home was not even mentioned as residents had new issues
to work on, including the sudden appearance of cockroaches and
mice in their trailers. One resident said he had called FEMA about
the issue and was told that it was not FEMA’s problem. The residents
had never heard of the Shaw Group and had no idea who to target
to try and get their trailers fixed to prevent against the invading
critters.
By
January 2008, the formaldehyde scandal had broken and many Renaissance
residents, like Lena, had spent the last the last few months trying to have their trailers
tested or secure alternative housing. Few were successful at either.
By
late 2007 Lena seemed resigned to life in a trailer. In her good moments, the
times when she owned her own home still seemed so close. “I’m
a two-time home owner in my life. My children used to have their
own rooms,” Lena remarked. She smiled dreamily as she remembered how their life
was. “Eric had a sign on his door that said Keep Out. And they
both had computers. Our life was very different. And now you see
me in this trailer and people view us as if we were nobody, and
when you meet someone like me and my family, you might wonder
how could they have had that? Well we did.”
In
the years after the storm, for most of the Renaissance
Village residents, moving back to New Orleans became
less and less realistic, so much so, that Lena had stopped pursuing
any housing option that was further from her Baker trailer than
Baton Rouge. And oddly enough, the cramped and
toxic trailers became the only security most residents had. “This
is home and I ain’t going to move into any slum just because FEMA
tell me I have to” Lena lamented in early
2008 referring to the apartments FEMA had on its lists of available
long-term rentals. Around this time, because of mounting pressure
due to the consistent findings of high levels of formaldehyde
in FEMA trailers across Louisiana and Mississippi,
FEMA began an aggressive push to shut down its trailer parks.
After two years and nine months FEMA finally deemed, in a statement
to Mother Jones, “travel trailers are not suitable for long-term
housing.” FEMA spokesperson Gina Cortez said that federal agency
was going “to relocate families into safer and more permanent
housing.” And with that, Renaissance
Village was emptied of its residents
in a matter of months.
Lena
and her family were one of the five last families to leave the
trailer park
After
her eviction from her FEMA trailer in June 2008, Lena
and her family moved into a nearby motel for which FEMA footed
the bill and gave them thirty days to find something else. While
Gina Cortez touts that FEMA has helped “all eligible trailer residents
transition into long-term housing,” this claim is disingenuous.
Firstly there are no available data on where these trailer residents
have gone. Ask
around the motels where former Renaissance residents are frantically
counting down their last 30 days, and one learns that people have
moved to homes of relatives in other states, are living in cars
or have joined the New Orleans homeless population which is rapidly
growing. Secondly, as Lena has been shocked
to learn, a simple mistake like giving FEMA your married name
once and your maiden name another time is enough to render one
ineligible for housing transition assistance. While her birth
certificate and marriage certificate were lost in the 2005 floods,
and with her FEMA-funded days in the motel quickly ticking away,
Lena cannot convince her caseworker that
her traumatized, post-Katrina state was responsible for her giving
two different last names. It is a battle she is still fighting
with just days left in the motel. “I’m so tired from all this”
Lena told me in the motel room that now housed the belongings
she was able to salvage from her trailer before she was locked
out of it. “I just want my family to live in a decent home after
all we have been through so we can rebuild our lives. Is that
too much to ask?”
BlackCommentator.com
Guest Commentator Deepa Fernandes, is a progressive award-winning
journalist, who is currently the host of Wakeup Call, the morning
news show at WBAI 99.5 FM in New York. She is also Co-Director of the Peoples
Production House and the author of "Targeted:
Homeland Security and the Business of Immigration"
published by 7stories Press
and a Puffin writing fellow at the Nation Institute.
Click here
to contact Ms. Fernandes.