Katrina Victims Stop Christmas Demolition

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Uploaded by on Dec 17, 2007

New Orleans, LA December 16, 2007— A week after arriving in New Orleans to cover the events William Quigley described in his call to action that laid out the details of the severe housing crisis still affecting New Orleans 2-1/2 years after the city was struck by Hurricane Katrina, many irregularities remain surrounding Mayor Ray Nagin's policies on the homeless, the displaced and the disenfranchised. Having stayed in a number of places that would probably scare most white people (we can say this because it scared us a little, being a couple middle class white boys) there is the sense of unfamiliarity and uneasiness at being out of one's element, but it is larger and much more foreboding than than. We were struck by the eerie and palpably obscene juxtaposition of people in expensive suits coming and going at City Hall in downtown New Orleans, while literally across the street was a scene directly out of the Grapes of Wrath with people living in tents, under blankets, cardboard and in some cases, even less than that. We ourselves stayed with the homeless overnight, sleeping on cardboard, in the rain, in Duncan Square Plaza. It's a little park directly across the street from the mayor's office in city hall. What we saw and smelled and heard would disgust most people, especially those who live there. Almost unbelievably, many of these people hold full time jobs, have always held jobs and have never asked for a handout but, because of the severe housing shortage and skyrocketing rent, can no longer afford housing. We watched them returning from work in clean white shirts and neat pants and clean shoes only to hole up inside their tent after dark.
We also stayed with a man who would frighten some people because, a) he is a black man, b) he lives in a small, landlord neglected first floor apartment in the hood and c) he is HIV positive. He isn't just any black man, having run for mayor in 2006. He served as a corrections officer, he's a veteran and he is an activist. But these are not what make him exceptional. It isn't even that he was locked inside a cell in downtown New Orleans during Katrina. There were thousands of other inmates, many who were being held on trivial offenses and, while they were never charged, they were nevertheless left there to drown in the foul, poisonous, sewage and chemically contaminated waters of Katrina by prison guards who left them locked inside flooding cells without so much as a parting insult before the guards headed for home and safety. Most of the inmates here are African Americans. So it is not his ethnicity that makes him stand out. What makes him exceptional is that he had absolutely no business being arrested in the first place.
We have seen exemplary models of courage and commitment by people who have endured the most furious hurricane in a lifetime, whose homes have been sacked by both nature and man. Their families have been scattered like so much straw in the wind, often with one way tickets to nowhere that is home. It would be easy to forgive them if they had given up. Easy to ask how much can people take? But we have witnessed a determination to take a stand against blatant and brazen racism, so often administered as in this instance with a smile and the promise of a mending heart and a helping hand. Everywhere we go we encounter local people who tell us that police violence, discrimination and brutality are rampant here. We have heard allegations of corruption at every level of governance. We have heard that there is cronyism at its ugliest in the administering of no bid contracts to developers who have much to gain in acquiring the property that Mayor Nagin proposes to demolish. Yet here are people who are willing to stand against tractors. The few who risk everything for justice. Unless the media have tired of pretending to care about these people already once forgotten in the tragedy of Katrina, they will return to bear witness again to the injustice visited upon the downtrodden every day in this latest phase of a heart wrenching story. Having shared but a week with them here, it is hard to imagine the national press could turn away now.
New Orleans City Council Members
Arnie Fielkow
City Hall, Room 2W40
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1060

Shelley Midura
City Hall, Room 2W80
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1010

Stacy S. Head
City Hall, Room 2W10
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1020

James Carter
city Hall, Room 2W70
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1030

Cynthia Hedge-Morrell
city Hall, Room 2W20
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1040

Cynthia Willard-Lewis
City Hall, Room 2W60
1300 Perdido Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
504.658.1050

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  • @504pkknight08 LOL and AMEN!!

  • @504pkknight08 that was really fucking cruel

  • REBEL! REBEL! REBEL!

  • the power thats fake anyways!

  • just incase you didnt know all over the world there isnt any welfare or foodstamps or all that crap they give out here in the US maybe if the US stopped giving away free things to the people who are using the Gov. because there lazy everything would be cool

  • amen xotic! where's all the new orleans rappers? lil wayne, baby, juvenile, cash money, etc. Oh, I remember - they moved to houston.

    But I will say this - what goes around comes around. N.O. can try to get rid of poor people, but no rich folks are going to move to a city where the levees still suck!

    Also, black folks better wake up and realize that the democrats don't represent them. The entire N.O. gov't is democrat, yet they've done NOTHING to help their own citizens. Its a disgrace!

  • the first scenes are is duncan plaza,across from city hall. how many people today were slaves? the projets took on 3-10 foot of water.[mold and mildew make them unlivable]. all were slated to be torn down and replaced, with mixed income housing at a later date.katrina just pushed up the action. greedy landlords doubled and tripled rents.today there are a lot of homeless,because of the storm.

  • Yes, you are right. The units need to be brought up to liveable condition that remain... and those that will be built to replace those that are not repairable or able to be brought up to health and building codes need to be attractive and not concentrated all together as part of a process of ghettoization. But we should not be spending $762 million of taxpaper dollars to destroy public housing with a net reduction of 82% of low income housing.

  • ((( jasonmleblanc (1 day ago) jungle monkeys bangging drums like they always do )))

    You racist pig. I'm marking you as SPAM, because that's what comments like yours are: racist spam, no different at all from pimping a porn website. Instead, you're spamming the falsehood mantra of racists: that black people fighting for their right and dignity are "jungle monkeys"? What a ****-head you are; the height of ignorance.

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