International Herald Tribune Editorial - In divided New Orleans
International Herald Tribune Editorial - In divided New Orleans
Copyright by The International Herald Tribune
Published: May 15, 2007
When President George W. Bush spoke to the nation soon after Hurricane Katrina, he was resolute that the city would be rebuilt. "We will do what it takes," he said.
We - the federal, state and city governments; elected officials and the citizens who hire them - have failed spectacularly.
Homes and schools remain empty or imaginary; evacuees and survivors wait in cramped trailers, unable to return. A huge silence still hangs over the Lower Ninth Ward, a place where truckloads of promises have filled New Orleans' vast devastation with nothing.
That the Lower Ninth is overwhelmingly black is not irrelevant. African-Americans were the predominant and poorest members of this city before the storm, they bore the worst of it and have the farthest journey back to stability. A study issued last week by the Kaiser Family Foundation, based on interviews last fall with residents of Orleans, Jefferson, Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes, maps the outlines of a sharp racial divide.
In Orleans Parish, twice as many African-Americans as whites said their lives were still "very" or "somewhat" disrupted. Seventy-two percent of blacks said they had problems getting health care, compared with 32 percent of whites. Blacks were more likely to say that their financial status, health and job security had worsened since the storm. And they expressed considerably more anxiety than whites about the sturdiness of the rebuilt levees, the danger from future Katrinas and the prospect of living without enough money or health care, or a decent home.
There was a consensus about broad categories of the recovery: Solid majorities thought there had been at least some progress in restoring basic services, reopening schools and business and fixing levees. But in three vital areas - rebuilding neighborhoods, controlling crime and increasing the supply of affordable housing - most agreed that there had been no progress or "not too much."
Even with the constant trickle of bad news, you can find minimal improvements. Thousands of building permits have been issued. A crisis was recently averted when the Bush administration extended temporary housing assistance for tens of thousands of displaced families. Some government housing subsidies that were to expire at the end of August will continue until March 2009.
Other positive signs include the halting progress toward a workable redevelopment plan, and a recent finding that the city's population had grown to above half of its level before the storm.
The survey even found signs of hope when it tested for resilience. Sixty-nine percent of respondents said they were optimistic about New Orleans' future. And only 11 percent said they planned to leave. Their faith must not be betrayed.
Residents in the survey were keenly aware that their city's fitful recovery would be devastated if the levees failed again. They put strong levees above all other priorities, including fighting crime and even basic services like electricity and water.
And yet National Geographic has reported that an engineer has found signs that levees were poorly rebuilt and are already eroding. There is no room for error here.
Copyright by The International Herald Tribune
Published: May 15, 2007
When President George W. Bush spoke to the nation soon after Hurricane Katrina, he was resolute that the city would be rebuilt. "We will do what it takes," he said.
We - the federal, state and city governments; elected officials and the citizens who hire them - have failed spectacularly.
Homes and schools remain empty or imaginary; evacuees and survivors wait in cramped trailers, unable to return. A huge silence still hangs over the Lower Ninth Ward, a place where truckloads of promises have filled New Orleans' vast devastation with nothing.
That the Lower Ninth is overwhelmingly black is not irrelevant. African-Americans were the predominant and poorest members of this city before the storm, they bore the worst of it and have the farthest journey back to stability. A study issued last week by the Kaiser Family Foundation, based on interviews last fall with residents of Orleans, Jefferson, Plaquemines and St. Bernard parishes, maps the outlines of a sharp racial divide.
In Orleans Parish, twice as many African-Americans as whites said their lives were still "very" or "somewhat" disrupted. Seventy-two percent of blacks said they had problems getting health care, compared with 32 percent of whites. Blacks were more likely to say that their financial status, health and job security had worsened since the storm. And they expressed considerably more anxiety than whites about the sturdiness of the rebuilt levees, the danger from future Katrinas and the prospect of living without enough money or health care, or a decent home.
There was a consensus about broad categories of the recovery: Solid majorities thought there had been at least some progress in restoring basic services, reopening schools and business and fixing levees. But in three vital areas - rebuilding neighborhoods, controlling crime and increasing the supply of affordable housing - most agreed that there had been no progress or "not too much."
Even with the constant trickle of bad news, you can find minimal improvements. Thousands of building permits have been issued. A crisis was recently averted when the Bush administration extended temporary housing assistance for tens of thousands of displaced families. Some government housing subsidies that were to expire at the end of August will continue until March 2009.
Other positive signs include the halting progress toward a workable redevelopment plan, and a recent finding that the city's population had grown to above half of its level before the storm.
The survey even found signs of hope when it tested for resilience. Sixty-nine percent of respondents said they were optimistic about New Orleans' future. And only 11 percent said they planned to leave. Their faith must not be betrayed.
Residents in the survey were keenly aware that their city's fitful recovery would be devastated if the levees failed again. They put strong levees above all other priorities, including fighting crime and even basic services like electricity and water.
And yet National Geographic has reported that an engineer has found signs that levees were poorly rebuilt and are already eroding. There is no room for error here.
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