Thought I’d provide you with some grafs of an article from the Guardian. The article largely reinforces Duranta and blksista’s excellent diaries (more below the fold – updated to fix broken “nerdified link” – yes Ductape Fatwa coined that phrase):
The waters have receded but the mainly black, low-income citizens of New Orleans are now the victims of rising rents, forced evictions and plans that favour the better off, reports Peter Beaumont
[…]
Miss Mildred’s piano lies where the water knocked it down three months ago, amid ruined photographs and clothes. Her favourite chair is jammed in a corner; the wooden tiles of her tiny clapboard house muddy and peeled loose. There is nothing to salvage from a thrifty, industrious life, so she has come to see her home in New Orleans’ devastated Ninth Ward for one last time.
‘I don’t have anything to come home to. No food, no water or electricity,’ said the 74-year-old, whose family has been scattered. ‘I can’t afford to live in the French Quarter and there is nowhere else to rent. I have three more years on the mortgage to pay for this.’ She will not sell the property, she says, but she also will not return. And Mildred W Franklin is angry. In a city where the wealthy areas are buzzing with reconstruction, her neighbourhood, one of the worst affected, is silent and ghostly. ‘They want us to be disgusted. They don’t want us to return.’
She is not alone in thinking this. When Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans it was the city’s poor – almost exclusively African Americans – who were left to fend for themselves as the city drowned in a lake of toxic sludge. Now, three months on, the same people have been abandoned once again by a reconstruction effort that seems determined to prevent them from returning. They are the victims of a devastating combination of forced evictions, a failure to reopen the city’s public house projects, rent gouging and – as in the case of Mildred – a decision to write off whole neighbourhoods.
They are victims too of a reconstruction effort that, while its funding remains stalled in Congress, and lacking proper leadership, has been left to the care of the private sector with little interest in the city’s poor. As a rapacious free market has come to dominate the rebuilding of the Louisiana city, it has seen spiralling prices and the influx of property speculators keen to cash in on the disaster. The result is one of the most shocking pieces of urban planning that black and poor America has seen: reconstruction as survival of the wealthiest.
Sitting in the back of the pick-up truck of union activist Jim Prickett, Aaron is on fire with anger. A young black man in his twenties in dreadlocks and a Veterans for Peace T-shirt, he flares out at all around him. ‘My grandpa died at the airport [during the evacuation]. Now me and my mama can’t get into our home. There is a notice on the door. If we try, we are looting. Do you understand how that must feel?’ he shouts. ‘Do you understand? I live how I can. It has jumbled me up here,’ he points to his head. ‘It is genocide and ethnic cleansing. It’s the return of Jim Crow.’
Aaron’s anger is not unique, although a crushed sense of depression is more common. It is fuelled by the suspicion among the city’s dispersed poor that what is happening is nothing short of an attempt to redraw the city’s demographics and gentrify it. It is a suspicion fuelled by widely reported comments from senior administration and city officials that in the future New Orleans, which once had a population that was 65 per cent black, will no longer look that way. Alphonso Jackson, President George Bush’s Housing and Urban Development Secretary, is one of those who has predicted a change in the ethnic mix of the Big Easy. ‘Whether we like it or not,’ he told the Houston Chronicle, ‘New Orleans is not going to be 500,000 people for a long time … New Orleans is not going to be as black as it was for a long time, if ever again.’
There’s more where that came from. Hat tip to fellow Okie Subjective Scribe.
Recommended – but please check that “nerdified link.” It’s not working. π
Ack! I knew I’d f*** up something. That’s what I get for being in a hurry. π
Painful to read, and this is from the inside out. We are set to lose our working class African American population here. It is no small feat to empty a city built with slave labor, now to disperse the descendents of slaves and free people of color.
It is high crimes. It is crimes against humanity.
as the young man in your diary notes.
And it is also US policy.
I know too many people who want to believe that genocide and ethnic cleansing are part of our distant past. I keep reminding them that old habits are hard to break.
The black Creole and black middle classes are really angry, from an article I read recently, because they have lost everything. And they may not be able to recover.
This is definitely shutting up Armstrong Williams and the rest of those sellouts.
I saw Bush shucking and grinning for Brian Williams last night on NBC Nightly News. They’re doing a show about one of Bush’s days as president. More PR, less and less action, more and more excuses.
And people are committing suicide. Not just blacks. Whites. All ages. Occupations. He has blood on his hands.
how many developers saw Katrina as a great opportunity to make a fast buck gentrifying the ethnically cleansed NOLA. It is sad to think that people may be that callous, but in modern Amerika I have no doubt some did indeed see Katrina as a blessing. Let’s also not forget Barbara Bush’s remarks.
Mayor Nagin met with wealthy developers and business owners in Dallas soon after the storm. We’ve requested the minutes of that meeting based on the freedom of information act.
Wealthy developer Joseph Canizaro, who led the charge to destroy St. Thomas Housing Development, now heads the Bring Back New Orleans Commission, named by the mayor.
Kabacoff, another wealthy developer, also profited from the destruction of St. Thomas, and sits on the committee as well. He has been after Iberville housing development for years, and wants to turn it into condos.
Urban Land Institute was invited in by the mayor to present their plan for N.O. They also participated in the St. Thomas Project, They are a real estate focus group, basically. They have advocated not rebuilding badly flooded areas. This is the land the developers wanted to get hold of.
The irony of it all is everyone is being held back, if they don’t rebuild the levees adequately.
Mad props to you for continuing to shine light on NOLA in the aftermath of Katrina. I’ll be curious as to what those minutes of that meeting contain. I trust you’ll diary that.
Hotel vouchers extended until Feb 7, 2006. This is just absurd. There are still several thousanf FEMA trailers just sitting. Are they afraid to haul them down to NO for fear they won’t be abvle to “get rid of” those people again. This country gets more disgusting by the minute.
I know. I just wonder what does it take? If Sean Penn and Harry Connick, Jr. can get over there and hand out bottled water and fruit or rescue stranded folks, then what is stalling this?
Nobody I know can part waters or fallen trees from highways. And yet these guys came through.