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Wednesday, August 23, 2006

MAJOR NEW REPORT: One Year after Katrina

We are now less than a week away from the one year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. After 12 long months, how are people faring in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast?

Today, the Institute's Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch project released "One Year after Katrina" (pdf)-- the most exhaustive study to date on the status of the Gulf one year after the storms.

Drawing on over 250 statistical indicators and in-depth reports on issues from housing and education to jobs and hurricane readiness, the report finds that "Gulf Coast rebuilding continues at a glacial pace -- and the region won't be able to come back unless national leaders confront fundamental barriers to renewal."

You can read a full copy of the report here. (pdf)

“Despite promises from national leaders to ‘do what it takes’ to rebuild the Gulf, the region’s recovery has been left to move at a snail’s pace – with tragic results,” says Chris Kromm, co-author of the report and director of the Institute. “Without a revived national commitment, the Gulf and its people won’t come back.”

Despite important signs of progress, the study finds that recovery remains stalled on the key issues that will shape the Gulf Coast’s future:

Lack of HOUSING still keeps tens of thousands of Gulf residents from coming back home. Aid for homeowners in Louisiana and Mississippi was approved 10 months after the storms, and none has been disbursed. Little money has been earmarked for rebuilding rental units—none in Mississippi— and rents are skyrocketing. Eighty per cent of public housing in New Orleans is still closed, despite minimal storm damage, and Mississippi residents learned that three coastal facilities will be shut down soon.

Problems continue to plague SCHOOLS in the region, making it difficult for many families to return. Only 57 of the 117 public schools in New Orleans before Katrina are scheduled to open in the 2006-2007 school year.

CONTRACTING SCANDALS and other special-interest dealings continue to plague the recovery. The Institute report finds $136.7 million in corporate fraud in Katrina-related contracts, and government investigators have highlighted contracts worth $428.7 million that are troubling due to lack of oversight or misappropriation. Altogether, the Institute finds that corporate contracting abuse has cost taxpayers 50 times more than widely-publicized scandals involving individuals wrongfully collecting assistance.

Threats to the ENVIRONMENT are exposing residents to a wide range of toxins and making many think twice about returning to the region. Federal officials also have yet to commit the resources to restore coastal wetlands—the region’s best defense against future storms.

The 96-page report also finds that those hurt most by the nation’s failure to help rebuild the Gulf Coast are the same people who suffered most from the storms of 2005.

“The people left behind in the evacuation of New Orleans after Katrina are the same people left behind in rebuilding – the poor, the sick, the elderly, the disabled and children, mostly African-American,” says Prof. William Quigley, a law professor at Loyola University evacuated from New Orleans. “We need them to come back – but so far, lack of federal help has made this mostly a grassroots recovery.”

The report is a part of the Institute’s Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch project, launched in October 2005 to document and investigate the rebuilding of the Southern Gulf in the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Founded in 1970, the Institute is a non-profit research and education center, and publisher of the award-winning Southern Exposure magazine.

For more information and copies of “One Year after Katrina,” please visit:

"One Year after Katrina" report (pdf):
http://www.reconstructionwatch.org/images/One_Year_After.pdf
Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch: www.reconstructionwatch.org
Institute for Southern Studies: www.southernstudies.org

UPDATE: I cross-posted this at DKos, glad to see it hit the recommended list for a while.
posted by Chris Kromm at 12:53 PM | Email this post | Post a Comment
2 Comments:
Blogger joejoejoe said...

Thanks for your great work on this Chris.

Do you know about the Rising Tide Conference this weekend in New Orleans, August 25-27?

It's a grassroots event put together by a coalition of NOLA bloggers "for all who wish to learn more and do more to assist New Orleans' recovery from the aftermath of the natural disasters of both Hurricane Katrina and Rita, the manmade disaster of the levee and floodwall collapses, and the incompetence of government on all levels. We will come together to dispel myths, promote facts, share personal testimonies, highlight progress and regress, discuss recovery ideas, and promote sound policies at all levels. We aim to be a "real life" demonstration of internet activism as the nation prepares to mark the one year anniversary of a massive natural disaster followed by governmental failures on a similar scale."

risingtidenola.com
thinknola.com/wiki/Rising_Tide_Conference

They are a great group of progressive folks trying to generate solutions from their own community and beyond. I hope you can take a look at their efforts and give their conference a nod through Facing South.

OT: Your Louisiana blogroll is a little thin. Fatten up!

8/23/2006 9:59 PM  
Anonymous Mike Connery said...

Great job on the report. Saw it on Kos this morning and linked it to a diary we wrote that aggregated a lot of resources that bloggers could use to write about Katrina and take action:

Katrina Resources

Your post got a lot more attention than ours did.

Just wanted to let you know that I've been following this blog for a month now and The Opportunity Agenda has been linking to it in our eNewsletters to our members. You guys have consistently had some of the best Katrina blogging in the interweb.

I'll make sure to mention this report when our next email goes out on Tuesday.

If you have time, drop by and check out our site:

http://www.opportunityagenda.org

Mike Connery
Web Editor
The Opportunity Agenda

8/24/2006 4:58 PM  

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Who Are These Folks?

CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. He is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

R. NEAL blogs two days a week for Facing South. Based in Knoxville, TN, R. Neal formerly ran the popular blog South Knox Bubba. He is now coordinator of KnoxViews.

SUE STURGIS blogs three days a week for Facing South. The editorial coordinator of the Institute's Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch website, she is a freelance reporter who lives and works in Raleigh, NC.

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