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Hurricane Katrina Survivors Speak Out and Fight Back

Posted by Elizabeth Hines at 11:00 AM on August 15, 2007.


Elizabeth G. Hines: "I used to think a four letter word that started with "F" was something other than FEMA," one woman says. "But not since Katrina."
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This post, written by Elizabeth G. Hines, originally appeared on The Huffington Post

In anticipation of the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, last week the Ms. Foundation for Women convened a small group of community based activists in Gulfport, MS, to train them in the art of radio documentary. The goal? To give these activists, and their communities, the tools they need to bring their stories of the storm and its aftermath back to a place of prominence on the national media landscape.

Led by the experts from People's Production House, the trainings resulted in the production of five, four to six minute radio documentaries, which will air on Pacifica stations in the coming weeks. This series of posts is my own effort, in the interim, to offer an inside look at the real lives of the people of the Gulf, two long years after the storm.

"Come to me and I will give you rest."

That's a quote from the Book of Matthew -- and one that's emblazoned on the set of sturdy blue teacups perched on the kitchen table of Vicky Cintra's boxy FEMA trailer. Vicky works for MIRA (Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance) and we're here in her home to talk about the housing situation in Gulfport, Mississippi post-Katrina, and how low-income residents have been all but erased from the picture of "recovery" that the local government is painting.

On our way into Vicky's trailer, my companion Anchanese Levison -- a staffer at the Mississippi Workers Center for Human Rights who will be interviewing Vicky for radio as part of a media justice initiative sponsored by the Ms. Foundation for Women -- points out that on either side of the mobile home park where Vicky lives, there is construction: on one side, they are building high-end condos; on the other, a new parking lot for the airport, only a stone's throw away. The land left in the middle, where Vicky's trailer and a few dozen like it (many of them FEMA-owned) sit, is all that's left of the wetlands that used to play a vital role in the ecology of this particular area. As a result, flooding in the trailer park is a constant threat. "It rains just a little bit one day and we have huge puddles for a week," Vicky herself offered up later on. "The water has no place to go."

But water and its ravages are something Vicky has had to get used to since Hurricane Katrina hit. The storm itself flooded her former home with eight feet of water; after evacuating to Miami, Vicky moved back to the region in the fall of 2005 to begin work with MIRA, and in December of that year took up occupancy, along with her husband, in the trailer in which we're now all sitting.

And in some ways, that is when the real trouble began. "After the first rainstorm in December of 2005, there was more water inside the trailer than outside, "Vicky says. "Water was just pouring in kitchen window. The whole trailer was totally flooded. Then the black mold developed."

That was more than 18 months ago. Despite the fact that Vicky has called FEMA religiously over the course of the intervening period, it was just weeks ago that they finally showed up to "fix" the leak in the kitchen window that caused all the damage. And while we sit and talk, we get the chance to witness firsthand the quality of FEMA's work: as clouds burst overhead, a slow but steady trickle of water begins to seep through the window casing, gradually flooding Vicky's countertop with rainwater.

"I used to think a four letter word that started with "F" was something other than FEMA," Vicky says. "But not since Katrina."

And still, in many ways, Vicky is among the lucky in this region. She has a place to live; she's been able to come back home. So many others like her, she points out, have been given neither opportunity. To demonstrate for us how fully low-income folks and people of color have been left out of the planning process, Vicky pulls out a 2005 publication from Governor Barbour's Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal. "I was at this meeting," Vicky, who is Latina, tells us, pointing to pictures in the publication of a largely white gathering. "And I promise you, I was the blackest person in the room. So I stood up and asked", 'Where are the black people? Where is the Vietnamese community? Why aren't all the people who are going to be displaced by all these casinos and condos you're building here at this meeting, too?" No one, she says, could give her an answer.

"I don't see an emphasis on bringing low-income folks back," she tells us with conviction. "I just don't see it." Not that that's stopped her from fighting to make sure their voices are heard. As a staff member at MIRA she is working every day, in coalition with MWCHR and other organizations, to make sure that the needs of immigrant and low-income communities get their place at the table, too. And as much as anything, she wants people outside of the Gulf Coast to understand how desperate the situation remains, to this day, for the survivors of Katrina.

"The thing that hurts me the most is to hear that people outside of this area think that everything is back to normal," Vicky remarks, clearly emotional. "It's what the mainstream media promotes, and what people in power who want to cover things up promote. But people need to know that things down here remain horrible. Working conditions are horrible. And living conditions are horrible at best.

"I want to appeal to the hearts of people to remember that ... [we] are human beings. And [we] have just as much a right to live in decent, safe conditions as anyone else."

Matthew couldn't have said it better himself.

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Tagged as: fema, mississippi, hurrican katrina, ms foundation

Elizabeth G. Hines is the co-author of the best-selling biography, Black Titan: A.G. Gaston and the Making of a Black American Millionaire. She blogs at Biting Giants.


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Government failure. Any surprise? FEMA, like most agencies, exists not to help people
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Aug 15, 2007 11:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but as a wealth-redistribution scheme (take public funds and get those funds into private hands.) Whether its giving the millions away to cruiseship companies, trailer manufacturers, engineering contractors, or 'charities' , the sole purpose of FEMA is to give money away to politically connected companies and to cronys. Well, I take that back, FEMA has another more longterm purpose....that is to have a quick-acting, government shock-troops in cases of 'emergencies' or when ever the government decides people are becoming troublesome. It is also designed to further the idea that the government is actually there to help individuals and to get the people 'comfortable' to police-state tactics and not to think anything of paramilitary forces operating in American cities. After all....they are only there to help us!!!
Learn the lessons from Katrina:
1) don't build in areas 'protected' by government
2) don't rely on the government to 'save you'
3) don't live in areas where natural disasters are likely to happen
4) have enough guns/ammo and food/water to last several weeks after an emergency

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My gosh.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Aug 15, 2007 12:29 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Water was just pouring in kitchen window. The whole trailer was totally flooded. Then the black mold developed."

That was more than 18 months ago. Despite the fact that Vicky has called FEMA religiously...


^ I don't know exactly how the bureacracy is in MS, but in LA, waiting on paper-clip counters to ensure that each request is fully documented, in triplicate, to patch the roof over one's head is an all-wet approach to keeping dry. If the author didn't have the competency to patch the roof/seal the windows, then surely SOMEONE in the park should have helped these poor people in the 18 months they were sitting around and watching water pour in and mold grow.

Of course FEMA is a blasphema and a shame. It's also a shame for someone to be stuck thinking that calling the government is the best approach to staying dry and warm in the winter time.

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» RE: My gosh. Posted by: albrechtkrausse
» How nice for you Posted by: DivaDeb
The poor, low-income
Posted by: TruthBeTold on Aug 16, 2007 2:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
people, black, brown, and various shades in between are invisible to the republicans and George W Bush.

But one group you won't find working for the common good of all of those displaced by Kartina are the low income, poor whites. They are so busy listening to the reich-wing republicans and evangelicals about how "those people" are taking away from them. And yet these folks barely have a pot to you know what in.

We all know this.

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We May Have Come on Different Ships...
Posted by: macdon1 on Aug 16, 2007 8:22 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When are poor and working class people going to realize that we are all in the same boat here? The rich love to see us fighting over crumbs or deluding ourselves that we too can be rich if we just "follow the proven plan" while they suck up everything in the trough. As long as we are divided against each other they can do whatever they want. That's why any leaders who really have a chance of uniting the people are assassinated.

"We may have come here in different ships but we are all in the same boat now." Mel King

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What Is Goin' On
Posted by: bob t on Aug 17, 2007 9:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Bushco/Rethugs and right wing religious are neglecting Katrina victims deliberatelybecause they are trying to turn La. into another Repuke state like Texass and Arizona and Miss. and 'Bama etc.

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» You should thing about LA... Posted by: ABetterFuture
Constructive anger-now take it to the polls @ elections
Posted by: Irinetta on Sep 10, 2007 2:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Anger used creatively and constructively can be an energizing element. I have worked with several LA Katrina victims through my job here in Nashville. I have been struck by the large amount of effort and sincerity that I have found with these folks. They are NOT victims in the sense of "oh woe is me" but in the sense that MOST of us live in our day to day existance in limited resources. There are some who donot try-you will find that anywhere. For the most part, they have shown initiative and balance . From the very beginning , they wanted nothing more than for it to be their lives as they were before Katrina. OUR gov has assisted only marginally- and I feel that they have done more toward the rebuilding of Bagdad than LA and MS. That is a disgrace. Yes, perhaps they could have done more THEN- BUT then the Army Corp of Engineers KNEW about the Levees . Could it happen again? You bet. There is a dam in KY that threatens to break- and its been in the paper several times here. Large parts of KY and TN will be affected. I cannot fix the dam- and like many of the people in New Orleans and other areas, I have only my labor to sell. So I will do what I can. CA faces earthquakes everyday-I was there during Loma Preta. Moving is not always the answer. Anyone of limited or moderate means CAN and MAY be in a situation that they did not seek. A single mom regardless of her race will live in a reasonably priced (usually older) neighborhood and face the same dangers-the actions of our current administration are racist, sexist and classist. Those shot on the Gretna bridge lie at their door. Never forget. Never again. Elections are coming and stay angry- the question for any potential candidate is I KNOW what you want FROM me. You are aware of the problems here - What will you do FOR me?

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