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A Better New Orleans is Possible

By Van Jones, AlterNet. Posted October 19, 2005.


Will the reconstruction effort for the city be politics as usual, or can we rebuild it as a model city and beacon for possibility?
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The best and the worst of America were on full display in the days following Hurricane Katrina. We are still seeing a desperate tug of war between two sides of the American character -- with the fate of New Orleans hanging in the balance.

As the Bush administration hands out reconstruction dollars, the clock is ticking: Will the response be politics as usual? Or will we be able to rebuild New Orleans as a model city and a beacon for possibility?

Looking Back: The Heartbreak -- And the Hope

The winds of Katrina blew back the curtain on some of the worst in U.S. politics. None of us can forget the heartbreaking images of our most vulnerable citizens abandoned to a horrific fate, trying to survive in a city underwater. Nor can we erase the image of a fly-over U.S. president, indifferent and detached during an unprecedented national catastrophe.

The better side of America also came into view. The media challenged the White House's preposterous spin that evacuation efforts were going fine. People of all classes and colors opened their hearts, homes and wallets to displaced families. And progressives led the way, through initiatives like HurricaneHousing.org -- our own "underground railroad" that housed tens of thousands of evacuees.

For the first time in more than a generation, caring deeply about the fate of the black poor seemed like the American thing to do.

The Moment at Hand: Profiteering or Possibility?

Charged with the monumental task of rebuilding, the government has squandered the hope and compassion of tens of millions. The same slowpoke White House that botched the evacuation is now moving at lightening speed to help its friends profit from the reconstruction:

  • Suspending environmental safeguards for Gulf fuel production.
  • Canceling affirmative action and living wage protections for workers rebuilding the region.
  • Passing out no-bid contracts to companies like Halliburton and Bechtel, with no obligation to employ Gulf workers who desperately need jobs.

New Orleans could ultimately re-emerge as a cartoon version of itself: a corporate theme park, the Big McEasy. The region's African-descended people are being priced out -- a new black diaspora, scattered to the winds. New buildings might rise from the rubble, but the spirit of New Orleans is in danger of being forever lost.

In response, the better parts of America are rallying to avert this second catastrophe:


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Van Jones is the executive director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, which houses Reclaim The Future: Alliance For Green-Collar Jobs. A version of this essay was originally published at YES! Magazine.

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Soulsong
Posted by: soulsong on Oct 19, 2005 10:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The words "Beacon of possibility" really stike a note. In the
Biblical comment, "A lamp is not placed under a bushel but
on a stand where all may see it". Nature does not take kindly
to cities built beneath sea level, on fault lines, at oceans edge,
and a variety of other precarious locations. Are we so ego
driven to think there is a human levee Nature can not destroy?
The fabled civilization of Atlantis probably gives us the answer.
Regretfully, we learn the hard way.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Rebuilt ? Sure if you're talking about a National Jobs Program
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Oct 19, 2005 11:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So they want New Orleans in the same spot. Sure why not. It's been a functioning port for years and a great costal fun spot. One problem though, IT'S A SOUPBOWL PEOPLE. You
have a lake on one side and a river on the other and the river is higher than the lake. No Problem. Make a line from all the spots that did'nt get flooded then bulldoze everything else into oblivion. Then fill dirt. A mountain's worth. Once everythings level and well drained start building. Houses,businesses,everything using solar,wind and alternative
energy as power. Planned emergency routes that are above swell. Rebuilding all homes and businesses to withstand an
F-5 storm and no previous resident,regardless of income, shall
loose a living space or home. We can finance the whole shabang like this.
" Emergency Reconstruction Bonds " . Bonds in the amounts of five thousand, ten thousand,fifty thousand,and one hundred thousand dollars,payable in 30 years. To make these bonds affordable for all Americans they should sell for
$10,$50,$100 and $1,000 respectivly. Do you think the Government could vote to do this as fast as they acted on 9/12 ?

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]