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Rights and Liberties

Reconstruction After Katrina: Brazen Housing Discrimination Continues

By Lizzy Ratner, The Nation. Posted August 30, 2008.


White parishes are zoning minorities out of neighborhoods all over New Orleans.
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After she tried to rent out her home, Kiana Alexander found it burned to the ground.

The stories sound like strange echoes from another era, as if someone had wound up the old Victrola of history and let the Dixie tunes rip. They begin on a half-abandoned street in St. Bernard Parish, an aggressively white community on the southeastern edge of New Orleans. That is where Daphne Clark, 39, an African-American supervisor at a group home, rented a house with help from a rental voucher last year, and that is where the harassment began. First, the Confederate flag hoisted over a neighbor's house followed by stares and sneers; then the official torment by the parish government as it waged a post-Hurricane Katrina crusade against the specter of rental housing. For Clark, this took the form of a series of "notices of violation" warning her that the parish would disconnect her utilities -- not because she had done anything wrong but because her landlord had failed to apply for a rental permit, as required by a new parish law. According to Hestel Stout, a white contractor working on Clark's house, the parish official who delivered one of these notices explained to him, "How would you like those types living next to you?"

Around this time, in nearby Jefferson Parish, Leatrice Hollis was enduring her own losing battle with the forces of housing prejudice. The founder and director of People's Community Subsidiary, a nonprofit housing development agency, Hollis had just completed plans for a mixed-income development that would have created forty-nine occupant-owned homes, with twenty-five going to moderate- and low-income "first responders." But just as she was ready to close the deal, Parish Councilman Chris Roberts declared that he wouldn't approve parish funding for any affordable housing in his district. The project was killed.

And then there is the tale of Maria Tejeda, 48, a receptionist and janitor who lived in the Redwood Apartments complex -- in apartment L, "as in love" -- before the storm. Located in Kenner, the Redwood complex was a 400-unit subsidized housing development and longtime anchor for the area's Latino community. But after the storm, the city decided not to rebuild it. And in April, just two weeks after nearly 1,500 poor and mostly black and brown people lined up overnight to apply for affordable housing vouchers, the parish council unanimously passed a yearlong moratorium on the building of multifamily housing -- a measure that effectively halts affordable housing construction in Kenner and leaves people like Tejeda struggling to pay market-rate rent in New Orleans, miles from her community and 12-year-old son. "Maybe in the future I could find me a nice place for me and my child to live," she sighed.

Such are the stories drifting out of New Orleans and its environs these days, dispatches from a rebuilding effort that often bears an alarming resemblance to a segregation re-enactment. Throughout the region, historically white suburbs, as well as one African-American neighborhood, have been tightening the housing noose by passing laws that restrict, limit or simply ban the building -- and even renting -- of homes that traditionally benefit poor and working-class people of color. Couched in the banal language of zoning and tax credits, density and permissive-use permits, these efforts often pass for legal and rarely raise eyebrows outside the small community of fair-housing monitors. But taken together -- and accompanied, as they so often are, by individual acts of flagrant racism -- they represent one of the most brazen and sweeping cases of housing discrimination in recent history.

"It's been like a wildfire," said Lucia Blacksher, general counsel for the Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center, an advocacy group that has been leading the fight against post-Katrina housing discrimination. "Local governments have been creating legal barriers -- legal, in the sense they created laws -- to prevent people who are African-American from returning. And I'm saying that because we all know what we're talking about here. Affordable housing or multifamily housing is where African-Americans lived. And if you don't let that kind of housing back, you're not going to give people who are African-American or Latino an opportunity to live [here]."

The intensity of this discrimination has surprised even veteran advocates like Blacksher, who grew up in Mobile, Alabama, with a civil rights attorney father. But in many ways it was foreshadowed -- though not necessarily foreordained -- by the powerful racial tectonics that have shaped New Orleans and its surrounding parishes for decades. Since as far back as 1960 -- when New Orleans schools were ordered desegregated and its white majority rioted, resisted and fled to neighboring parishes -- the region has been defined by a vigorously maintained bull's-eye shape. At the center was the black-majority city, while the outer ring belonged to the mostly white suburban parishes.


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Lizzy Ratner is a freelance reporter living in New York City.

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Katrina deja vu
Posted by: Obama2008Fan on Aug 30, 2008 2:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm having nightmarish flashbacks watching Hurricane Gustav heading towards Louisiana.

The possible repeat tragedy ahead should remind us of what Senator McCain and President Bush were doing while hundreds of Americans were drowning in their New Orleans homes: Having a merry old time in Sunny Arizona eating McCain's birthday cake.

Please, former Hillary supporters, I beg you. Do not vote for the MCCAIN/apPALINg ticket in November.

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

» RE: Katrina deja vu Posted by: LionHeart
» RE: Katrina deja vu Posted by: luzmejor
» RE: Katrina deja vu Posted by: JSquercia
» Katrina deja vu Posted by: John Orford
New kid on the block
Posted by: LionHeart on Aug 30, 2008 5:08 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What was Obama doing during Katrina? not much..but then, he was a brand new senator with no experience so we couldn't really expect him to do anything.

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

» What about McCain? Posted by: Rolomax
» RE: New kid on the block Posted by: JSquercia
PatS
Posted by: pats2827 on Aug 30, 2008 5:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As long as institutional racism thrives, these stories of discrimination will continue; the numbers of hate groups will continue to multiply; and, their power will grow to historic levels. Anti-immigration sentiment and racial stereotyping are the fuel that feeds the fire. We must unite to make a lasting change and end discrimination like that seen so clearly in New Orleans.

pats@4thepeople.org
www.4thepeople.org

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Are we really surprised by this?
Posted by: 2crazykids on Aug 30, 2008 6:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think discussions of finally getting the "blacks" out of the entire area were swirling back in '05 just after katrina hit. It was obvious that the black community was left behind and left for dead...this was just part of the cleansing process, right? Don't we all know that if NOLA was a primarily middle-class-rich white community history would be COMPLETELY different? It sickens me...but truly not at all surprised. I hope this will be another log to add to Obama's fire.

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The Asian Tsunami Was Far More Devastating Than Hurricane Katrina
Posted by: opmoc on Aug 30, 2008 7:11 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So how did the people of Thailand, Sri Lanka, Indonesia and the Maldives react to it?

Was there mass looting etc?

Were guns very much in evidence?

Did survivors do their best to help each other - regardless of race/colour/religion?

Did reconstruction take place extremely rapidly such that the vast majority of it is now complete?

How does New Orleans compare?

linked text

Extract

“Before I went to New Orleans I thought volunteering was a nice thing to do, and at the same time thought that there was nothing left for us to contribute or help. Going down there it was a complete shock,” she said. “It is not sexy anymore to talk about New Orleans; it is completely off the radar.”

I was also under the same false impression when I went to New Orleans at the end of January.

As part of a group of five Western students, I joined the Hillel trip of Greater Toronto on a mission to build houses. I did not understand why the city still needed my help. It had been over two and a half years; had New Orleans not recovered?

On my first day in New Orleans I went on a city tour. The first phenomenon I noticed was the silence. I walked along the abandoned streets of the Lower Ninth Ward, which had been under 18 feet of water.

Instead of new developments, I walked for miles and miles in vacant fields. The only glimpses of previous life left in the remains werestaircases leading to nowhere and street signs.

“You could see that people had lived there. These were peoples’ homes. These had been peoples’ lives. I think the first reaction was one of shock and you kind of stood there gasping at the whole situation,” Lauren Rakowski, a fourth-year psychology and philosophy student, said.

There were thousands and thousands of dilapidated abandoned properties, wooden houses that were still marked by the destruction from the flood. Most noticeably, painted on each house a giant X that revealed the date and emergency team that examined it and the number of victims that were found dead inside.

The next day my fellow volunteers and I were sent to a site in an area of the Lower Ninth Ward called Holy Cross. We joined a volunteer team provided by the non-profit organization Rebuilding Together, which builds homes for the elderly and disabled.

Rebuilding Together has completed 69 houses in New Orleans and there are 36 houses still in progress.

“Without the volunteers we would not be here. Volunteers are like gold because they come ready to work and they spread the word to their friends and family at home,”

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Katrina
Posted by: GreyFoxThree on Aug 30, 2008 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just heard on the news this morning that LA officials think if Gustav hits them (it is heading that way) that the Levees might not hold. I dont get it. There has been plenty of time since Katrina hit them, there has been a LOT of time to make things right, dependable and SAFe there. What is the problem?

Whistler
Whats hiding on your PC?

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» RE: Katrina Posted by: richholland
snow town
Posted by: logic on Aug 30, 2008 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The arguement for single family dwelling would hold water if they can show integration of all people. Assess by merit not race.

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racisim...
Posted by: eosrk on Aug 30, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...will always indentify the south, espically new orleans

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more isms than racism
Posted by: luzmejor on Aug 30, 2008 3:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every person without sufficient money is treated the same way as members of minorities. That always includes women and children.

Republicans who believe people should be paid a fair wage are kicked out of the party, so if you want fairness for all, don't vote for reactionary Republicans because their ideal nation would be landowners of leisure who prosper by renting to others.

Remember that this nation has been founded on theft of property from its previous owners and inhabitants. That crime naturally continues to the point where even the former Mob members are admired for their conspicuous wealth.

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New Orleans, the next Phoenix
Posted by: billwald on Aug 30, 2008 8:24 PM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Check real estate prices in the parts of New Orleans that nave been made safe for white people. In the old part of the city prices are like Seattle. There is no way that the poor people will be permitted to rebuild.

Entire neighborhoods will be bought at less than dirt prices and when the deals are done will be rezoned for gated communities, shopping malls, and condos. If I was younger . . . .

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What a shocker
Posted by: rickiey on Sep 4, 2008 9:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
YOu mean they aren't rebuilding the slums and ghettos as more slums and ghettos?

here's a hint, it isn't about race, it is about MONEY.

Your article isn't about racism, or discrimination.

It is about class warfare and the way poverty is treated.

Stop portraying every attack on the poor as racism, so we can DO something about the attacks on the poor.

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