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The Other Side of the Big Easy

By Liza Featherstone, Grist.org. Posted September 12, 2005.


Katrina has exposed decades of benign neglect, racism, and environmental injustice that can't be prettified with crawfish étouffé.
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Much of the world -- including white America -- has been shocked by the devastation in New Orleans, and by the ongoing failures it has exposed at every possible level of government. Even normally unflappable TV news anchors and politicians have been moved to outrage, asking why those left behind were mostly black, poor, disabled, elderly.

Veterans of the environmental-justice movement, especially those working in New Orleans, are just as appalled -- but they are less surprised. Indeed, they're finding their most chilling fears confirmed.

For years, these advocates have been telling anyone who'd listen that blacks in New Orleans were far more affected by environmental problems than the white folks in, say, the Garden District -- and would be far more vulnerable in a disaster. They've long realized a truth that the response to Hurricane Katrina seems to be proving: people in power viewed the city's poorest residents as, says Robert Bullard, "expendable in some sense."

Bullard, director of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University and author of the forthcoming The Quest for Environmental Justice, has been leading a research project on official responses to environmental disasters with Beverly Wright, executive director of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice. Wright and Bullard say blacks and other people of color are all too often overlooked in such crises.

For instance, last January, in Graniteville, S.C., a train crash released deadly chlorine gas, forcing the evacuation of some 5,500 people; black residents contended that white people were evacuated immediately, while a black neighborhood was not evacuated until hours later.

There are hundreds of black farmers, their crops and barns destroyed by tornadoes, who have filed lawsuits against the U.S. Department of Agriculture for failing to grant the relief they say is provided to white farmers; in 1999, the government settled a $2 billion class-action suit addressing claims of discrimination. And after Hurricane Hugo devastated South Carolina in 1989, black victims received less emergency shelter and food assistance than whites in similar situations.

Katrina offered another painfully vivid illustration of the way inequities can pervade government planning for an emergency. Bullard explains that the evacuation strategy for a Gulf Coast hurricane, a long-anticipated event, "did not plan for people who did not have lots of money, do not own cars, the poor, sick, elderly." (New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, who is black, was justifiably -- in his own words -- "pissed" at the slow federal response to Katrina, but his race hasn't spared him from criticism over his own failure to plan for his city's least fortunate citizens.)

This critical weakness had been exposed as recently as last year. During Hurricane Ivan, rich, primarily white people fled New Orleans in their SUVs, while the city's poorest and darkest residents stayed behind. That time, the area was spared as Ivan drifted elsewhere, but many warned that the next storm might not be so merciful.

Louisiana, long a nationally recognized poster child for environmental injustice, has seen such inequities for decades. The 85-mile stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is home to more than 140 oil refineries and chemical plants, accounting for one-fourth of the nation's petrochemical production.

Known as Cancer Alley because of the industry's devastating health effects, the area has been a hub of environmental-justice organizing since the 1980s. Oil and chemical companies in Louisiana have long spewed pollutants in local communities, with little interference from any government agency. That's what helped to create the toxic broth that now fills New Orleans' streets, which is going to make cleanup difficult and, according to The New Orleans Times-Picayune, may make much of the city uninhabitable for years. Many houses, now stewing in these poisons, will have to be bulldozed even if their foundations are solid, says Wright.


Digg!

Liza Featherstone is a New York City-based journalist. She is the author, most recently, of "Selling Women Short: The Landmark Battle for Workers' Rights At Wal-Mart" (Basic).

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Holding off the Vultures
Posted by: jbrowdy on Sep 12, 2005 5:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's our job as engaged citizens to make sure that decent, affordable housing is a part of the redevelopment plan for New Orleans. The "refugees" are going to be conveniently out of the way, and out of the loop, as the decisions get made on how to rebuild the city. Let's hope they have advocates on site willing to press their case, and keep the vultures at bay.

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Developers/Vultures/Gentry--waiting in the wings
Posted by: fedupamerican on Sep 12, 2005 5:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to admit that I knew nothing of the environmental problems of NOLA. I am truly appalled at that in itself!

What I find interesting is that without knowing those facts I myself expressed some of the very same things stated in this article in very specific ways lastnite after watching the interview with Mayor Ray Nagin. Responding to a question about the process of rehousing the citizens who were evacuated to Houston and elsewhere and using the phrase "rebuilding the New American City," Mayor Nagin stated that 'people' and 'outsiders' were already trying to do things behind his back by trying to get a bunch of trailers, put them in the middle of the state in the woods and move the people there. He said that won't happen!

At that point I said, "New American City" --that sounds like it will become the new catch phrase in all of this--outsiders just lining up to get in on the money-making -- sounds like a bunch of vultures just waiting for the kill-- gentrification waiting for the spoils of New Orleans --I bet the developers are chomping at the bits over this!!"

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agitator church and state
Posted by: eileenflmng on Sep 12, 2005 6:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"From the Mississippi border to the Texas state line, Louisiana is loosing its protective fringe of marshes and barrier islands faster than any place in U.S."- National Geographic.Com Oct. 2004

Up until 50 years ago the Louisiana wetlands would have been healthy enough to absorb much of what flooded into the Big Easy.

The catastrophe we all witnessed on TV was foretold in the New Orleans Times-Picayune 3 years ago and the exact scenario was written as 'fiction' in October 2004 Nat.Geo.Com.

There's plenty of blame to go around, but our focus should be on resettling American refugees compassionatly and quickly!

www.wearewideawake.org

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all american girl concernerned about gentrification and the lack of laws of those responsible
Posted by: luna on Sep 12, 2005 7:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think these vulture contractors and the people in charge of the gentrification to New Orleans ought to be charged with a criminal offense and be sent to one of the many privitized prisons which are full of minorities working for 30 cents an hour consistant wth slave labor and see how it feels to be part of this criminal system that is becomming such commonplace in the United States of America.

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trublueark
Posted by: trublueark on Sep 12, 2005 9:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Practical Approach?
I agree with Mr. Malek-Wiley that those who want to return should be given an opportunity to obtain jobs in the rebuilding and salvage of New Orleans and anywhere needed on the Gulf Coast. Surely many of them were part of the infrastructure prior to Katrina and would have current knowledge of the area and possibly some expertise needed in contrast to a workforce brought in by an outside 'contractor.' Whatever workforce is established would need housing and basic support during most of the rebuilding effort. Why not use evacuees who also need that? Maybe this aspect is too much wishful thinking, but this approach would also be fairly economical, again in contrast to bringing in outsiders, essentially moving yet another large group, displacing them for some periods away from their families.

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» RE: trublueark Posted by: kww355
Like 9/11, like Hurricane Katrina - misusing tragedies to advancing rightwing agenda
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 12, 2005 9:47 AM   
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Should vs Will
Posted by: NoPCZone on Sep 12, 2005 11:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With an issue so enmeshed in money, racial politics, environmental policy and old-fashioned 'Louisiana Politics', I am very skeptical that what is right will be done. We can already see commercial interests pushing to re-open the French Quarter as quickly as possible. Sheer momentum will push politicians into expeditious decisions at the national level and then local power brokers and politics will take over and no state has a more corrupt 'old-boy' network than Louisiana.

Unless interested groups and individuals steel their will and gird themselves for the long fight, we will ALL be disappointed. Make no mistake about it, this is NOT a local or 'Louisiana' issue-- the US taxpayer is being asked to pony up untold billions of dollars to pay for all of this.

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Lord have mercy
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 12, 2005 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What a dismal picture, Liza. Thanks for painting it. Seriously. More people need to hear the words "environmental justice". I am sure the 1.5 million readers on AlterNet are well familiar with those words. Or maybe not. I would hope there would be some green design in the rebuilding of New Orleans. The situation seems hopeless to me, utterly hopeless...

Well except for the Sierra Club. There is a glimmer of light in all this darkness.

Thank God. Praise the Lord. Hallelujah.

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