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In the Lawless Post-Katrina Cleanup, Construction Companies Are Preying on Workers

By Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. Posted July 16, 2007.


After Hurricane Katrina pummeled the Gulf Coast, construction companies have squeezed billions out of federal contracts with few labor regulations and almost no oversight, allowing outrageous worker abuses to occur.

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After Hurricane Katrina pummeled the Gulf Coast in late August 2005, tens of billions of dollars in federal and private contracts, the largest of which went to companies like Bechtel, Halliburton, and its then-subsidiary Kellogg, Brown, and Root, were dispatched to New Orleans. The alleged goal was to fund a clean-up effort President Bush said would require "a sustained federal commitment to our fellow citizens." That, of course, never came to pass.

Thanks to its initial disastrous rescue effort, today, the Federal Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) receives most of the blame for chaos in New Orleans. But it wasn't just FEMA. The anatomy of the failed reconstruction is complicated, but understanding what went wrong requires examining the Department of Labor (DOL).

The DOL has been in decline for a generation, suffering from long-term decreases in funding even as the number of people whose livelihoods it is supposed to protect has grown. Those problems have been exacerbated through the six and a half years of the Bush administration. But the consequences have never been more appalling than in New Orleans, where the failure of high-level DOL officials to require proactive oversight of reconstruction employers led to an endless string of abuses. After Katrina, employers, unfettered by rules, became less concerned with the task at hand than with profiting at the expense of workers without protection. They became predators in a lawless environment.

In the two years since the disaster, there have been thousands of testimonials -- issued to both government officials and private advocates -- about a wide taxonomy of abuses.The most frequent complaint workers cite is withheld wages, but almost as numerous are accusations of employee intimidation, toxic and hazardous working conditions, immigrant abuse, trafficking, exploitation and monetary extortion.

On June 26, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH), chairman of the Domestic Policy Subcommittee of the Government Reform and Oversight Committee in the House of Representatives, convened a hearing to investigate the origins of the abuses perpetrated by subcontractors and other employers against those working to clean up New Orleans. The subcommittee heard testimony from advocates, attorneys, organizers, DOL officials, and a man named Jeffrey Steele.

Now 49-years-old, Steele says he traveled from Georgia to New Orleans in the first weeks after the hurricane out of both a sense of duty and the hope that he could earn enough money to cover debts and, perhaps, collect some savings at the same time. A subcontractor he identified as the Reverend Carroll Harrison Braddy had recruited Steele and others in Georgia, promising $10 per hour, free food and lodging. Soon after he arrived, in a van full of similarly minded men, he learned that none of his employers were willing to pay him the full wage, or provide him with the sanitary living conditions, he had been promised.

Steele worked for more than a week before his first employer belatedly provided him the vaccines he needed to avoid illnesses like tetanus and hepatitis B that were idling in the toxic stew fermenting throughout much of the city. Most nights he slept on floors in houses and hotels with about seven other men, sharing a bathroom and scrounging for Meals Ready to Eat (MREs) that the National Guard had trucked in for workers and residents. After his first two weeks on the job -- 12 hour shifts, seven days a week -- he was owed $1,400, not including overtime. He was paid $230.

Steele's story was hardly uncommon. Forty-four year-old Tyrone Wilson, known as "Coach" to his friends, worked for Phoenix & Global, a company subcontracted by a different company called ECC, which was paid in turn by the Army Corps of Engineers to help clean up debris. This sort of subcontracting chain could be of any length and often ran many companies deep, with each additional tier masking more potential fraud and making lost pay harder to reclaim.

Wilson's job with Phoenix & Global entailed removing heavy trash -- refrigerators and other appliances -- from city grounds. The employers of his "foul smelling" job, he said, "would hold pay a week back on us. I worked three weeks and nothing was paid. Twelve hours a day, seven days a week, for three weeks. I got paid less than half of what I deserved. Mexicans got even less. I think they got paid three- or four-hundred dollars." On December 30, 2005, Wilson received $865 in pay for the 94 hours of work he did from November 20, through Dec 7. For a similar stretch between January 5 and January 18, he was paid only $206.10. In each case, he should have been paid about $1,500.


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With the homies shooting each other in the streets
Posted by: gistre on Jul 16, 2007 12:59 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and Ray Nagin looting the till, construction companies are the least of New Orlean's problems.

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New Orleans' biggest problem is ecological ignorance.
Posted by: Pat Kittle on Jul 16, 2007 1:40 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you live below sea level, mostly surrounded by water, behind lousy levees, on sinking ground, in hurricane alley, with global warming accelerating, you're asking for it.

If you try to rebuild, you're begging for it.

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

» What are you...some kind of.. Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
» Reduce our population..? Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
How much of the labor is done by illegal immigrates?
Posted by: White middleclass male on Jul 16, 2007 1:47 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you scurry across the border like a cockroach in the dark and steal work that might have paid an American well, you deserve to be treated like the criminal you are.

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» Put the employer in jail and the illegal in Mexico. Posted by: White middleclass male
» Edith Bunker? Posted by: malcolmartin
» You're Beautiful When Your Angry Posted by: malcolmartin
» RE: You're Beautiful When Your Angry Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Why is Alternet bringing this up now????
Posted by: Prophit on Jul 16, 2007 3:37 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They knew about the illegal immigrants being used way back within a few weeks of the disaster..... I don't remember reading this kind of piece about that then when the rest of us were asking about the jobs for locals who needed them more than the illegals... so why bother now? Running out of fluff???? LOL

Talk about racist..... its ok to spern the local blacks who needed the work, and not a word about the illegal hispanics taking those jobs, but now we rag on about the poor hispanics and not a word about the "American citizen" blacks that should have had all those jobs so they could save their homes. What crap!

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» Hire American Posted by: edith
» RE: Why is Alternet bringing this up now???? Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
What About the Rule of Law?
Posted by: Urstrly on Jul 16, 2007 3:49 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's pretty clear that all these workers are desperate and that unsrupulous contractors have taken advantage of them because they know the government is willfully negligent. Why the previous three posters can't find a little compassion or demand enforcement of decent wages staggers my imagination. A day's pay for a day's work is the most basic of human rights. As for those deploring the employment of immigrants, maybe they didn't see all those FEMA trailers the government set aside for illegal immigrants they tacitly recruited.

Six years down the road, we're seeing the effects of laboring under toxic conditions which the government denied at Ground Zero. Not only will these New Orleans workers be denied the money they earned, they'll probably have a higher incidence of cancer and lung disease in the future. Contractors should be penalized, and restitution should be made. Frankly, I don't know if anyone can make the Bureau of Labor function, because it's obvious that the executive wishes it would go away.

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Impeach
Posted by: sheena2u on Jul 16, 2007 4:28 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is just another example of the way our country is going to Hell under the Bush/Cheney administration. Worker abuse is no joke. The Katrina debacle showed Bush/Cheney for what they are: lawless criminals entirely incapable and unwilling to lead. Everything came apart. Nothing was solved. Abuses of all kinds were rampant. Multiplied thousands of times over eight long years this country has been virtually brought to its knees. We can't really go for another 18 months with those two idiots in office. IMPEACH! Impeach! Impeach!

This is also another example of what Dennis Kucinich is made of. He's brave, courageous, and continues to do the important tasks most other politicians ignore. Thank God for people like Dennis Kucinich.

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» RE: Wrong again...Wackos Posted by: kbest
» RE: Wrong again...Wackos Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
...and this is why BushCo kept overseas help out
Posted by: eosrk on Jul 16, 2007 5:01 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
to hook up his buddies at Halliburton, Betchel, and the like.

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This Isn't New News
Posted by: dlf on Jul 16, 2007 5:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I posted a link to a Colorlines story about this over a year ago.

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Two Years--??!!-- INCOMPETENCE--ARROGANCE--- [Compashionate conservatism!!? ]
Posted by: wmGreybeard on Jul 16, 2007 5:18 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
AND A UNITER , NOT A DIVIDER .

New Orleans was a logical site for for a sea port; but never for a major city. We can not blame the present bunch of criminals in charge for building the city. But they are definitely responsible for the irresponsible response to the Katrina disaster.

IT IS LONG PAST TIME FOR IMPEACHMENT.

It should have been at least five years ago.

wm

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Today vs The Past
Posted by: mizipi on Jul 16, 2007 5:24 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If someone is a supporter of Bush, then everything that has happened in New Orleans is OK and those people living and working there now are getting what they deserve. But, had something like this happened while Bill Clinton was prezdent, then the same Bush supporters would be wailing about the inequality, the wasted dollars, the corruption and down-right sinful nature of those taking advantage of the less fortunate.

So, the lesson is this: DOWNSIZE the federal government. Get the feds out of the "relief" business. FEMA and the Dept of Labor are about as useful as the $12 million worth of ice that melted last week. And we couldn't get ice in South Mississippi for three weeks. Katrina has been and is another Iraq for the Bushies. Rich people getting richer with no accountability for the money spent. I cannot speak for New Orleans, because my Katrina experience happened in South Mississippi. But, I do know this and have heard this many, many times, "If not for the church and faith-based organizations, we would not have received any help at all." I guess that is why a buddy and I cut two trees off an 85 year-old man's house in Jan 2006. We had gutted his home, cleaned his yard and got him some new furniture during Oct/Nov 2005. At that time the man had filed all the paperwork with the Corps of Engineers who were to remove the tress. When I visited the man at Christmas the trees were still there. A month later, I got some help and we - two 50 year old men with nothing but a chainsaw and some ropes and no experience in the tree removal business - got the trees off of the man's house.

Hang in there, Nawlins'! And hopefully, those who have taken advantage of the Katrina situation will one day face a hurricane of their own, see the error of their ways, and truly feel sorry for what they have done.

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» 20+ Years Post Reagan . . . Posted by: VisionQuest
» Feel Better LeftCoast"Progressive" Posted by: VisionQuest
» RE: 20+ Years Post Reagan . . . Posted by: peacefullaim
Up here in Canada ...
Posted by: Don Garb on Jul 16, 2007 5:49 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I predicted this as soon as Katrina happened. I told all my friends that billions of US citizen's tax dollars would once again flow into the pockets of the Bush crime cronies with nothing to show for it. All the US infrastructure is capable of these days is stealing, they couldn't rebuild a city even if they tried.

And what city will be next? The waters in the Gulf of Mexico are getting pretty hot, due to the Global Warming that Exxon paid so much to make people forget about. Any hurricane that slips in there will rev up to a category 5 in just one night! And hey, how many years has that southern US drought been going on that the main stream media keeps forgetting to talk about? It hasn't just started this year you know!

I find it interesting that a Canadian, Frank Stronach, was able to build a trailer city down there in just a few months after the storm hit. (I put that in my post to give the trolls something to froth about, "Stronach's trailer town is worthless!" or some shit like that will surely follow)

The US is basically jiggered. They have to have a port city to support the economic and geographic end of the Mississippi River, but they can't build one there from an engineering perspective because of the unstable land and they can't build one there from an economic perspective because of the corruption that is now ubiquitous.

Just as the storm named Katrina washed over the landscape laying waste to a vast region, so the storm of corruption led by the Bush Crime Syndicate has washed over the entire US, laying waste to people's lives and livelihoods. Can't wait to see what part of the US gets destroyed by nature next!

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Oh! The wonders of Capitalism!
Posted by: zooeyhall on Jul 16, 2007 6:29 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How great it is we have in the USA (the most god-blessed country on earth btw) such true upholders of the unblemished un-wimped capitalist tradition!

This article proves how an attitude of greed is good and full-blown economic Darwinist thinking brings out the best in people.

Despite such minor annoyances as this article on Alternet, I am sure that these predators are giving themselves a "job well done".

I mean, hey if you pressed them about it, they would just reply "If it makes money, you don't make apologies".

Karl Marx, my man---dude you were soooooo RIGHT!

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» RE: Oh! The wonders of Capitalism! Posted by: richholland
Welcome to the New South, same as the Old South
Posted by: willymack on Jul 16, 2007 6:41 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Isn't is amazing how really bad ideas and practices can re-emerge-even after more than 100 years? Many words have been said about the reasons for the Civil War, but when it comes down to one hard fact, it's this: The Old South was a sick society which had to be crushed in the name of humanity, just as Nazi Germany did. The same mentality that allowed people to think that certain groups of humans were MEANT TO BE ABUSED AND EXPLOITED is alive and well in New Orleans, aided and abeted by the Scumbag in Chief and his toadies. How many more crimes against Humanity must these cretins commit before they're put into prison where they belong?

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» Look Away Dixieland Posted by: edith
» RE: Look Away Dixieland Posted by: richholland
Most blame belongs to the local/State
Posted by: Poe on Jul 16, 2007 7:09 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no doubt that the Bush administration was inept in dealing with Katrina, particularly the casual attitude and response during and after the storm hit. But I find it hard to believe that a city that can accommodate a hundred thousand visitors for Mardi Gras and Super Bowls, could not keep forty thousand of its own citizens comfortable for four or five days inside the Superdome. A GREAT move it was, getting people into that stadium.....it saved their lives. We tend to forget about that. BUT.....the images that washed into our homes across the country......people that had to go without food and water for days......and a short supply of proper facilities...bathrooms....wash areas.

Now who's at fault for that??? That's not the job of the Federal Government. With proper planning, much of that could have been alleviated. Port-o-potties can be set up in hours.....and now portable wash stations are used everywhere....festivals...concerts.
Give me a break...this is a city that has thousands of visitors a year.....and they couldn't get the Superdome supplied and ready for forty thousand people. Look what they did in Houston. By comparison, the Astrodome was ready for the influx....and it was night and day for many of the fortunate ones that made it there.

New Orleans is notorious for its corruption.......it's been going on for years....well before Bush was around.....and the fact that they keep re-electing these "leaders"......well....the people there deserve what they get.

Bush will be gone....but unfortunately for the people in NO....Nagin and his administration won't.

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» RE: Filthy brown mexican Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: Filthy brown mexican Posted by: babs
» RE: Filthy brown mexican Posted by: kelly.nickell
political tourist trap
Posted by: nolafugees on Jul 16, 2007 8:22 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
as a longtime new orleanian and having just worked a benefit for latino day laborers injured on the job here in new orleans, i feel qualified in saying that for those of you using this story as a springboard to vent against the bush administration, you are as culpable as those anti-immigration racists ranting on this forum.

Those of us who actually bother to live in new orleans (as opposed to those who simply use us as further justification for their political views) know that Reconstruction New Orleans is one of the greatest economic swindles in the history of the republic. want to find proof of racist conspiracy, corporate misbehavior, government malfeisance? liberals, conservatives, radicals, come on down. our ruins are your tourist destination, and we can provide you with all the ammunition you need to fight amongst yourselves.

in the meantime, we'll keep serving undocumented trabajadores and cracker meth addict contractors three dollar bud lights while the gunshots go off down the block.

how about you all just let us secede?

NOLAFugees.com

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» RE: political tourist trap Posted by: VisionQuest
» For Nolafugees- question, please Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» That was not the question. Posted by: sausage
» RE: That was not the question. Posted by: PirateJesus
» Sausage- WRONG!!!!!!!!!! Posted by: veggiegrrrl
» For bakerman, question please Posted by: VisionQuest
» RE: For bakerman, question please Posted by: VisionQuest
» RE: political tourist trap Posted by: kelly.nickell
Reconstruction Watch
Posted by: fanny666 on Jul 16, 2007 8:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Reconstruction Watch

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» RE: Reconstruction Watch Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Of course the irony of this situation will be lost on most
Posted by: sausage on Jul 16, 2007 9:38 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It should infuriate the average red-blooded American that laborers of ever stripe, from those few born and bred in this nation to the sleezy, slimy illegals who slither through our porous borders, are being abused to re-build New Orleans on the cheap. And on the taxpayer dollar.

But of course, this was the great design of the Bush administration from the beginning and the goal of every Republican politician worth his skirt-chasing, boy-loving hypocritical salt: Loot the national treasury until it looks like the Iraq National Museum, then privatize, privatize, privatize; lower wages, lower wages, lower wages.

The irony of the situation in New Orleans is that while those few "legal" laborers and the myriad "illegal" workers are being misused, abused, ripped-off and woefully under-paid, Halliburtion subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR) is paying Americans upwards of a $100,000 per annum to American citizens to drive trucks in known war zones in Iraq.

Of course KBR doesn't provide any insurance, health, death or otherwise, worth a damn for the poor, redneck bastards who simply want to send their kids to college. KBR doesn't care, truck drivers are expendable, they're merely human resources and their wages comes from Uncle Sucker. So who cares?

Meanwhile, the irony of the situation is not lost on Wall Street and its cadre of Harvard School of Business MBAs, reactionary Republicans and triangulating Democrats. After all, they are all laughing the way to the bank while the rest of us poor schmoes fight over the last scraps of the American dream.

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This is not uncommon or unusual in any way
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jul 16, 2007 10:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the new America, the dirtiest, most dangerous jobs go to the poorest and most disadvantaged people, who are treated like slaves by the subcontractors who do the actual work.

How does this government contracting business work? First, you have to buy a lot of politicians and insinuate yourself and your friends into the system. Getting a corrupt politician to appoint one of your 'ex-board members' to a position of authority within the contracts and grants system is your best bet.

Then, you submit your 'bid', or not, if it's a no-bid contract. You then wait for you ex-employee to call you up and tell you that, after careful consideration, your company has been chosen on the basis of experience and a good track record.

Then, you pick up the other telephone and call your network of subcontractors, and relate to them the details of the job. You take your cut off the top (5%? 10%? 25%? 50%?), hand the contract on the the subcontractors, release yourself from any criminal liability, and laugh your ass off as you walk down to deposit the bloated government check in your private account.

That's the story with the 'Iraq reconstruction contracts' - it was endless chains of subcontractors. Why? It's simple - if you're a aubcontractor to Bechtel, you might think, why don't I do the same thing? and then you've got the ranks of the sub-sub-contractors. At the end of the chain is some impoverished Iraqi or illegal immigrant wading through an open sewer in bare feet with a shovel in one hand.

This is how most of these contracts for privatized government services are carried out. In spite of this blatant and obvious fraud, the corporate press continues to chant its mantra: "the private sector is more efficient!....the private sector is more efficient!..." blah, blah, blah...

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» Telling him anything just snaps his mind shut! Posted by: LeftCoastProgressive
Make War on al-Qaeda not the American Working Class Chertoff..!
Posted by: TJ-stars4peace on Jul 16, 2007 10:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Under HSPD-20 Michael Chertoff becomes maybe the 2nd most powerful man in America and even in charge of all our Industry..this is part of NSPD-51..which Bush signed May 9th 2007..!

Remember nobody ever voted for Michael Chertoff and under the guise of "Continuity" establishes a Dictatorship..for all practical purposes and makes Chertoff the American Albert Speer..!

If Bush had pursued bin-Laden and made war on al-Qaeda the way he has the working and middle class in America bin-Laden would be dead and the War on Terror nearly won..!

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Bacon and whatever law
Posted by: bookwoman on Jul 16, 2007 11:21 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are you surprised by this. Did you think Bush rushed to cancel the Bacon whatever law for fair wages post Katrina because they had an altruistic streak and wanted to pay the workers more than standar.

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Scott Tabor
Posted by: Scott Tabor on Jul 16, 2007 3:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As far as I am concerned, this is just the tip of the Ice Berg. I was in New Orleans in October of 2005. I spent a night at a Red Cross Shelter, and around the corner, was an abandond building that was housing Undocumented workers from Honduras. What I saw there was that these people were nothing more than disposable human beings. They lived in a rat infested conditions, they were always being watched by the bosses thugs, and protected from being recruited to work for someone else by the New Orleans Police dept. I found that there job was removing Asbestos from the Naval Yard and with no protective clothing. What I saw in New Orleans made me sick. And the Sick part is that it came from The White House.

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In the Lawless Post-Katrina Cleanup, Construction Companies Are Preying on Workers
Posted by: KUCING on Jul 16, 2007 5:02 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And this story is only about the workers who are "hired" to clean up New Orleans and Louisiana. I doesn't even touch the misery of the persons FROM New Orleans and Louisiana who were displaced by Katrina.

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