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Home Front Economy
Carnival of Hurricane Relief vol. 18
2005-12-29
Thank you Chuck Simmins for all your hard work in compiling this information. I like the format too. This is dedicated to Matt, Glenmore, and all of Rantburg's once and future Gulf Coast readers.

Excerpt:
Something amazing is happening in my mom’s little town of Pearlington, Mississippi, something inspiring and hopeful, something full of love and renewal. A grass roots movement is growing from the mud and despair of Katrina, and it’s making my heart grow by three sizes just to know it exists. I want to nurture it, protect it, share it with you. Its spirit was embodied in one amazing day this week, a day that represents to me all that is right with the world, all that is good and caring in the human spirit.
Posted by:Seafarious

#16  I can't discuss this issue. My blood pressure will exceed the point of my body to keep it from boiling away.

Posted by: 3dc   2005-12-29 20:08  

#15  Given that what I sent to the Red Cross appears to have been largely wasted / squandered, I can only say that, in future, I will only trust the Salvation Army as an Org - and otherwise give directly to people - no middlemen need beg. Everyone's circumstances are different, but giving enough to really feel it struck me as the way to treat this. Now I consider myself to have received a painfully expensive personal lesson in fraud and waste.
Posted by: .com   2005-12-29 19:51  

#14  Government can't win in these situations. They either pay $400 for a hammer today or take five weeks to purchase a $4 hammer, and use a ton of paperwork to do it.

There isn't enough money from government for what needs doing. The private efforts are so important. I'd like to see some banks choose to take a loss on the mortgages they now hold on bare ground, and forgive them. I'd like to see each and every little two bit politician stop posturing for the media. I'd like to see some planning for how folks with no money, no job and no home are supposed to return to the Coast. I'd like to see New Orleans hold an election on schedule. I'd like to see business micro loan programs to restart all the small businesses in the region. Heck, just get the traffic lights working.

This recovery ought to be a perfect example of the "can do" attitude of Americans, everything done twice as good in half the time. I'm certain the people of the Gulf Coast are capable of amazing things. Let's hope that the rest of America is willing to do the same.

Please keep me posted. I've been blogging this from day one and I'm not going to quit now.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2005-12-29 19:45  

#13  Seafarious - I'm not sure who you mean by the 'us'. In my opinion the 'us' is mainly we who were affected - just get the f*** out of the way. Since probably mid-Oct or so I think the overall process has more been hindered by government than helped. Government needs to tell us the 'rules', pay what they promised to the lowest level possible, and then go away.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-29 19:07  

#12  Will do. We've got a powerful piece of work in front of us.
Posted by: Matt   2005-12-29 19:02  

#11  Matt -
My e-address in my posts is real - drop me a note and we can compare observations.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-29 18:48  

#10  I think I'm starting to understand that the SOMEBODY who should be doing SOMETHING is...us.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-12-29 18:03  

#9  Em, thanks for posting this and thanks also to Chuck Simmins. I generally agree with Glenmore's observations about what things are like now. The scale and visual impact of the destruction in the residential areas of Orleans Parish just can't be conveyed, and I haven't even seen the Mississippi Gulf Coast yet.
Posted by: Matt   2005-12-29 17:40  

#8  Pappy O'Daniel was a Cajun? Live and lern, I thought he was Texas all the way..... umm here's yur Louisiana story.

Mayor's Daddy Makes Out
Posted by: Leon Clavin   2005-12-29 16:05  

#7  Seafarious - maybe the rest of the millions promised to Houston was chewed up in 'overhead'. That's how $2 worth of blue vinyl ends up costing $175. Or how the Air Force pays $500 for a $4 hammer.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-29 12:14  

#6  However, Laurence Simon had a link to a Houston paper recently that the Houston school district has gotten a grand total of $165,000 from Uncle Sam, out of miliions promised to absorb all those NO schoolkids...
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-12-29 12:09  

#5  About two weeks ago one of the two local free weekly bettydcrockercrat papers ran an editorial about how horrible it was that Bush hadn't yet kept his promise to rebuild the gulf coast, and decried the "republican whisper campaign" about Louisiana's unfortunate history of corruption.

(As if it were some sort of historical anamoly, like the Pappy O'Daniel's Flour Hour or Huey Long's governorship, and there weren't corruption issues in the here and now about why the levees failed in the first place).
Posted by: Phil   2005-12-29 12:02  

#4  You've probably seen the blue tarp roofs all over the surviving Gulf Coast buildings - today's New Orleans paper points out the cost of those things after applying layers of government contractors and bureaucracy - is around $175 a square, or roughly the same as a conventional new roof. Same system applies to pretty much everything from debris removal to levee repair. It's the only way they could possibly have spent the $30 billion + so far - about $15,000 per man, woman and child in the area. That's pretty amazing when you realize almost nothing has actually been rebuilt yet. In other words, America may not be 'forgetting' us, it just thinks (with good reason) that enough money has been spent that there shouldn't be a big problem.
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-29 11:41  

#3  Gone from the MSM - what did you expect? They can not beat Bush up without getting a lot of their own in the same blame-game, and it shows soemthign no liberal wants to show: that government is ineffective and is NOT the solution. So its of no use to the MSM and they will ignore it, like the suprisingly strong US economy, or the elections in Iraq.

The inability fo the 4th estate to report widely and fairly, to abandon their tacit political biases, is damaging the nation. Pinch Sulzburg and his elitist ilk need to be held accountable. Tar and feathers seem appropriate.
Posted by: Oldspook   2005-12-29 10:13  

#2  Thank you, for the linky love.

I grow increasingly concerned that our fellow Americans are being forgotten. This is our tsunami. For the first time in memory, tens of thousands of Americans are living in third world conditions, wondering where their next meal is coming from, refugees in their own country.

The Gulf Coast recovery will take a decade or more. Here it is, four months after the worst disaster in American history and it's gone from our media.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2005-12-29 08:53  

#1  Thanks for pointing this out to me.
I took the 'scenic' route in to the office downtown today for the first time in a month. Very little visible improvement - traffic signals still out, almost no people about. And surprisingly, on a gorgeous day like today, nobody working on anything. But there are now a few FEMA trailers in peoples' yards in Hollygrove.
I would blame the lack of progress on the politicians, who have given us the new #1 oxymoron - political leadership - but it's deeper than that ('in a democracy you get the government you deserve.') I could blame the insurance companies for being so slow to pay up - but there is plenty that could be getting done free, and isn't. Depression is almost epidemic (I saw in the paper this morning that a past friend couldn't take it and killed himself this week.)
But - Rebirth Brass Band is playing the Maple Leaf, so all is not lost!
Posted by: Glenmore   2005-12-29 01:08  

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