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US housing official: rebuilt New Orleans will have fewer poor
blacks
By Jerry Isaacs
4 October 2005
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President Bushs secretary of Housing and Urban Development
acknowledged the administrations real vision for New Orleans
when he told reporters last week that the city would have far
fewer poor black residents once reconstruction is completed.
In an interview with the Houston Chronicle, HUD Secretary
Alphonso Jackson predicted New Orleans would slowly bring back
as many as 375,000 people, but that only 35 to 40 percent of the
population would be black. Prior to Hurricane Katrina the city
had nearly 500,000 residents, more than two-thirds of whom were
African-American.
Whether we like it or not, New Orleans is not going to
be 500,000 people for a long time, Jackson said. New
Orleans is not going to be as black as it was for a long time,
if ever again.
Jackson, who was appointed by Bush to aid in the reconstruction
of the city, made it clear that such an outcome was not simply
the product of the hurricane and flooding, but the desired policy
of the Bush administration and the citys political and financial
elite.
Because the worst hit areas were low-income minority neighborhoods,
Jackson added, they may never be repopulated. Im telling
you, as HUD secretary and having been a developer and a planner,
thats how its going to be, he said.
Jackson also acknowledged he had told New Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin not to rebuild the citys predominantly poor and black
Ninth Ward neighborhood. I told him [Nagin], I think it
would be a mistake to rebuild the Ninth Ward. I said Im
not sure what we do with it, or if we decide to build in the Ninth
Ward we have to look at different ways of building.
The HUD secretary suggested that the Ninth Ward was too flood-prone
to rebuild, repeating suggestions from local officials that it
should be bulldozed. Jackson made no similar proposals, however,
about more affluent areas of the city which are just a vulnerable,
including Lakeview, a predominantly upper-middle-class white neighborhood
that was overwhelmed by floodwaters from nearby Lake Pontchartrain.
Simply put, the majority of the poor have been forced to evacuate,
Jackson said, and they are not coming back.
The federal government has done nothing to provide shelter
or low-cost housing for the majority of the 350,000 families displaced
by Hurricane Katrina, and many are little more than refugees spread
across the US. Two weeks before President Bushs mid-October
goal for moving victims out of Red Cross and other emergency shelters,
more than 100,000 people still reside in such makeshift lodging
and another 400,000 are in hotel rooms costing up to $100 a night,
according to an October 2 report in the Washington Post.
Plans to provide housing assistance vouchers and to set up
large-scale trailer camps have not materialized. To date, the
Federal Emergency Management Agency has set up less than 1,400
mobile homes in Louisiana for displaced people, with about 1,100
occupied by workers engaged in the New Orleans recovery effort.
Well aware that the lack of affordable housing and employment
will make it impossible for most poor people to return to New
Orleans, FEMA officials are now openly encouraging low-income
workers to move elsewhere. Evacuees, said FEMA spokesman Eugene
Kinerney, need to consider long-term housing in areas where
there is available rental stock and prospects for employment to
take care of other needs, such as food.
Alphonso Jacksons comments that New Orleans would no
longer be a black-majority city have certainly been welcomed by
the most bigoted elements. At heart, however, he expresses the
contempt for the working class shared by all layers of the wealthy
elite, black and white. Jackson, who is black, was the president
of American Electric PowerTexas, a $13 billion utility company,
before his nomination by Bush to be HUD deputy secretary in 2001.
Indeed, Jackson only said publicly what the business and political
establishment in New Orleans and throughout the US have been discussing
privately. For these elites the hurricane is seen as a golden
opportunity to rid the city of undesirable elementsthrough
a sort of class-cleansingand a chance to reshape
New Orleans in their own interests, with further tax cuts and
billions in government rebuilding contracts.
This retrograde sentiment was captured in the comments of one
real estate appraiser cited by the New Orleans Times Picayune,
who said, This may sound mean and rotten, but if we can
get rid of 100,000 of the lower class that are takers and not
givers to the community, well be much better off.
Victimized already by the neglect and incompetence shown by
every level of government, hundreds of thousands of displaced
working class families in New Orleans will have no say-so in how
the city is rebuilt.
This was made clear in the personnel selected by Mayor Nagin
for the 17-member Bring New Orleans Back commission
which will direct the citys reconstruction. Included are
multimillionaire real estate developer Joseph C. Canizaro and
shipbuilding mogul Donald T. Bollinger, major Republican donors
with close personal relationships to President Bush. After writing
a quarter-million dollar check to the Republican National State
Elections Committee in 2000, Canizaro said, You have to
participate in government if you want to get something out of
it.
Speaking about the disaster which has befallen hundreds of
thousands of New Orleans residents, Canizaro, who lives in a European-style
mansion that took four years to build, said the hurricane had
created a clean sheet to start again and some
very big opportunities.
Also included on the commission are representatives of the
citys black elite, including Alden McDonald Jr., the chief
executive of Liberty Bank and Trust Company, Daniel Packer, the
chief executive of the New Orleans subsidiary of Entergy Corporation,
and David White, a former business associate of Mayor Nagin.
See Also:
William Bennetts hypothetical
on racial genocide
A spreading stench of fascism
[3 October 2005]
New Orleans prisoners left to drown after
Katrina struck
[1 October 2005]
Lurid reports of rape, murder
in Katrinas aftermath exposed as frauds
[30 September 2005]
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