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One year since Hurricane Katrina: the rebuilding of Mississippis
Gulf Coast
By Jeff Lassahn
26 August 2006
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I recently traveled to Mississippis Gulf Coast with the
volunteer organization Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA)
to assist in ongoing relief efforts there. It is painfully obvious,
nearly a year after Hurricane Katrina laid waste to the region,
that the market-based approach to relief and reconstruction has
left the entire region devastated, generating even higher levels
of social inequality.
No one driving along the Gulf Coast can miss the destruction.
More astonishing, however, is the relative lack of rebuilding;
in many cases, absolutely nothing has been done. Working in a
relief organization provided some insight into why that is the
case: the lack of a centralized, publicly funded and organized
reconstruction program.
Nearly all the rebuilding has been left to private companies
and relief organizations, primarily faith-based. Families and
individuals whose lives and livelihoods have been decimated have
largely been expected to fend for themselves. The results are
huge profits for a small number of casinos, banks and construction
firms and misery for almost everyone else.
The damage
Mississippis 70-mile stretch of the Gulf Coast was battered
by Katrinas 125-mile-an-hour winds last summer, and, in
the words of one account, inundated by a mountain of water,
25 feet high in places, with waves that reached 10 feet higher.
The surge affected areas as much as 15 miles inland. When the
water finally retreated and the winds calmed, 11 seaside communities
were left in ruins, with more than 160 dead and 65,000 homes destroyed
(St. Petersburg Times). Residents refer to the storm as
our tsunami.
I traveled along Highway 90, which follows the coast through
the small cities and towns of Moss Point, Pascagoula, Biloxi and
Gulfport, Mississippi. Years ago, this stretch of coastline was
made into an artificial beach, normally in proximity to the state
highway. At certain points, however, restaurants and stores were
located right on the beach; these were almost all obliterated
by Hurricane Katrina.

On the other side of the coastal highway, there is a block
of large, expensive houses and commercial buildings. Much of this
too is rubble, although some sturdier structures only sustained
heavy damage. Few of these buildings have been repaired or are
in the process of being repaired. Most commonly, one sees foundations
of what used to be buildings now holding signs advertising debris
removal, home rebuilding and the like.

Buildings a block north of the highway appeared more intact,
but many homes still showed severe damage to roofs and walls.
Some residents live in trailers alongside their damaged houses,
or the remnants and foundations of a house, presumably awaiting
the opportunity to rebuild. Chain restaurants
and stores bore signs promising rebuilding and reopening, but
these messages were belied by the adjacent piles of rubble and
wind-damaged signposts.

It was surprising to see that in most cases even luxurious
beachfront homes were not undergoing repair. The same holds true
for the branches of large retail and commercial chains, despite
the billions of dollars they ostensibly have available for rebuilding.
Many have put their properties up for sale, presumably due to
lack of funds or threats of further hurricanes. Apparently, there
is no coherent plan for redevelopment, much less hurricane protectionthe
market decides how to remake the beachfront, and its verdict is
to leave it, for the most part, in shambles.

Even the Ohr-OKeefe Museum of Art in Biloxi has been
left waiting for money to rebuild. George Ohr was a native of
Biloxi, renowned for his use of modern forms in pottery at the
turn of the last century. Fortunately, collections of his work
were undamaged by the hurricane, but the partially built museum
was damaged by a casino barge that washed ashore. The museums
web site says that As with all of the Gulf Coast, the museum
is waiting on the resolution of the wind versus water insurance
issuehopefully with resolution just around the cornerand
rebuilding will begin.

As opposed to local residents, small businesses and the art
museum, two industries have clearly benefited from the hurricane:
banks and casinos. The former are reaping profits from loans to
cover rebuilding costs. One cynical billboard in the area proclaimed
that banks and residents shared common interests. Together
We Rebuild, says the Hancock Bank sign.
Prior to Katrina, Mississippi state law barred the location
of casinos on land. While such establishments were restricted
to floating structures in the Gulf, their parking garages, restaurants
and other associated enterprises dotted the coastline. Unsurprisingly,
most of the casinos floating structures were heavily damaged
or destroyed; almost immediately, Mississippi law was changed
to allow the casino industry to build on land.

With new, immense profits in sight, most of the casinos are
being rebuilt, with reopenings scheduled for the latter part of
2006. The new materials and heavy equipment visible at the casino
construction sites stand in stark contrast to the situation in
the immediate surroundings. The casinos supporting establishments,
such as restaurants, tourist shops and other stores, lie damaged
and untouched right in view of the gambling joints. A notable
exception to this was a pawn shop. The so-called fringe economy
has flourished as the desperation of struggling residents has
no doubt grown.

Casinos thrive on sucking the money out of such impoverished
areas, and it shows: the Beau Rivage Resort and Casino in Biloxi
has enough cash not only to rebuild, but to buy advertising space
on about 20 continuous billboards along Interstate 10. The billboards,
each with only a single comment, gradually describe the extravagance
and opulence awaiting those who can afford to visit the Beau Rivage
upon its reopening.
On the casinos web site, President and Chief Operating
Officer George P. Corchis, Jr. reports contentedly that Immediately
following Hurricane Katrinas devastation, our parent company
MGM MIRAGE made a commitment to our employees, their families
and the entire Gulf Coast community to rebuild Beau Rivage and
rebuild it quickly.
Remarkably, 12 casinos find enough business to operate along
the Mississippi coastline, with several more located up bays and
rivers.
Condominiums are being repaired or rebuilt more rapidly than
any other type of housing on the Gulf Coast. Farther inland, the
wind and flood damage to businesses has mostly been repaired.
Some damage is permanent, however, particularly where the business
was already abandoned or its owners couldnt handle the cost
of rebuilding. Towns are thick with pawn shops, payday loan and
check-cashing stores, most of which seem to have found it possible
to rebuild and repair.
At any rate, in some cases, it is difficult to distinguish
between hurricane damage and the effects of already existing deprivation.
In Gulfport, Mississippi, for example, we passed through a neighborhood
in which abandoned, boarded up housepresent in every poverty-stricken
neighborhood in Americastood next to dwellings that had
obviously sustained flood damage.
Relief organizations were repairing other houses, as many residents
lack the means to afford professional rebuilding. As a volunteer
for one of these organizations, I found out first-hand how desperate
many people are for assistance and, for all the genuine humanitarian
feeling animating the private relief efforts, how ineffective
decentralized and essentially amateur reconstruction efforts can
be.
The free market model of disaster
relief
Mississippis Gulf Coast is supposed to be rebuilt through
the workings of the free market and relief organizations.
Most of the latter are faith-based (associated with
one or another religious denomination) and use the labor of student
and middle-aged adult volunteers. Usually the groups of 20 come
only for a week, which means that personnel on worksites is continually
changing.
I volunteered for Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, which had
constructed a camp to house its work groups on the edge of a farm
near Gautier, Mississippitoward the eastern end of the states
coastline. The camp itself appeared well funded and supplied,
with plastic, air-conditioned pods as housing; decent
showers, toilets and dining areas; and a large stock of most of
the tools one might need. Additionally, there was money for advertising
and gimmicks like large printed signs, lanyards and T-shirts.

The camps location had little to do with the location
of the worksites; sometimes we traveled 15 miles to go work on
a particular house. It appeared that there was not even a plan
to divide up the regions in which the different relief organizations
were to operate. Instead, our group split into three to go and
work on houses in quite different areas.
The situation of the homeowners was an indictment of the profit
system. All three I eventually worked for came to the PDA for
help because they could not afford to pay for the necessary repairs
themselves. All three had to compromise on the quality and extent
of the work due to insufficient funds; at least two had been waiting
for months for Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) loans.
The greatest compromise is made through the use of volunteer
labor. Most of the volunteer workers for the faith-based agencies
are university students or those who can to afford to take a week
off work. These students and professionals usually have little
knowledge or experience of skilled construction trades. The tens
of thousands of hurricane-affected residents who dont have
the money to hire professionals to rebuild their homes are obliged
to rely on these willing, but unskilled volunteers!
Our team, for instance, was assigned tasks such as tiling,
roofing and siding installation, although none of us had
any prior experience in these trades. In each case, we first stopped
at a hardware store, bought how-to booklets and then tried to
learn something about the work during the car ride to the respective
homes. The results were entirely predictable.
The volunteer labors lack of productivity was also astounding.
Our group of six worked only 25 hours in seven days.
Six and a half of those hours were spent tiling and grouting
the floor of a single medium-sized room. This was only the second
of seven flood-damaged rooms that needed retiling; at the pace
at which the work was proceeding, it would have taken a month
to retile the rest of the house. Following that, electricity and
plumbing will still need to be repaired or restored, and the entire
house refurnished. Meanwhile, the family of three lives in a tiny
FEMA trailer.
Six additional hours went toward trying to install vinyl siding
on another house. The owner could not afford to hire professional
installers or even purchase enough materials. We began to work,
but soon recognized that the operation should be halted until
the siding could be installed correctly.
Sadly, despite our good intentions, we left the house in worse
condition than we had found it, as we had taken off the trim on
the old siding. PDA denied financial aid for purchase of the materials
needed to the job properly, on the grounds that it was not hurricane-related
damage. Given that the owner had been waiting for two months for
a FEMA loan, the replacement of his siding has now been delayed
indefinitely.
At another house, we spent 12 hours fixing a leaking roof and
making small repairs to the walls. The leak was from a roof rebuilt
by volunteers only a month previously! Again, because of insufficient
funds and inadequate skills, the job had been done improperly.
Rather than replacing a large number of rotting and poorly constructed
roof joists, new shingles had simply been applied over the top.
The result was obvious: the shingles looked nice and new, but
they came in waves. Some sections of the roof would sink a foot
if stepped on.
Because of the unevenness of the shingles, pools of water formed
after heavy rains and eventually produced leaks. Trying to fix
one of these leaks, our group removed a section of the roof, throwing
out perhaps 50 brand-new shingles, and then replaced it. Undoubtedly,
other leaks will occur; probably all we did was shift around the
area where leaks will occur.

Meanwhile, a side wall of the house had at least six different
exteriors to it, due to patching. A support beam was so rotten
that it was accidentally kicked out. The entire side of the house
needed to be rebuilt, but again, because the owner lacked funds,
it was not possible. Arguing this was not hurricane damage, PDA
denied funds, except to buy expandable foam to fill the holes.
To sum up, for those along the Gulf Coast who had their property
damaged or destroyed, there are two options: pay a private contractor
or rely on charity. Neither the federal nor the state government
will lift a finger. And relief does not come quickly: one year
later, some houses havent been touched, while others are
stalled waiting on funding. Public assistance only comes in the
form of FEMA trailers and paltry, unfulfilled FEMA loans. Many,
many people have been left without any means of properly rebuilding
their homes, as they lack the resources to do anything except
rely on volunteer labor.
See Also:
White House report on Katrina:
no blame, no accountability for hurricane disaster
[25 February 2006]
Katrina, the Iraq
war and the struggle for socialism
[23 September 2005]
Hurricane disaster
shows the failure of the profit system
Build a socialist political alternative for working people
[7 September 2005]
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