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New Orleans police attack residents protesting public housing
demolition
By Jeff Lassahn
22 December 2007
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On Thursday, New Orleans police attacked demonstrators attempting
to gain entrance to a city council meeting scheduled to discuss
and vote on the destruction of 4,500 units of public housing.
The proposed demolition is part of the effort to utilize the devastation
wrought by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 to bring about permanent
demographic change in New Orleans, aimed at preventing the return
of poor and primarily black residents.
The local authorities and police acted in a thoroughly provocative
manner Thursday. A police SWAT team was located inside the hall
between council members and the audience, while barriers were
set up outside manned by dozens of police.
Protesters first attempted to open the iron gates blocking
their access to the meeting, alleging that the meeting was disproportionately
filled with supporters of the demolition. Police responded with
Tasers and large cans of mace, resulting in four hospitalizations.
Videos of the event show demonstrators first being sprayed and
forcibly kept from entering, and later, flushing their eyes out
with water.
According to the Associated Press, One woman was sprayed
by police and dragged from the gates; emergency workers took her
away on a stretcher. Another woman said she was stunned by officers,
and still had what appeared to be a Taser wire hanging from her
shirt. I was just standing, trying to get into my City Council
meeting, said the dazed woman, Kim Ellis, who was taken
away in an ambulance.
The elected officials incurred the wrath of demonstrators and
others by their arrogant and indifferent attitude. City
Council memberssome sipping water, others leafing through
file folderslooked on impassively as a man was tasered,
handcuffed and dragged from the council chambers, reports
the Los Angeles Times.
In the end, in what was largely a foregone conclusion, the
seven-member council voted unanimously to demolish public housing
units, confirming the suspicions of residents and demonstrators
that their opposition would not be registered. Democratic Party
mayor Ray Nagin issued a press release in which he claimed that
this is an incredible day. You heard lots of pain today.
The City Council in its wisdom has come up with a solution that
will allow us to move forward, to hold HUD [Housing and Urban
Development] accountable.
Various groups demanding that the housing be rebuilt offer
a different story. The complexes now slated for demolition have
been boarded up for over two years, ever since Katrina hit New
Orleans. Some 3,000 former residents of public housing have been
unable to return and are spread throughout the country. Of the
buildings in question, some barely sustained any damage during
the hurricane and reportedly could be repaired and reopened within
a relatively short time, but are now slated for destruction.
According to Nicolai Ouroussoff, architecture critic of the
New York Times, in an article highly critical of the proposed
demolition, The projects in New Orleans have little
to do with the sterile brick towers and alienating plazas that
usually come to mind when we think of inner-city housing. Some
rank among the best early examples of public housing built in
the United States, both in design and in quality of construction.
Ouroussoff continues: The quality of the construction
materials would also be unimaginable in public housing today:
Their concrete structural frames, red-brick facades and pitched
terra cotta roofs would seem at home on a university campus.
The problems facing these projects have more to do with
misguided policy and the citys complex racial history than
with bad design. The deterioration can be attributed to the governments
decision decades ago to gut most of the public services that supported
them.
In any event, whatever the shape of the housing, the residents
are no doubt correct in their suspicion that they are unwanted
and that little or nothing will be done to bring them home.
An unusually high 57 percent of New Orleans residents were
renters prior to Katrina. Since the storm, rent has skyrocketed
45 percent in the city, making housing costs an enormous hurdle
for working-class residents trying to return. The homeless population
has nearly doubled, from 6,300 prior to Katrina to over 12,000
presently. In the face of such an acute housing crisis, the lack
of any effort to repair the public housing up for demolition shows
the decision is not just a matter of engineering.
Instead, the vote to demolish housing is a continuation of
policies intended to refashion New Orleans in the interest of
business and profit. The projects to be demolishedC.J. Peete,
B.W. Cooper, Lafitte, and St. Bernardwere indeed areas of
poverty and crime, as residents have testified. The city government
claims that their rebuilding as mixed-use units will
end this by intermixing higher-priced market rate housing with
subsidized public housing.
Of the new units, though, only 900 of 3,200 are reported to
be for low-income residents, ensuring a vast demographic change.
Thousands of predominantly black and working-class residents will
be forced into increasingly unaffordable housing, or join the
swelling ranks of the homeless population. After another project,
St. Thomas, now River Garden, underwent redevelopment only 25
percent of the housing was subsidized compared to 75 percent at
market rate. Of 800 families originally living there, only 70
have been able to return.
Overall housing policies show a similar trend of redevelopment
in the interests of profit and demographic change. The city of
New Orleans is able to demolish houses for alleged health and
safety reasons, with little input from residents themselves, thus
quickly clearing the way for redevelopment. Tracy Washington,
the president of the Louisiana Justice Institute, told Democracy
Now of a 61-year-old woman who had finally received a $130,000
grant to rebuild her home, only to find that the city had demolished
it despite her protests. In return she was offered $100,000, far
below what is needed to purchase land and build a new house.
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