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Katrina’s Impact 18 Months Later

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Katrina’s Impact. 18 Months Later. Displaced Housing Healthcare Education Infrastructure Criminal Justice Signs of Hope. 25% of New Orleans Do Not Own Car. Not Just New Orleans. City Hall, Long Beach, MS. Katrina Damaged 90,000 Square Miles. Area from Boston to Baltimore - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Katrina’s Impact

Katrina’s Impact

18 Months Later

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• Displaced

• Housing

• Healthcare

• Education

• Infrastructure

• Criminal Justice

• Signs of Hope

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25% of New Orleans Do Not Own Car

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Not Just New Orleans

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City Hall, Long Beach, MS

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Katrina Damaged

90,000 Square Miles

Area from Boston to Baltimore

Inland hundreds of miles

Size of Oregon

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Still Displaced

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80% of New Orleans Flooded

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One Million Displaced

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September 10, 2005 in Shelters

• 64% Renters

• 55% Did Not Have a Car

• 93% African-American

• 67% Employed

• 76% Had Children under 18 In Shelter Too

• 57% incomes of Less than $20,000/year

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280,000 Still Displaced New Orleans Alone

• Pre-K 484,000 people• Post-K 200,000 people• African-American pop dropped from 325,000 to

89,000 (73% decrease)• White pop dropped from 136,000 to 81,000 (41

% decrease)• Children decreased from 145,000 to 40,000 • Metro Area dropped from 1 million to 666k

Source: LRA 11.27.06

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St. Bernard Parish: Post-K Rent Only to Blood Relatives

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Jefferson Parish Council Passes Resolution Opposing

Tax Credits for Housing. Member

Chris Roberts: "With the number of jobs out there,

nobody should be

on public housing

unless you're ignorant or lazy."

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We do not want “thugs” and “trash” from New Orleans

public housing projects.

Everyone with dreadlocks or che-wee

hairstyles will be stopped by law enforcement.”

Sheriff Jack StrainSt. Tammany Parish

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Housing

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DAMAGED HOMES IN LOUISIANA

• 112,000 Owner occupied homes

• 84,000

Rental homes

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90,000 Families in LA in 240 sq ft. Trailers – January 07

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Good News – LA gets $10 billion

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Bad News: Little Federal Housing Rehab $ Yet

February 2007 – 532 people out of 105,000 applicants

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Estimated 5% of the 100,000 LA Applications

forFederal Housing Assistance

have Title Problems

Source: LRA RFP Legal Services October 25, 2006

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51,000 Rental Units Seriously Damaged in New Orleans

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CDBG – Tiny % Going to Renters

84,000 rental units were destroyed or suffered major damage (41% of the total housing) only 15% of the $10 billion program is to be spent on rental units.

Of those funds only 15,000 apartments are scheduled to be affordable housing – about 18% of the pre-disaster rental housing market.

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Rents Soar

70-80%

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Pre-Katrina, 5000 families lived in public housing

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Post-Katrina, 1040 families allowed to return to

public housing

HUD Announces Demolition of 5000 Apartments

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Healthcare

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Refusal to Reopen Public Hospital –that saw 350,000 a year

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Half the Hospitals in New Orleans Remain Closed

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People Have Lost Jobs, Health Insurance, Hospital, Doctor, Dentist,

Pharmacy, Records

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Impact on Children?

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Pre-Katrina 450 Psych Beds in Metro Area – Now 80

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Suicide Rate Triples

• Lost Half Psychiatrists• Lost Half

Psychologists• Lost Half Social

Workers

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Education

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Pre-K - 56,000 students in over 100 public schools

Katrina hits -public schools put in receivership-Best schools converted into charters

2006-2007 - 25,000 students -69% in Charter Schools

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Largest Union in LouisianaUnited Teachers of New Orleans

DECERTIFIED

7500 people lose jobs

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Problems in Public Schools

• February 2007 – 300+ no room in schools

• Long delays in textbooks

• Unreliable transportation system

• Vacant teaching jobs

• Little IDEA education

• One high school has more security guards than teachers

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High School Entrance

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In Houston, 41% of high school sophomores

and 52% juniors of evacuees were held back.

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Infrastructure

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City of New Orleans

Near Bankruptcy

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Environmental Impact?

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Major Water

Problems

New Orleans Losing

More Water Than Using

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Lower 9th Ward No Drinkable Water For One Full

Year

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Half Homes in NO Still Not Hooked Up to Electricity

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“I am back and I want to work, but the jobs are 3 to 11

and the bus doesn’t run at night!”

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Still Unfixed Traffic Lights!

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Dramatic Reduction in Day Care

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Pre-K 600,000 Jobs in Metro NO;Post – K 400,000 jobs

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Recruitment and Abuse of Immigrant Workers

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Workers Living in Tents

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Dramatic Reduction in Public Education, Healthcare, Housing,

Transportation, & Childcare Equals

Reduction in African American Women Workers - From 51,000 to 17,000

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Privatization of New Orleans

• Public Schools to Charter Schools

• Public Housing to Private Developers

• Public Healthcare to Private Providers

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Superdome is Opened

- $180 Million

Public Hospitals?

Public Schools?

Public Housing?

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Criminal Justice

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6000 – 8000 Prisoners Left Behind

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Evidence Room: Chest-deep Water

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2000 criminal case backlog – Dec 2006

• Insufficient #s Public Defenders

• Problems with Jail Facilities

• Absent retired or quit NOPD officers

• Evidence problems

• District Attorney problems

• Displaced victims, witnesses

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November 29, 2006

Inmate lost in system resurfaces:After 13 months he gets day in court

After spending 13 months in three different state prisons without speaking to a single defense attorney, prosecutor or judge, Pedro Parra-Sanchez pleaded innocent Tuesday to an assault

charge levied against him six days after he moved to New Orleans to work in the battered city’s recovery.”

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Seven Police Officers Charged with Murder

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Meanwhile, Crime Increases

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Signs of Hope

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Our Hearts Must BeTotally Open

to Injustice and Painand

Totally Opento Hope and Love

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St. Augustine’s Church

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Guest Workers Protest Passport Confiscation – Sulphur, LA

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Advancement Project

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Small Business Assistance

Kevin J. Curnin, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan; David Goldberg, associate general counsel of Citigroup;

Tricia Jefferson, Lawyers Comm. Civil Rights

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http://law.loyno.edu/~quigley/