Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Ten years Post Katrina 08/2015

                                                                   TEN YEARS POST  KATRINA                                                                                                                                                                                                         
 Ten years post Katrina 08/29/2015. Here we are in Atlanta Ga. my wife and I and our daughter.  Minus the   townhouse and the headaches that it brought after the Katrina destroyed it. Hurricane Isaac knock a hole in the roof and the tenets that was renting had to move out, leaving us with a house note and repairs which the new insurance post Katrina did not pay the full cost for repair.  The repairs were done with much struggle by contractors hired by our new best friend in New Orleans and my wife.  The section 8 tenet came with her issues and tore out the stairwell to take her washer and dry out and left us with repairs which we could not make. By this time we had decide that it would be in our best interest to sell this townhouse and focus on moving from Woodland Hills Ca. to Georgia.  We choose Georgia because we wanted to be closer to our extended families. Only with the kindness and patients of our close friends Linda and Bob were we able to put together the funds to make that cross country move in October 2011.
Just after the arriving from Hawaii 2005 where we were on August 29 2005, celebrating my 50th birthday our flight was rerouted to Jackson Mississippi and there we were housed by my wife’s mother. It’s from Starkville Mississippi we started to try and get our lives back into some kind of order.  My wife and I began the never ending  ordeal  of fighting with the insurance companies about what they was now going to pay for while we was now homeless.  The local community of Starkville was given the use of a local church as a meeting, feeding and aid distribution sight. Our friends and some family members gave us support and some financial help which was what was needed most to move out of the temporary housing that FEMA was funding at the local hotel for Katrina evacuees.  We moved to the hotel for the privacy and just room to gather our thoughts together, on which way forward.  This was  also the first time we had seen Halliburton company personal in their red jumpsuits, most likely headed to the gulf cost as part of the privet contractors used by FEMA to clean up and rebuild the gulf cost. The Red Cross handed out some checks once in Starkville about $350 and that was all the support from the Red Cross that we knowingly received.
We did get a couple offers of work in Starkville from the local hospital but the wages were nowhere near the funds we needed to even try to pay a house note, car note and other bills that were still coming due every month.  Once Ray Nagin open the city back up we rented a U-Haul and drove the four and half hours down to east New Orleans to see for ourselves the massive extent of the devastation and destruction that wind and water could do. All of the major landmarks were closed due to flood damage all the schools, all the home had some find of water damage and light phone service was still out. There was only spotty cell phone service. On our street the large oak tree was still standing but the neighbor’s tree had fell into their yard. Our two neighbors across the street had started repairs. My car was setting in the driveway just as we had left it August 23, 2005.  But it had a brown water stain up to the mid windshield and the interior was molding and my much love rust color poncho was ruined.  I backed the U-Haul in and to our surprise the keys worked and we were able to open the door. What awaited us was a surreal world where things, furniture was in awkward positions and in places that did not make sense  but only water or something could have moved them into such positions.  And then there was the things that was unmoved it seemed, like the dining room table that was unmoved and all my cookbooks on them was dry and the china cabinet still standing and the china still in place and not one piece broken.  The water line on the walls was about six feet pulse and the black mole had started to creep up the wall and foul the air.
It was the mole smell that was in all of the stuff that was not water damaged. Upstairs on the second floor it was dry but mole had started to grow on everything up there and foul it with that moldy smell. So we just started pulling thing out. We were just numbed by the level of destruction and lose we were subjected to and witnesses.  My wife was upset and crying some but we was just taking in and inventorying the level of loss and destruction we was now facing.
We stayed on the west bank with my wife’s cousin who had evacuated and had returned back and had their home back up and she was working at Tulane hospital. Charity Hospital laid off its entire staff and was forcing anyone who wanted to remain a state worker to reapply under new rules                                   [http://savecharityhospital.com/].  With no job and no home we could not return back to East New Orleans to live. While in Starkville we had used the public library to open up new email address that’s why mines remain fgminstarkville@yhaoo.com today I’ve now added footholder1955@gmail.com thereafter.
As a person who feels that a government that forces you to live under it rules and laws has expected amount of responsibility to the people who are forced to live under its rules and laws. Before Katrina we had organized a group called Advocate Louisiana for Public Health in New Orleans with members from a peace group called C3, and was about to welcome the Physician for National Health Care, Physicians for Single Payer. They had announced that they would be holding their national convention in New Orleans that October of 2005 and we were going to use that occasion to further push our demand for Single Payer Heath care for Louisiana.  We had succeed in get through the state legislators a resolution to support a study of the feasibility of doing a study of doing a study on the befit of a Single Payer Health Care system for Louisiana. That was done with the support and forms we had held for the district and the candidates running for office in our district and the candidate that wound had been put on record from the forms that he would support a study of implementing a Single Payer Health Care system for Louisiana. Rep Juan La Fonta gave us room to present our demand at a hearing of the health and human service committee and carried our bill for this study. It passed and we were not able to follow it up after Katrina.
The activist who help us with work on health care were already involved in the antiwar work C 3 and saw the need to support or original work at keeping Louisiana State University  the administrators of Charity Hospital from closing floor and clinics. Our meetings for ALPH were held at a local mosque that gave us space and time
Once we arrive in Los Angeles from Starkville Mississippi, we were given support by our friends and some local actives to get our story out.  There were a number of interviews with Prof. Saul Sarabia of UCLA, Shantel Vachani UCLA school of Law, had an on air interview with Margaret Prescod  of KPFK with Brad Ott. Brad Ott was still in New Orleans leading the work around re-opening Charity Hospital and continued his education.  Here is the outcome of his years of work. Brad said most of the research in this article was from the work he had done over pass six years,  {http://www.thenation.com/article/why-was-new-orleanss-charity-hospital-allowed-die/ } here is another web site that you can follow the Charity Hospital situation and read its history { http://savecharityhospital.com/ }. We also did an interview with Debo Kotun who all put it on CD.  At every opportunity we made an effort to get the story out on what was going on in New Orleans, Margaret Prescod also had a Women First Strict Event and Brave New Films also had an event we were given space to speak. We were given space and time at the KRST Unity Center for African Spirituality and meet some local South Central community members that wanted to help and link up with the people in New Orleans.  While in New Orleans I made contact with Leon Waters, commongroundrelief.org, People’s Hurricane Relief Fund, and Community Labor United.  Peoples Hurricane Relief Found held a people tribunal and issued a finding they also made a major complaint about the Red Cross not helping or giving out the millions of dollars it had collected.
There was a legislative effort from the Black Congressional Black Caucus H.R. 4197 and S. 2319 in 2005 but it  was not reintroduced  2006 by the congressional black caucus or than Senator Obama.                      { http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/congressional-black-caucus-introduces-hurricane-katrina-relief-legislation-to-help-gulf-coast-residents-55279887.html }. Senator Obama at that time refused to add the prevision about addressing the poverty that Katrina exposited. Senator Obama also refused to reintroduce the S.2319 in the 2006 congressional section.
The Bush, governor Kathleen Blanco, mayor Ray Nagin, the congressional Black Caucus Senator and now President Obama let us all drown in this manmade disaster called Katrina and I will never forget or forgive them for what fail to do and in respect all the people who lost their lives and those that are still not right.
This is one story of one Katrina survivor and not the whole story, Freddie G. Monroe.


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