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      Estee's Blog
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  <p id="description">Silver lining over Lake Pontchartrain

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     <h2 class="date-header">Wednesday, 06 February 2008</h2>
      
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    <h3 class="post-title">Message forwarded by Steve Zeltzer</h3>
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      <p>Pat LaMarche: New Orleans still looking to recover from Katrina
Wednesday, February 06, 2008 - Bangor Daily News  

What kind of government reconstructs infrastructure halfway around the world and leaves its fourth-largest port community to rebuild with charity?

Happy Mardi Gras! Or more appropriately now, Ash Wednesday.

Boy, New Orleans has really changed. Iım staying near the Lindy Boggs Medical Center. The parking lot lighting is still lying on the ground and the windows are all boarded up. It hasnıt opened since Hurricane Katrina struck more than two years ago. The neighbors tell me it will never open again.

September 2005 seems like yesterday. I remember the first mother I met who had lost a baby to the hurricane floods; she barely moved, hardly ate, and didnıt speak  at least not until we heard that Hurricane Rita was coming. Then this traumatized mom dragged herself from her cot in the River Center, Louisianaıs largest semipermanent shelter, and asked us to go find her baby.

Nobody could believe that this woman had waited weeks to tell people that her baby was missing. The woman said that initially she thought she would just wait for the authorities to find her little girl and then figured they would come and get her. But, she explained, she decided to ask us for help when she learned that a new hurricane was on its way.

I went to Baton Rouge with the Red Cross relief workers. I broadcast live on several area radio stations and wrote cover stories for another Maine newspaper. After seeing the gratuitous devastation for myself I know one thing: If youıve ever said anything nasty about the folks in New Orleans during or after Hurricane Katrina, then you werenıt there.

First of all, for an incredible number of Gulf Coast residents Katrina came as a pretty big surprise. After all, if the mayor, governor and president werenıt fretting, why would the residents? And with the lowest wage earners making the national minimum wage of $5.15 an hour, how could these ordinary folks afford to do anything anyway?

There was no excuse for the government underestimating Katrina, but no average person fathomed that a calamity the size of Katrina could strike with the speed, intensity and fury that it did.

Within 24 hours of Katrina hitting land, New Orleansı Ninth Ward was under 8 feet of water. When the water rose, people drowned.

Back to the lady and her daughter. When the water started rising in this womanıs house, she knew she had to get help. But the streets were a wall of water and she didnıt dare take her son and baby girl with her. She told her little boy to sit on the dresser and hold his sister high up out of the water and she would come right back.

When she found some folks with a boat she returned to her home to save her children. But it had taken too long. The baby was heavy, the little boy couldnıt hold her anymore, and she had drowned. Because the guys with the boat needed room in their rescue craft for other survivors they left the babyıs body behind. I donıt know if she ever recovered the body.

New Orleans has reopened for business. The Mardi Gras parades are back, hospitality abounds and food tantalizes; but the curse of Katrina remains.

Many folks have come back, a few never left and many will never return. For the folks who live here, the rubble and makeshift safety devices are reminders that their lives will never be the same. But deep inside they already know. Theyıre victims of living in a city without defenses.

Residents live in fear, still surrounded by FEMA trailers and rotting buildings, the cityıs mortality rateıs through the roof  43 percent higher then before the storm contaminated the environment with toxic chemicals and mold. Depressionıs a problem too  the suicide rate is nearly three times what it was before the storm.

New Orleans, the nationıs fourth-largest port, home to the countryıs greatest domestic disaster, still needs your help. You can go to www.levees.org or www.all4energy.org and make a contribution  theyıre just two of the nongovernmental organizations trying to solve the problems here. Or write to your favorite government official and ask what he or she intends to do.

Pat LaMarche of Yarmouth is the author of "Left Out In America: The State of Homelessness in the United States." She may be contacted at PatLaMarche@hotmail.com.
http://bangornews.com

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      <em>Estee Blancher @ 10:46 AM</em>
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		  <dd class="profile-data"><strong>Name:  :</strong> Estee Blancher</dd>
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		<p class="profile-textblock">I am a documentary filmmaker currently living in Monterey, California. A full-time student attending California State University at Monterey Bay, I will be graduating next spring. In September 2005, I returned to my home state of Louisiana following Hurricane Katrina to film the aftermath and record the stories of the people affected by the storm. Two years later, it's shocking to see how little progress has been made towards recovery and rebuilding; I continue with my efforts to help the Gulf Coast. 

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