Statement by AFL-CIO President John Sweeney On the 2-Year Anniversary of Katrina August 28, 2007
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For
information:
Steve
Smith
202/637-5018
Statement
by AFL-CIO President John
Sweeney
On
the 2-Year Anniversary of
Katrina
August 28,
2007
New
Orleans
isn’t a city forgotten, it’s a city
deliberately abandoned.
Not by our country’s good citizens –
who well
remember the painful images of people stranded
on rooftops and at the
convention center, but by the leaders of our
federal government.
Two years after an 18-foot wall of
water
followed the howling winds of Hurricane
Katrina into the city, the levees
haven’t been repaired, the cleanup
hasn’t been completed, no significant
affordable housing has been restored, and
213,000 of the city’s people haven’t
been able to return to their neighborhoods or
their jobs.
The
problem, which extends into the entire
Gulf
Coast
region, is a lack of federal
commitment at the top.
In March when he
visited the city, President Bush claimed $110
billion in federal funds had been
sent to New
Orleans. Actually, less than $59
billion had been
allocated to the entire state of
Louisiana
and as of this week, according to The New
York Times, only $6.7 billion
has been spent in the state, just $3.39
billion of that in New
Orleans.
Over
the past two years, thousands of volunteers
have streamed into New
Orleans.
Hundreds of thousands of individuals
have donated money, food and
clothing. More
have opened up their
homes and communities to evacuees.
Non-profit organizations have taken on
projects ranging from emergency
housing to tourism development. Our own
AFL-CIO Gulf Coast Revitalization Program is
deep into $1 billion worth of
strategies to produce new housing, fund
economic development projects, create
thousands of new jobs, train workers to fill
those jobs and guarantee the
right-of-return for all former public housing
tenants.
Even
so, crime is on the increase and 45 public
schools remain closed in Orleans
Parish alone. Half
the hospitals are
still shuttered.
The city is down more
than 100,000 jobs.
And the Lower Ninth
Ward remains as it was the day after the flood
waters receded: A ravaged war
zone whose refugees aren’t able to
return.
The
restoration of New
Orleans is a
loaded train that requires a powerful engine
to pull it. Only
our federal government has the engine to
do it, but so far, it hasn’t left the yard
except for public relations
junkets. Every
day, New
Orleans grows into a
more shameful chapter in our
nation’s history, a bigger symbol of federal
leadership incompetence and
neglect.
-end-