It has been nearly three years since Hurricanes Katrina and Rita devastated the gulf coast region, leaving behind a wake of suffering and human misery unmatched in recent American history. Sadly, the victims of this crisis are still suffering and residents of the Gulf Coast region are still waiting for the government to do the right thing by investing in the region, cleaning up and rebuilding New Orleans and surrounding communities. The scale of this crisis is unimaginable for a modern, developed nation with the industrial strength and collective will we have to remedy the situation. As a country, it is time for us to come together and call for justice for the victims of Katrina and Rita with a comprehensive, public works program designed to address the real needs of people who are still suffering from this natural disaster.
In New Orleans and surrounding regions, people continue to suffer from unhealthy living conditions. Many areas lack basic social services and there always remains the looming threat of Mother Nature once again taking more. We have the means to address this crisis. Recently Congress introduced the Gulf Coast Works Act, which is designed to restore the region. The Gulf Coast Works Act will ensure that real progress is made toward restoring the environment, rebuilding infrastructure, and revitalizing the workforce of the area. The Act will provide 100,000 job opportunities for residents to rebuild their communities and it will create incentives for local and national business to participate in the redevelopment of the Gulf Coast region.
If this bill is introduced into the Senate I will work to support this companion legislation as a candidate and work to ensure that all victims of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have the opportunity to rebuild their lives and make New Orleans the city it truly deserves to be. Real solutions to the problems of jobs, infrastructure development and environmental restoration are possible with the collective participation of our entire society. Unfortunately, at a time when the people of New Orleans really needed our support our President was too busy waging war halfway around the world. Instead of dealing with the real crisis at home, the Bush administration and FEMA largely neglected the disaster which had struck the gulf region, betraying a fundamental trust that the people have in government that it will be there at times of national crisis.
Thankfully, some people still believe that when disaster strikes, we the people will respond. In addition to the numerous private efforts which have accomplished many good works since 2005, the federal government has finally woken up to the reality of the situation and is finally going to do something right. The Gulf Coast Works Act will create a federal authority with the ability to implement and coordinate the necessary federal response in the event of a future natural disaster in the region. It will put people to work rebuilding vital infrastructure and restoring the environment and it will spur sustainable development in the community, giving people a sense of dignity and justice.
By working to rebuild the roads, levees, police stations, schools, firehouses and public utilities in the gulf region we are rebuilding America. By cleaning up the marshes, wetlands and restoring the natural ecology of the region we are protecting the planet. By serving as a national model for disaster recovery and infrastructure development we are protecting the future.
for more information on the Gulf Coast Civic Works Act please visit:
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Would you support a "Support
Would you support a "Support the Iowa Flood Victims" Act of 2008, Chris? This year, these people were devastated by torrential rains and floods that wiped out many homes, farms, businesses and entire cities. You don't hear a lot of finger pointing by bleeding hearts about lack of Federal Gov't help in this case -- maybe it's because the hardworking people of the Midwest are too busy picking themselves up and working to re-build. You don't have local politicians posturing - they're working with they're constituents to re-build as opposed to playing politics with a disaster.
Would you support a "Support
Would you support a "Support the Iowa Flood Victims" Act of 2008
It already exists, there is no need for it. The federal government spends billions on flood relief every year and is no doubt spending quite a bit in Iowa, Wisconsin and other states right now.
Chris, I think that act has contradictory aims. You can not restore the natural hydrology and rebuild all that was there. Those things are trade-offs. Also, the natural hydrology wants to switch to the Atchafalaya Basin as the main channel, something we have been preventing at great cost since the early 1960s.
The best thing to do in the Delta is build up Lafayette as the new major port, gradually dismantle Old River Control, and let New Orleans be a smaller city thriving on the bayou harvest, history and culture.
Rikki?
What is "natural hydrology?" I'm sorry -- maybe I'm slow. And the "natural hydrology want(ing) to switch to the Atchafalaya Basin..." what is that? How can a natural hydrology want to do something? Seems pretty heavy, Rikki.
Could it be that we simply had a very big storm hit an area below sea level and the levees failed so we're left to decide how best to clean it up and re-build it while the local and state politicians continue to blame the federal government for all of their failures as opposed to getting off of their asses and doing something themselves?
will
How can a natural hydrology want to do something?
Hydrology is the flow of water in a system. Hydrology can be disrupted by dams or, in the case of the Mississippi Delta, levees and canals. Through such structures, we impose our will on the hydrology, but the water still wants to do what it had been doing before we interfered. The Mississippi River wants to move its main channel into tha Atchafalaya Basin. Hydrologists noticed this process mid-century, and the United States constructed a massive structure upstream of Baton Rouge that lets us control how much of the river flows toward New Orleans and the Acadian Basin and how much flows toward Lafayette and the Atchafalaya Basin.
Obviously, it is we who have brains who are doing the actually wanting, but by resisting our efforts, the river, by default, gains agency. The Mississippi wants to change course through the delta, as big rivers with deltas are wont to do.
Try Reading The Storm
Try reading The Storm: What Went Wrong and Why During Hurricane Katrina: the Inside Story from One Louisiana Scientist
by Ivor van Heerden
I bought the electric version here.
It is an excellent account of the cause of the destruction in New Orleans and the inept response from your friends in Washington.
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