Displaced New Orleans Community Demands Action, Accountability
and Initiates A People’s Hurricane Fund
Becky Belcore, September 6th 2005
Not until the fifth day of the federal government’s inept and inadequate
emergency response to the New Orleans’ disaster did George Bush even acknowledge
it was ‘unacceptable.’ ‘Unacceptable’ doesn’t begin to describe the depth
of the neglect, racism and classism shown to the people of New Orleans.
The government’s actions and inactions were criminal. New Orleans, a city
whose population is almost 70% percent black, 40% illiterate, and many are
poor, was left day after day to drown, to starve and to die of disease and
thirst.
The people of New Orleans will not go quietly into the night, scattering
across this country to become homeless in countless other cities while federal
relief funds are funneled into rebuilding casinos, hotels, chemical plants
and the wealthy white districts of New Orleans like the French Quarter and
the Garden District. We will not stand idly by while this disaster is used
as an opportunity to replace our homes with newly built mansions and condos
in a gentrified New Orleans.
Community Labor United (CLU), a coalition of the progressive organizations
throughout New Orleans, has brought community members together for eight
years to discuss socio-economic issues. We have been communicating
with people from The Quality Education as a Civil Right Campaign, the Algebra
Project, the Young People’s Project and the Louisiana Research Institute
for Community Empowerment. We are preparing a press release and framing
document that will be out as a draft later today for comments.
Here is what we are calling for:
We are calling for all New Orleanians remaining in the city to be
evacuated immediately.
We are calling for information about where every evacuee was taken.
We are calling for black and progressive leadership to come together to
meet in Baton Rouge to initiate the formation of a Community Oversight Committee
of evacuees from all the sites. This committee will demand to oversee
FEMA, the Red Cross and other organizations collecting resources on behalf
of our people.
We are calling for volunteers to enter the shelters where our people
are and to assist parents with housing, food, water, health care and access
to aid.
We are calling for teachers and educators to carve out some time to
come to evacuation sites and teach our children.
We are calling for city schools and universities near evacuation sites
to open their doors for our children to go to school.
We are calling for health care workers and mental health workers to
come to evacuation sites to volunteer.
We are calling for lawyers to investigate the wrongful death of those
who died, to protect the land of the displaced, to investigate whether
the levies broke due to natural and other related matters.
We are calling for evacuees from our community to actively participate
in the rebuilding of New Orleans.
We are calling for the addresses of all the relevant list serves and
press contacts to send our information.
We are in the process of setting up a central command post in Jackson, MS,
where we will have phone lines, fax, email and a web page to centralize
information. We will need volunteers to staff this office.
We have set up a People’s Hurricane Fund that will be directed and
administered by New Orleanian evacuees. The Young People’s Project,
a 501(c)3 organization formed by graduates of the Algebra Project, has agreed
to accept donations on behalf of this fund. Donations can be mailed
to:
The People’s Hurricane Fund
c/o The Young People’s Project
440 N. Mills St., Suite 200,
Jackson, MS
39202