Louisiana NAACP Head Urges Shelter Denizens to Organize
Branden Coyle
The New Standard, September 14th 2005
Sep 14 - As part of an extensive and ongoing effort to aid those displaced
by Hurricane Katrina, the head of the Louisiana arm of the NAACP called on
survivors staying in shelters to begin organizing committees to handle resource
distribution, information gathering and dissemination and agitating for better
treatment from government agencies.
Stating that "in unity there is strength," Louisiana NAACP President Ernest
L. Johnson urged the evacuees to immediately form committees and "elect a
chairperson and a secretary and begin holding meetings, organizing and working
as a team for better treatment."
An unknown number of people have sought refuge in shelters throughout the
country, with Texas hosting at least 10,000 in shelters in Houston, San Antonio
and Dallas, the Associated Press reports. The Red Cross estimates that there
are over 750,000 refugees from hurricane-ravaged areas. The organization
said it is housing more than 75,000 people in nineteen states.
As of yesterday, the federal government has provided financial assistance
to 430,000 Katrina refugees, the Department of Homeland Security stated.
Johnson's announcement was conducted in coordination with several bloggers
and came in advance of public service announcements on Baton Rouge radio
and a web video release.
As part of the organizing, Johnson said the evacuees should build a list
of names to provide to FEMA workers to aid in benefit claims. The national
NAACP has mobilized over 500,000 members to aid Katrina refugees, the AP
reported today.
The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) is also
helping refugees organize. At a meeting of the New Orleans chapter in Baton
Rouge, displaced members discussed plans to organize for better relief efforts,
the group said. A similar meeting was held in Houston last Friday.