Sonsyrea Tate
Washington Informer, September 13th 2005
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Ronald Breland, 53, needed a cold beer after the storm.
“Our house was a two-story, so we didn’t expect the water to rise the way
it rose. When it came up, it just flooded everything,” Breland said told
The Informer Wednesday afternoon. A tall, then, but sturdy man, Brlenad was
born and raised in New Orleans. His family moved from a housing project into
a subdivision of private homes in Ponchatrain when he was five. After a four
year tour in the Marines, he returned to his hometown. He and his brother
were among those who tried to hang on after the historic hurricane hit Monday.
“Was”. Breland is adjusting to the loss.
“The helicopters started coming in and telling everybody to move out. When
we had this before, the water came up but went back down. But when it came
up the second time, it came up with the oil from the cars out in the street
and the stuff in the sewers. It turned the water black,” Breland said.
Breland was huddled with five people on the second floor in his house – his
brother and a few neighbors.
“We all stuck together and we all wound up here,” Breland told a reporter
last week, sitting in a corner of a park off 17th and Massachusetts in southeast.
He and his friends arrived at the D.C. Armory Tuesday when city officials,
federal agents, and throngs of volunteers welcomed them to 300 cots, plenty
of good food, donated clothes and toiletries, and Wal-Mart vouchers for shopping.
They also had vouchers for other retailers.
Breland and the other survivors became instant celebs.
“You should’ve seen it,” said Timothy Funchess, sitting in a neighborhood
park near the Armory. “They had a parade for us coming in. People were honking
their horns and waving at the bus, and when we got here, the people in the
neighborhood were standing out there with “welcome” signs.
Breland and Funchess met at the D.C. Armory and became fast friends. Wednesday
evening they found a nearby liquor store, a nearby park, and settled in -
to settle down.
“We’re new in your city. Just visiting really,” Breland said by way of introduction
to a woman he did not guess was a reporter. Breland and Funchess had drifted
away from the Armory, away from the glitz and the bustle, away from a throng
of reporters seeking their survival stories.
“It was a bunch of them standing out there at the front,” Breland said. His
teeth look like chickletts with wide spaces between. His baritone voice ought
to be on radio. Breland made it clear up front that he would talk as long
as there were no cameras. “I was one of the looters,” he said.
“He was looting. People needed food. What else were they supposed to do?”
Funchess piped in.
Funchess sounds more southern, even referred to D.C. as up north. He wore
black sweat pants and a blue hospital smock – courtesy of donation. They
both wore official I.D. badges bearing the D.C. logo and the word “temporary.”
Funchess talked about his old job as a hotel porter. He is sure his job will
be there when he returns. “Yeah it’s still standing. It’s historic,” he said
of the Sonaite House Hotel where he worked the past three and a half years.
“They said we can go back in a couple of months.”
“The days leading up to the flood? I was working and stuff, but come Sunday
they were telling everybody to evacuate. But we said we’re staying because
we’ve been lucky 40 years, but the luck ran out, and come Monday morning,
about 8:30 or so it started raining very heavy and the winds were blowing
about 140-150 miles per hour,” Funchess said.
Funchess was in the house with his elderly father, who is also incapacitated.
As the water rose and it became clear that it would not recede as usual,
Funchess wondered how he could get his father out and keep the old man lifted
high enough to keep his head above water.
“The water started rising, so the first night we stayed in the attic,” Funchess
said. The house got about three feet of water. The next morning, friends
in the house next to us said ‘ya’ll need to come stay with us’. So we took
all the canned food and went to stay with them. We lasted for seven days
and they finally came and told us we had to leave because they said they
were closing the city and we had to leave.”
Funchess, his father, and their neighbors were rescued on a boat, then a
helicopter picked them up and took them to an airport, where they stayed
until boarding a plane. The plane ride was two hours.
“We watched ‘Herbie the Love Bug’,” Funchess said.
Breland and his brother wandered around the airport for three days, not knowing
what to expect next, determined to stay together.
They had not wanted to leave their home even after the flood – especially
after the flood.
“We were takin’ stuff upstairs, wiping it off,” Breland said. “They way they
got us here, when we go back everything’s going to be matted down. They’re
going to take about two months, so we’re really going to lose everything.
You could’ve save some things. Washed it off and saved it.”
Last Wednesday evening Breland and Funchess declined Mayor Anthony William’s
free tickets to a Nationals game, but Funchess was excited that one of his
old friends had been chosen to toss the opening pitch.
People from his part of New Orleans are not that into baseball.
“But one of the guys here with me is pitching the first ball tonight. It’s
five of us. Benjamin Camp was pitching. His father, Clinton Camp was going
with him.
Funchess named the other guys in his group. They are the country’s real survivors
at this point. This is their moment of fame. Funchess’ father, Willie Clay,
is handicapped, wheelchair bound, and he made it here. “He’ll be 67 on Sept.
10,” Funchess said. “Of that’s Saturday? What day of the week is this? I
have to keep up now.”
City services here have been good, Breland and Funchess agreed.
“The city has been wonderful to us, and the shelter’s making sure all our
needs are met,” Funchess said. “They’re giving us clothes, shoes, underwear,
soap, the works. They’re really making sure we keep fluid in our body and
food on our stomachs…good food, too.”
Meatballs, salad, crabcakes, pasta. “The crabcakes were the best,” Breland
said.
Bar-be-que chicken, fruit, chips, smothered fish. “This morning we had eggs
and cheese on French bread.”
“The French bread wasn’t all that good,” Breland added.
“Yeah, we’re from New Orleans. If we were there we would’ve had grits. Up
here in the north, they don’t know that.”
Northerners also don’t know much about landscaping the men agreed. “Who cuts
yall’s grass? We were just talking about that,” Funchess said.
“They just leave the stuff laying there,” Breland said. He was a landscaper
back home.
“We were saying he could go around here house to house and show them what
a lawn is supposed to look like. Ya’ll don’t know how green it could be,”
Funchess said.
“But I might not be here long enough to get the job,” Breland said, looking
around.
So many of there fellow survivors already had left by Wednesday evening.
Relatives and friends from nearby had picked them up. Funchess already had
talked to relatives in California to take him and his father in. They might
get plane tickets courtesy of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
“In the last two days, a lot of people have left,” Funchess said.