Three Years After Hurricane Katrina, Homelessness Looms
News: Where are Katrina evacuee families supposed to go once FEMA kicks them out? A trailer park tale continues.
August 28, 2008
|
|
"That's President Bush hugging me. See how tightly he's hugging me?" It was the chilly end of 2006 in Baker, Louisiana, when Lena Beard asked me this, proudly waving a newspaper clipping my direction as we talked in her still-temporary home. The fading photo, taken the same day the mother of two took refuge on a mattress in a church after Hurricane Katrina, had served as proof after the levees burst that she was going to be okay. "I'm a veteran who has served my country and put my life on the line. I believed my country would take care of me and my family," she said.
But three years after natural disaster stripped Beard and her sons of their house in New Orleans, she is still not okay. Unable to find a place she can afford after being evicted this summer from Renaissance Village, the largest FEMA trailer park in the country, the Beard family is contemplating a move next month into a homeless shelter.
I first met Beard a year and a half ago, while she was living in one of the 75,000 toxic trailers issued to Katrina evacuees. Ninety miles from New Orleans, she had grown discouraged and depressed after struggling with a three-hour commute each way trying to find work in her home city. She and her family had occupied the "temporary" shelter since October 2005. The day we met was the first day she had come out of it in a month. "I'm not proud that my children see me staying in bed all day, but I don't know what to do. I just don't," she told her neighbors in December 2006, at a residents' meeting of Renaissance Village. "I feel you honey, I feel you," came the sympathetic response. Cold winter winds whipped past the flaps of the big white tent where Beard and the other residents were gathered.
Like others in the room, also evacuees from a poor and heavily African American neighborhood in New Orleans, Lena had received a trailer for herself and her two sons. The trailer was approximately 8 foot by 32 foot, with two sectioned-off ends that served as bedrooms. Even if she was watching TV in her room with the flimsy door shut, everyone in the trailer could hear what the other was doing. "My children used to have their own rooms," Beard told me of the home she used to own. "And they both had computers." No one wants to be a homeowner again more than she does.
From February 2007 through the summer months, Beard actively pursued various options to move her family back to New Orleans. She commuted in on weekends to work a bar job on Canal Street, which didn't last long due to health issues that made it hard for her to stand for eight consecutive hours. In July 2007, just one month shy of her two-year displacement anniversary, a final housing option fell through. With no job, and having spent down the last of her savings in the years since the storm, she was unable to come up with the money to cover a security deposit and the first and last months' rent. She was devastated.
But she was not alone. In the years after the storm, moving displaced low-income families back to New Orleans has become less and less realistic. Yes, 92 percent of hotels in New Orleans were open by mid-2007, but by June 2008, 40 percent of public schools remained closed. The number of public buses up and running is still nowhere near pre-Katrina levels.
In the fall of 2007 the number of active trailers still numbered more than 50,000. By February 2008, when CDC tests confirmed high levels of formaldehyde in FEMA trailers across Louisiana and Mississippi, FEMA began an aggressive push to shut down its trailer parks and "relocate families into safer and more permanent housing." In the first quarter of 2008, FEMA displaced over 10,000 trailer residents. But even after the formaldehyde scandal had broken, the cramped and toxic trailers were the only security most residents had. "This is home, and I ain't going to move into any slum just because FEMA tell me I have to," Beard lamented to me in early 2008, referring to the apartments FEMA had on its lists of available long-term rentals.
Beard received a knock at her trailer door one June morning and was told she had two days to pack her things. After two days she and her family were moved into a motel and given a month days to find alternative accommodation. "I'm so tired from all this," Beard told me then, in the motel room that housed the belongings she was able to salvage from her trailer before being locked out of it. "I just want my family to live in a decent home after all we've been through, so we can rebuild our lives. Is that too much to ask?"
This summer, FEMA spokesperson Gina Cortez told Mother Jones, "FEMA has closed 106 of its 111 group sites in Louisiana. Renaissance Village is one of them."
Beard's was one of the last five families to leave the trailer park.
Cortez claims FEMA has helped "all eligible trailer residents transition into long-term housing," but ask around the motels where former Renaissance residents have gone after 30 days, and you hear a different story. While some have moved to homes of relatives in other states, others are living in cars, or have joined the rapidly growing New Orleans homeless population.
FEMA reiterates that its mission, beyond meeting emergency needs, is to simply complete infrastructure repairs and return a disaster area to its predisaster state. The agency won't build new housing for displaced residents, even if it could be done for less money than what it costs to temporarily house people, because it's outside their purview. But if FEMA isn't responsible for finding these people housing, who is?
Beard and her family are still scrambling to find out. She had hoped to move into a lovely house with a yard near Renaissance Village—Catholic Charities even paid the landlord a security deposit—and she thought she could afford to move in. But due to what she says is a technical error, FEMA has deemed her ineligible for housing assistance, and as a result the lease fell through. While she searches for housing she can afford, her home state is being rebuilt around her. Her final eviction from the motel will come this week, just shy of the three-year anniversary when she lost her home to Hurricane Katrina.
Deepa Fernandes is a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at the Nation Institute, whose Investigative Fund provided research support for this article.

How much time did these people think that they were goig to get supported on the public dime..? If my house was flooded I bet my wife would have had the whole family cleaning it up in ASAP..!!! Do you think that YOUR wives would have let you hang out with yoru firends in some trailer park or hotel for 3 yrs...?
Give me a break..
BIll
They didn't choose to lose everything, and they didn't choose to be moved into stinking trailer ghettos and then evicted into hotels. People in America are obviously loosing their sense of decency and compassion. Bill & Steve, your greed and hate are shameful. Sometimes people need help. Someday, you might need help too.
I was in Cedar Rapids Iowa after their recent flood with 15 feet of water downtown. No crying & complaining to the press, the people were at work cleaning up & rebuilding.
Some people use compassion as a smokescreen for their own personal laziness. Disagree? Study the results of New Orleans vs. Cedar Rapids, it is clear. By the way, I have spent time in New Orleans, if a Hurricane was bearing down on me, I would drive, bike or even WALK out of that city (which is a fishbowl) not sit there like a deer in the headlights. The ones that were a tradgedy were the sick & elderly; the others were pathetic.
rest of us! As a Uk Citizen i'm disgusted by the way people in New Orleans and around the Gulf Coast.
I'm amazed that when there is trouble in another country the US finds money and aid for that country but not for it's own
Darren
They own the land. Build hope houses pitch a tent on your land live in that and rebuild yourself as you have money. My Grandparents did it, they lived one winter in nebraska in what was basically a cave dug into a hill. One wall at a time one bag of cement at a time. Port a john rentals are cheap. Yeah the government is going to hassle you about codes get the code read. Building isn't rocket science.
If you can't do that buy used manufactured homes and travel trailers trailers. Make the goverment try to kick you off it's your land take it back.
I know it's possible I bought a used manufactured home and gutted it. The remodel takes place as I have cash.
I felt really bad for Ms. Beard because she's a renter and as a fellow veteran but to all the people whose families own the land thier old houses sat on. Get to work the government isn't your friend you and your friends and families have to save yourselves.
"I'm not proud that my children see me staying in bed all day, but I don't know what to do. I just don't," she told her neighbors in December 2006, at a residents' meeting of Renaissance Village. "I feel you honey, I feel you," came the sympathetic response.
How pathetic. The government is not responsbible for providing everyone a home. That's your job. Get out of bed and find a job. I feel sorry for those children; its not their fault they were born to a lazy person.
NO is UNDER sea level anyway. Just forget about it and move somewhere else. Nobody lives on top of Mount Everest or in Death Valley. Why should we pay for people to live in such an inhospitable place? If they want to live there, fine, let them pay for it themselves.
If you know what is like to loose everything you had in your life, I don't think you'd be uttering cynical words toward these victims. They didn't ask for the disaster, but yet no one has paid much attention to their plight during the past three.
I still remember the attention folks in California got after the fire - free massage was part of the recovery efforts. But go ask Lena and the others if FEMA or any other government entity has provided cared for them even after spending nearly three years in highly formaldehyde tainted trailers. Why is that? Aren't they Americans as the Others? Or aren't they deserving?
How do you expect people who hardly survived even prior to Katrina to go back and rebuild by themselves without a single assistance? Does anyone honestly think that Lena and the Others (Jacob Riis) would willingly stay in a FEMA trailer just because "they hate to work or are lazy?" If you think so, then you have no idea what is like to live in a trailer with your entire family for days let alone years. If you can't help these folks, at least spare them your hateful comments.
It's a shame that Americans have the gut to tell their fellow Americans evacuated from NO that they just don't want to get themselves out of the mess Katrina has brought upon them. Miserably selfish!
I took my life in my own hands driving through some of the "neighborhoods" to see the real NO. If the people in the slums of NO would attempt to pick themselves up and move their lives forward, I would say Godspeed and we should help. The reality is, living off public aid & committing crime has become their way of life. They do not want to change, or more accurately, they have not tried. Where are the menfolk in these communities to lead the change? No where to be found.
In the meantime, the focus is on the thousands Lenas stranded in hotel rooms or in government provided trailers who are unsure of what tomorrow would look like.
While I do not advocate sitting passively by and doing nothing during a bad situation, I can honestly say that its understandable. These people are traumatized. Forget about all the falsehoods embedded in their brains about being rescued by their government and getting help from anywhere or anyone one.
Forget about the attitudes taken because these people were mostly "minorities" code word for Black.
Forget about the fact that any help that was provided was because of the Oil in the gulf.
Forget about the fact that animals and prisoners were rescued before the hard working, home owning people of NO and the Gulf.
Forget these things and everything else about this tragedy and say to yourself.
What if it were my family, and how would we fair - same if not worse.
COME ON PEOPLE -- This was a natural disaster and these are the after effects of such.
To say that these people want to live on the dole, are lazy etc etc is just plain ignorant. This country has very little experience dealing with natural disasters and their after effects.
The end is yet to come.
This is not white America's fault, it is the black community who must step up for themselves.
What is your trade or skill, maybe we can help you find work?
I will forward you an article about a family that helped the same way you are proposing.
http://www.realestatejournal.com/bu ysell/regionalnews/20051202-gray.html