Where Did the Katrina Money Go?
Two years after the storms, most hurricane rebuilding funds have yet to be spent-much less reached those in need.
This article is taken from the new report compiled by the Institute for Southern Studies called, "Blueprint for Gulf Renewal," giving a voice to grassroots advocates calling for greater federal accountability in the Gulf Coast rebuilding process. The report is available at: http://www.southernstudies.org/BlueprintShort.pdf .
When pressed on the slow pace of recovery in the Gulf Coast, President Bush insists the federal government has fulfilled its promise to rebuild the region. The proof, he says, is in the big check the federal government signed to underwrite the recovery -- allegedly more than $116 billion. But residents of the still-devastated Gulf Coast are left wondering whether the check bounced.
"$116 billion is not a useful number," says Stanley Czerwinski of the Government Accountability Office, Congress' investigative arm.
For starters, most federal money -- about two-thirds -- was quickly spent for short-term needs like debris removal and Coast Guard rescue. As Czerwinski explains, "There is a significant difference between responding to an emergency and rebuilding post-disaster."
That has left little money for long-term Gulf Coast recovery projects. Although it's tricky to unravel the maze of federal reports, our best estimate of agency data is that only $35 billion has been appropriated for long-term rebuilding.
Even worse, less than 42 percent of the money set aside has even been spent, much less gotten to those most in need. For example:
Washington set aside $16.7 billion for Community Development Block Grants, one of the two biggest sources of rebuilding funds, especially for housing. But as of March 2007, only $1 billion -- just 6 percent -- had been spent, almost all of it in Mississippi. Following bad publicity, HUD spent another $3.8 billion on the program between March and July, leaving 70 percent of the funds still unused.
The other major source of rebuilding help was supposed to be FEMA's Public Assistance Program. But of the $8.2 billion earmarked, only $3.4 billion was meant for nonemergency projects like fixing up schools and hospitals.
Louisiana officials recently testified that FEMA has also "low-balled" project costs, underestimating the true expenses by a factor of four or five. For example, for 11 Louisiana rebuilding projects, the lowest bids came to $5.5 million -- but FEMA approved only $1.9 million.
After the failure of federal levees flooded 80 percent of New Orleans, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers received $8.4 billion to restore storm defenses. But as of July 2007, less than 20 percent of the funds have been spent, even as the Corps admits that levee repair won't be completed until as late as 2011.
The fact that, two years later, most federal Katrina funds remain bottled up in bureaucracy is especially shocking considering that the amounts Washington allocated come nowhere near the anticipated costs of Gulf rebuilding.
For example, the $3.4 billion FEMA has available to recover local public infrastructure would only cover about one-eighth of the damage suffered in Louisiana alone. But this money is spread across five states -- Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas -- and covers damage from three 2005 hurricanes, Katrina, Rita and Wilma.
Congress has acted on some of the money holdups, like changing a requirement in the Stafford Act that mandates local governments pay 10 percent of rebuilding projects up front before receiving federal aid. The Bush administration had refused to waive the rule -- like it did for New York after 9/11 -- grounding countless projects. The effect of the rule was particularly devastating in the hardest-hit places like Mississippi's Hancock County, where communities lost most of their tax base after the storms.
Many in Washington claim that state and local governments are to blame: The money's there, they say, but the locals just aren't using it. And it's true that there have been problems below the federal level. For example, Louisiana's "Road Home" program -- created by Congress but run by the state -- has been so poorly managed that 18 months after the storms only 630 homeowners had received checks. Closings have sped up since then, but administrators admit many won't see money until 2008, if at all -- the program is facing a projected $3 billion shortfall.
But the White House and Congress have done little to exercise oversight of these federally backed programs, much less step in to remove red tape and make sure taxpayer money gets to its intended destination.
This is especially true when it comes to tax breaks and rebuilding contracts. Included in the $116 billion figure is $3.5 billion in tax breaks to jump-start business in Gulf Opportunity Zones -- "GO Zones" -- across 91 parishes and counties in Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi. But many of the breaks have been of questionable benefit to Katrina survivors, like a $1 million deal to build 10 luxury condos next to the University of Alabama football stadium -- four hours from the Gulf Coast.
Federal contracts for rebuilding and recovery have also been marked by scandal, fraud and abuse. An August 2006 study by the office of Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., identified 19 contracts worth $8.75 billion that experienced "significant overcharges, wasteful spending or mismanagement."
For thousands of Gulf residents, the end result is that federal support for recovery after Katrina's devastation has been insufficient, too slow and hasn't gotten to those most in need.
"Where did it go?" says Tanya Harris of ACORN in New Orleans when asked about the $116 billion. "Tell me. Where did it go?"
Jeffrey Buchanan is communications officer with the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights. Chris Kromm is executive director of the Institute for Southern Studies. This report was part of ISS's "Blue Print for Gulf Renewal."
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14 Comments so far
Show AllIt is much worse than that. Bush is not going anywhere, he is staying in power after a false falg terror attack on his own people, US. He will declare martial law. He will lock up dissenters to his authority in concentration camps being built right now here in the USA by KBR. But there is only one problem. It will fail, and WE the people will get to see his ass hang.
Coffeelover,,,,,,,,,,
When Clinton left office we were looking at a #3+ Trillion surplus over ten years. After a couple years under the Bush administration we all of a sudden are looking at a $5+ Trillion deficit. Katrina & Iraq are usually given to me by Bush supporters as a reason for this $8+ Trillion swing. This just proves to me Bushies don't know math just as they have no concept of fiscal responsibility. Even a third grader can see that $116 bn (Katrina)+$700 bn (Iraq est.)+$1,000 bn (tax breaks for the wealthy) doesn't add up to $8+Trillion.
WHERE THE HELL DID ALL THE MONEY GO?
PaulMagillSmith
Clinton had 8 years to shore up the levees when he was president. If he and the democrats did their job bush would have been irrelevent after katrina.
RE: real world August 26th, 2007 10:59 am
PaulMagillSmith
"If New Orleans had wisely spent the money it was given they might possibly have survived katrina in much better shape."
It was the responsibility of the Army Corps of Engineers to maintain that vital national infrastructure and the reason they failed is because Bush drastically cut their funding. 100,000 people in New Orleans were so poor they didn't have transportation to got away from the storm so what chance did they have of convincing a corrupt ineffectual federal government (I agree it's on both sides of the aisle) the funding cut was detremental? Poor people (especially poor black people) have no voice in America, savvy?
We are living by false confidence in an economically and morally bankrupt nation that is fast becoming what the Founding Fathers warned against.
I agree with 'Real World' that the democrats are just as corrupt as the republicans, but can't say either are stupid. They both utilize the same tactics and pass the same laws to further enrich themselves and their class. There are slight variations in pretending to oppose the 'other party' but " the more things change, the more they are the same" isn't true anymore. Not with this administration and the dems who quietly support them. 'Things' are getting worse for the average 'Joe and Jane'.
Stay home from work on this eleventh of September and make no purchases.
I only type with one finger ( never learned ) so if you see a typo when I don't edit my posts, or like I wrote on the Majorie Cohn article, typing in the word except instead of accept, I'm hoping you know what I meant.
PaulMagillSmith
"How does that go again,"
This is how it goes..
a stitch in time saves nine.
If New Orleans had wisely spent the money it was given they might possibly have survived katrina in much better shape.
I am not a bush supporter but in the real world the democrats are just as stupid and corrupt as the republicans.
RE: real world August 25th, 2007 6:00 pm
.....democrats have been pissing it away for years down there.
Seems like I read an article stating Bush cut the funding for the levies from over $100 million down to $26 million, despite the fact the Army Corps of Engineers said they were sinking & needed more funds to make them safe. Gee, I didn't realize Bush was a Democrat. Get in the Real World real world!!! Republicans & Democrats both failed our nation on this one. How does that go again, "For lack of a nail the kingdom was lost"? For lack of a few tens of MILLIONS a few tens of BILLIONS were lost.
Ask yourself this real world, "Who has had control of the national purse strings for the past dozen years?" Do I see a light bulb going on over your head now?
Where did all the money go that could have helped prevent the damage before katrina hit? democrats have been pissing it away for years down there.
TENOR: Bush's gravestone should read, "abject failure of responsibility" That should also head his resume... I can't think of a time in US history where so much graft, corruption and lack of accountability went for business as usual. How 'bout that 9 billion that disappeared in Iraq? How 'bout no $ to fund "No child left behind," but bloated military budgets to ensure that murder remains our highest government back, tax payer financed PRIORITY. DISGUSTING!!!!!!!!
Do I suffer from a false memory? In my vivid memory, W is giving a staged speech in a beautiful NOLA square lit up dramatically (while the rest of town was powerless). He walks out in rolled up $300-shirt sleeves -- he's gonna get job done.
Then W declares that KARL ROVE will be totally in charge of the post-Katrina Reconstruction!
At the time, I'm thinking Karl knows nothing about helping and building -- those are not is areas of expertise.
Now on the two-year anniversary, Karl retires and no one mentions his abject failure of responsibility -- or, more likely, uncanny criminal success.
Our elected officials (Congress & Administration) just don`t have time to worry about ordinary people in trouble; they are so busy raising their own salaries, lining up all of the perks for life, and getting re-elected. We did not have to put up with nearly two years of expensive campaigning in the past.
Our appointed bureaucracy is also very concerned with their own welfare, and their job takes second place. That is not to say that we have no dedicated public servants, but they are getting fewer all the time. Our continual involvment in Iraq is a big factor in causing total mismanagement of fixing and funding our infrastructure.
Since I'm not in Germany yet, where just uttering this word can get somebody in trouble with the federal authorities, I'll just go ahead and spit it out.
The 161 billion, more than likely, has been 'ear-marked' for deferred 'gentrification.'
It would be deferred until after the 2008 election, giving the displayed additional opportunities to 're-establish' themselves.
America the beautiful.
People saw an opportunity and took advantage of it. And I don't care who gets upset, the whole Katrina situation had poor race relations written all over it.
People take advantage of those that can't defend them selves. And who is going to complain about poor brown and black people being taken advantage of besides other brown and black people.
The Funds have been poorly managed because on the inside, the people that are in charge just really don't care about what happens to poor ethnic people. They want to care. They wish they did. But they just don't.
It's like seeing a black guy get a cab in New York. It's just built into some people's souls.
And it's ok to admit that we have a problem in this nation. It's ok to say that we just don't really feel that sad about what's going on.
Think about it............. Think about how long America has raped Africa? We have taken resources, people, land, and everything else possible to steal. Genocide has been going on for quite some time, and we don't really want to do much about it. It's just a bunch of blacks.
You want to help to make yourself look good, but you just can't get motivated enough to do it.
I have said time and time again. If it were a bunch of whites in trouble, there would have been helicopters and rescue efforts and all sorts of things like that.
And it's not that people are thinking to themselves "Oh lets go save these white people from danger".
They just see people in danger and want to help.
But when it comes to blacks and browns. It's tough because we still don't see them as equals. As people.
And it's ok to admit that.
We are not going to go invade some country where there are a bunch of whites. But Iraq, and Iran, they are brown people. That makes it ok.
And it's ok to admit that. We just have to learn to admit that we are a racist nation, and all ways will be.
~Future~
Where did the money go? Simple. Halliburton/KBR to Dick Cheney, with side payment to Blackwater.