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HUD Demolitions Draw Noose Tighter Around New Orleans
Odessa Lewis is 62 years old. When I saw her last week, she was crying because she is being evicted. A long-time resident of the Lafitte public housing apartments, since Katrina she has been locked out of her apartment and forced to live in a 240 square foot FEMA trailer. Ms. Lewis has asked repeatedly to be allowed to return to her apartment to clean and fix it up so she can move back in. She even offered to do all the work herself and with friends at no cost. The government continually refused to allow her to return. Now she is being evicted from her trailer and fears she will become homeless because there is no place for working people, especially African American working and poor people, to live in New Orleans. Ms. Lewis is a strong woman who has worked her whole life. But the stress of being locked out of her apartment, living in a FEMA trailer and the possibility of being homeless brought out the tears. Thousands of other mothers and grandmothers are in the same situation.
Renting is so hard in part because there is a noose closing around the housing opportunities of New Orleans African American renters displaced by Katrina. They have been openly and directly targeted by public and private actions designed to keep them away. The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) just added their weight to the attack by approving the demolition of 2966 apartments in New Orleans.
Despite telling a federal judge for the last year and a half that approvals of public housing demolition applications take about 100 working days to evaluate, HUD approved the plan to demolish nearly 3000 apartments one day after the complete application was filed. HUD says the 3000 apartments are scheduled to be replaced in a few years with up to 744 public housing eligible apartments and a few hundred subsidized apartments.
Unfortunately, HUD's actions are consistent with other governmental attacks on African American renters.
After Katrina, St. Bernard Parish, a 93% white adjoining suburb, enacted a law prohibiting home owners from renting their property to anyone who is not a blood relative. Jefferson Parish, another majority white adjoining suburb, unanimously passed an ordinance prohibiting the construction of any subsidized housing. The sponsoring legislator condemned poor people as "lazy," "ignorant" and "leeches on society" - specifically hoping to guard against former residents of New Orleans public housing. Across Lake Ponchartrain from New Orleans, the chief law enforcement officer of St. Tammany Parish, Sheriff Jack Strain, complained openly about the post-Katrina presence of "thugs and trash from New Orleans" and announced that people with dreadlocks or "chee wee hairstyles" could "expect to be getting a visit from a sheriff's deputy."
HUD's actions are also bolstered by pervasive racial discrimination in the private market as well. The Greater New Orleans Fair Housing Action Center has documented widespread racial discrimination in the metro New Orleans rental market and in the states surrounding the gulf coast.
HUD told a federal judge a few days "the average time [for the process of reviewing applications for demolition] is 100 days." They did suggest that the process could be expedited in the case of New Orleans. So it was. Instead of reviewing the details of demolishing 3000 apartments and considering the law and facts and the administrative record for 100 days, HUD expedited the process to one day.
HUD and the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO, which HUD has been running for years) argued passionately that residents displaced from public housing (referred to once in their argument as 'refugees') are financially "better off" than they were before. This echoes the Barbara Bush comment of September 5, 2005 when she said, viewing the overwhelmingly African American crowd of thousands of people living on cots in the Astrodome, "And so many of the people in the arena here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this - (she chuckles slightly) this is working very well for them."
HUD announced approval of demolition of 2966 units of public housing in New Orleans - 896 apartments at Lafitte, 521 at C.J. Peete, 1158 at B.W. Cooper, and 1391 at St. Bernard. A few buildings on each site will be retained for historical preservation purposes.
New Orleans had a severe affordable housing crisis before Katrina when HANO housed over 5000 families. There was a waiting list of 8000 families trying to get in. HUD and HANO together did such a poor job of administering the agency that there were about 2000 more empty apartments that had been scheduled for major repairs for years.
The continuing deceptions by HUD and HANO have been shameless. Since Katrina, HUD has continued to act out both sides of a charade that the local housing authority is making decisions and HUD is waiting on local actions. Yet, the decision to demolish was announced by the Secretary of HUD in DC over a year ago. But in the year since then, HUD has continued to tell a federal judge that any legal challenge to demolitions was premature because HANO had not even submitted an application to HUD for their careful 100 day evaluation. This is while a HUD employee runs the agency, commuting back and forth to DC each week. HANO even announced they would have 2000 apartments ready for people in August of 2006 - a deadline not met even in September 2007. HANO later announced to the public that they had a list of 250 apartments ready for people to return only to admit in writing weeks later that no such list existed - nor were the phantom apartments ready. The list of untruths goes on.
HUD would not agree to delay the demolition of the 3000 apartments until Congress finished reviewing legislation that would give residents the right to return and participate in the process of determining what kind of affordable housing should be in place in New Orleans.
And so HUD's actions help further restrict the opportunities for African American renters in New Orleans. Adjoining white suburbs do not want African American renters back. HUD does not want them back. The local federal judge has refused to stop the demolitions.
But the mothers and grandmothers and their families and friends are still determined to return and resist demolition. One sign at a recent public housing rally summed it up. "We will not allow the community we built to be rebuilt without us."
Odessa Lewis, despite her tears, said she is not giving up. She and other public housing residents promise "we did not come this far to be turned back now. We will do whatever is necessary to protect our homes." Thousands of African American mothers and grandmothers are the ones directly targeted by HUD's actions.
Forty years ago, Martin Luther King, Jr., said "We as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a "thing-oriented" society to a "person-oriented" society...When profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered." We can add sexism to the list, particularly in the fight for the right of public housing residents to return.
The fight of Ms. Lewis and others on the gulf coast shows how much we need a radical revolution of values.
Bill is a human rights lawyer and law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. Quigley@loyno.edu



10 Comments so far
Show AllThis report should be read with today's posting about Jena. They are both parts of the same terrible fabric being wrapped ever more tightly about our social and body politic. Resurgent racism, rampant corporate greed, and the ruthless ambitions of the Rovite GOP political machine, together pose a daunting challenge to anyone concerned about the future of America.
"St. Bernard Parish, a 93% white adjoining suburb, enacted a law prohibiting home owners from renting their property to anyone who is not a blood relative."
How can such a law be legal or constitutional? Wouldn't federal anti-discrimination laws prohibit such a thing? Discriminating on the bases if being a blood relative is the same as discriminating on the basis of race or national origin. Is anyone challenging it? Are the laws even enforced these days?
LAWS? We don't need no steeeenking laws! Racism in Louisiana? Say it ain't so...sigh...
Well, there you have it. That had to have been the plan all along -- to chase all dark-skinned people and poor whites out of New Orleans permanently. How convenient to the plan that the levee protecting the 9th ward gave way. Was it helped to fail? There is evidence that it was. Will this be investigated thoroughly? Of course not.
This is Republican government at work, folks. If you're rich and white, ok. If not, go away. That's how they play. Who got their insurance checks and got their property rebuilt, and who got the shaft? Who got left in the Superdome to fry and die? You think this is mere incompetence? This was the plan, man.
Wake up, America, to the enemy within.
The laws are being rewritten to favor those with money. Any of this really a surprise?
Welcome to New-Orleans-World! another fantasy playground for the whole family; the best of Disney and Sin City all in one place. Evening performances of old-style jazz by handsome Black musicians in Scott Joplin costumes; rides down the bayou in colorful swamp boats; the scary ride, with mechanized zombies; voodoo fortune tellers (nothing too disturbingly pagan) in their booths decorated with exotic plant and animal fetishes (shop shop shop); the daily funeral parade at 2pm, complete with fancy hearse and decorated horses, followed by the band playing "When the Saints G Marching In"; the Cemetery Funhouse; all the mudbugs you can eat! Feed the alligators! (humane society protected); Po'Boy concessions from here to the horizon; deepfried alligator on a stick! Gift packs of Tabasco Sauce and Chef Prudhomme... Monster hotels and cruise ships, sports stadiums, gambling casinos...Mrs. Fields type prefab beignets by the truckload (not locally made) Mardi gras every weekend...A fantasy New Orleans wiped clean of sweat, blood, dirt, and life to pull he last few pennies out of the pockets of the unsuspecting tourist....ahhh the Bucks they'll rake in hand over fist! And no one will be showing anyone their tits anymore.
Don't say I didn't warn you; you heard it here first.
It's clear that Disney-New Orleans is well under way, made more apparent in the recent reports that Trump and others have been buying much of New Orleans' real estate.
As one who was there during and after Katrina, I find it implausible - no, impossible - that three separate levees all failed within hours of one another, despite the water in the canals being two feet below the top, and Katrina being only a Category I when it hit New Orleans.
That last bastion of originality, reality and creativity had to be demolished in this country. A sterile tourist attraction is much less troublesome. I'll miss the real thing every day until I die.
That last bastion of originality, reality and creativity had to be demolished in this country. A sterile tourist attraction is much less troublesome. I'll miss the real thing every day until I die.
"I'll miss the real thing every day until I die". Whenscott, I'm right there with you. My family and I spent the best 7 years of our lives in NO in the late '80s. It got under my skin like no place ever has. So far, I've been unable to force myself to go back and see, with my own eyes, what has happened to one of the great cities of the world.
For those who haven't read any of Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine": do so immediately. It will open your eyes.
The "politics of the consumate fact" would seem to built on a house of cards both fiscally and in assumptions regarding natural resource bases. I sometimes wonder if there will be a psychic collapse of the "shakers and movers" when their denial of being in denial finally hits home.
Does anyone need any MORE proof your are living in a Fascist state?
Before blaming the GOP one must understand that the problems in N.O. are to be blamed mostly on the Democrats. They controlled the local governments, state government and other entities when Katrina hit. Who was responsible for the buses?. Why did the Democrat party abandon the citizens of N.O. for so long in the first place? I know its a nice trick to blame Republicans, but the real blame is on the Democrats and not helping poor folks rise up and enjoy Economic prosperity. On the other hand, the poor folks have to make the right decisions in their life to help themselves. Government is the final safety net - not the first.