Joyce Green died on the roof of her Lower 9th Ward home as her New Orleans neighborhood flooded during Hurricane Katrina.
Helplessly, her son watched her die as the water rushed dangerously below them. Just last week he was able to return to their
collapsed house on Tennessee Street for the first time, and found her skeletal remains amidst the ruins. He was able to identify
them because they were wrapped in the clothes she was wearing the day she died.
During Katrina, the Lower 9th Ward was deluged due to breaches in the Industrial Canal levee. Additionally, an enormous
barge that was illegally left in the canal was launched into the neighborhood, destroying lives and property during its reckless
trajectory. Four months later, many questions remain unanswered regarding the destruction in the Lower 9th Ward, including the
question of possible criminal negligence. However, before those questions have been fully investigated, let alone answered, the
City of New Orleans is rushing to bulldoze much of the neighborhood--without informing homeowners.
On the eve of the holiday season, Greg Meffert, the city's chief technology officer, revealed that the city would
immediately demolish about 2,500 "red-tagged" homes in the Lower 9th Ward. Before Meffert's announcement, a red-tag merely meant
that a home was unsafe to enter.
The City of New Orleans website specifically states in bold italicized text that "a red sticker does not indicate whether or not a
building will be demolished, only that the structure is currently unsafe to enter."
Yet the City decided to bulldoze red-tagged homes without informing homeowners of the new meaning of the red tags or the
demolition order.
This is a clear violation of due process, guaranteed under federal and state constitutions, which protects property owners from the
unlawful destruction of their property. It is also a clear, opportunistic attack on the Lower 9th Ward community, whose
historically black roots run deep in the neighborhood. Boasting the highest level of black homeownership in the nation, the area is
also where many black New Orleanians have traditionally been able to purchase their first homes.
Due to the massive destruction of the Lower 9th Ward, neighborhood survivors have been scattered across the country. Most
residents have not been able to evaluate the damage to their homes due to their displacement. FEMA's fly-back program for evacuees,
which could have been expanded to allow homeowners the opportunity to return to New Orleans in order to view their property, expired
on New Year's Eve.
Furthermore, the Lower 9th Ward was closed until December 1st, making it impossible for residents to visit their homes until quite
recently.
Residents missing loved ones know that there are more dead yet to be uncovered in the debris, whose bodies would be
wrongfully buried by demolition. Adding insult to injury, a history of redlining has left the land in the Lower 9th Ward not only
low-lying, but also lowly valued.
Leveling homes would not only further demoralize a diasporic community that has had no voice in the decision-making process
concerning their property, it would also strip them of most of their assets, render them gravely vulnerable to speculators, and
raise the threat of eminent domain.
Considering how slow the City has been to respond to the needs of its citizens during the four months since Hurricane
Katrina, we must ask why it is now rushing to bulldoze the Lower 9th Ward. Is it to cover up unlawful tampering with the levees
during Katrina? Is it to avoid an accurate body count of the area? Is it because the City intends to forcibly remove residents
from their land to make way for a glitzy Cajun Casinoland? Or is it simply due to the blatant racism and classism that
characterizes so much of this tragic disaster?
Concerned community members are not ceding their rich cultural heritage without a fight. On December 28th, Kirk v. The City
of New Orleans won a temporary restraining order against the City to halt the demolition of property until the court hearing to be
held this Friday. Ishmael Muhammad, an attorney working on the suit for The People's Hurricane Relief Fund and Oversight Coalition,
summed up community sentiment by saying that "there can be no justice in the rebuilding process unless the residents and homeowners
can fully participate."
If New Orleans is to rise from the piles of rubble strewn unevenly across the city, the often-drowned out voices of poor
blacks must dictate the terms of the rebuilding process. City planners and developers who may attempt to capitalize upon a disaster
largely manufactured by negligent funding, poor planning and a criminal response must not further desecrate the memory of those
silenced in its wake, indiscriminately bulldozing over unclaimed bodies and haphazardly demolishing what remains of the Lower 9th
Ward. To do so would be the final insult to a community deluged not only by floodwaters, but also by injustice.
Much more than the ubiquitous cookie-cutter houses that characterize suburban sprawl, homes in the Lower 9th Ward are the
historic connections to a multigenerational community that has deep roots laid in the land presently under threat. Bulldozing a
person's most emblematic tie to that land without their consent is not only plainly unlawful, it is a covert step towards the ethnic
cleansing of New Orleans. Turning a natural disaster into an opportunity to whitewash one of the world's most multiethnic cities is
not only the lowest form of racism, it would also spell municipal suicide for a city whose integrity resides in the preservation of
its most dynamic neighborhoods.
No other neighborhood better exemplifies the cultural uniqueness of New Orleans than the Lower 9th Ward-Fats Domino lives
there, as do many Mardi Gras Indians, and countless French Quarter musicians, mimes and waiters commute to Bourbon Street from their
Lower 9th homes. These people should decide if and when demolition is necessary, and they ought to determine the future of one of
America's most vibrant neighborhoods. If any American city exemplifies the genius of everyday people, it is certainly New Orleans.
And if the city is to truly recover from this disaster, the local people who created its international reputation must lead its
reconstruction.
For more information on the People's Hurricane Relief Fund and Oversight Coalition, see: www.communitylaborunited.net. Email Scott Boehm at: sboehm@ucsd.edu.
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