Thursday, August 7, 2008

Post Katrina: No Shortage of Volunteers

Contractors however, take credit – and the cash – for the work. From the Times Picayune:

Doris Grandpre knows exactly who gutted her 7th Ward house last year, then helped her start rebuilding the single shotgun where she lived for three decades before Hurricane Katrina.

"There was David. You got Christopher. Then there was Jason. Oh, and Simon," Grandpre, 76, said this week, recalling the student volunteers who came from Boston and Seattle to tear out her plaster walls and save the few precious items the flood did not destroy.

"I call them my little angels," she said.

It appears, however, that another crew has taken credit for demolition work at Grandpre's house. City records show that Hall & Hall Enterprises, the highest-paid contractor in Mayor Ray Nagin's home remediation program, billed the city $7,830 for gutting and boarding up the house and cutting the grass at the St. Anthony Street property.

The house is one of at least seven addresses that appear on two lists detailing post-storm remediation. One list belongs to the Episcopal Diocese of Louisiana's Office of Disaster Response, which organized volunteers from across the country to come to New Orleans and provide free home remediation services, such as gutting and boarding up homes, to residents in need of help.

Those same addresses appear on a list produced by the nonprofit New Orleans Affordable Homeownership Corp., which oversaw a remediation program that contractors billed a total of $1.8 million.

The homeownership corporation, also known as NOAH, billed taxpayers more than $25,000 for work at those addresses.

Grandpre, a retired nursing aide at Charity Hospital, said Wednesday that she has no idea how her address got on NOAH's gutting list. Since January 2007, she has lived in a Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer in her side yard, and no city contractor has ever stopped by.

"A group of kids took the stuff out," she said. "The only people who helped me was people from outside the city."

Operations shut down

The duplicate entries on the NOAH and church lists raise more questions about the management of a short-lived city program designed to help elderly and poor residents along the road to recovery. A city official said last week that, to his knowledge, NOAH had paid out all of the $1.8 million to its subcontractors.

In light of the scrutiny, NOAH's board of directors suspended the organization's business last week and served notice Wednesday that its remaining four employees will be terminated Friday as of 5 p.m. Officials declined to name the employees or disclose their salaries. NOAH's former executive director, Stacey Jackson, resigned in June.

Now it seems to me that the contractors didn’t just pull addresses at random, but actively sought out properties that were being cleaned up, saw that the volunteers were from some church or school and figured they could bill for the cleaning since the volunteers would be going home in a week or two and no one would ever know…wrong!

As we approach the 3-year commemoration (I won't say the "A" word) of the storm, I can't believe this is still happening.

While in NOLA recently I spoke with a number of people who lost their home, or the home of a family member. In some cases (NOLA families are notorious for living in close proximity) the homes of entire families were destroyed. And not just in the Ninth Ward. The scars are visible, but the determination to rebuild is contagious.

Read the rest HERE.

And so it goes.

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4 comments:

  1. So typical of the whole situation and city and state! They need to annex everything south of I-10 from the Sabine River to Mobile Bay, turn it into it's own country, ala Monaco, with a King or Queen (preferably me) who can rule absolutely. Off with his head!! With gambling and oil, it would be a prosperous region!

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  2. "JD" Too bad the rest of the population hasn't a clue what the area means to the entire country.
    I'm also grateful for your humble suggestion, uh, of being Quean, and all.

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  3. A comment I wrote on one of Mimi's Wounded Bird posts about this same article:

    "Just saw this on the T-P website. A positive to the story is that the Episcopal names quoted are names that have been there for months and months. I worked with Emily Danielson at the Diocese back in the fall of '06, 23 months ago. That these out-of-staters have held volutnarily held out for so long in these grueling jobs is a remarkable gift and blessing. I did three months; they've done years, and unlike the residents, they could leave at any point and go back to their old lives. My hat is off to them."

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  4. W.E. I will check out Grandmere's post.
    You see, the prevailing "truth" is that all is well, not only in NOLA, but the entire Gulf Coast. The only voices about the realities there come from the church groups from this area who have gone down twice yearly and cannot believe so little progress has been made. The UMC groups have made some impact in two neighborhoods, but time stands still until they return. Frustrating doesn't begin to describe it.
    The group from my Episcopal Church was about to give up this spring, but went back for one more go.

    Since you know Grandmere, I assume you know Mad Priest. Perhaps you also know my friend Elizabeth Kaeton (that Kaeton woman!) as MP calls her.
    The world gets smaller and smaller.

    Thanks for the visit and insights.

    ReplyDelete

Your comments are welcome if they are positive and/or helpful.
If they are simply a tirade or opinionated bullshit, they will be removed, so don't waste your time, or mine.

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