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kapeman
08-12-2008, 04:25 PM
from todays NYTimes editorials...........

The pace of recovery is slowing in New Orleans as the city approaches the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina late this month. The next president and Congress will need to expedite assistance before the city’s mood turns from guarded optimism back to despair.

With a mélange of federal, state, city and private recovery efforts under way, it is difficult to grasp what is really happening in the stricken city. Fortunately, two reports on New Orleans’s condition have just been issued by authoritative outside organizations.

The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation released its second survey of the attitudes and experiences of the city’s residents. The good news is that 6 in 10 Katrina survivors say that their lives are almost or largely back to normal, and most see recovery moving in the right direction. The bad news is that 4 in 10 respondents say their lives are still disrupted, and more than 7 in 10 see little or no progress in making housing affordable or in controlling crime, which they view as the city’s top problem. Smaller majorities see little or no progress in making medical services available, strengthening public schools, attracting jobs or rebuilding neighborhoods.

These perceptions are largely consistent with an index of progress compiled by the Brookings Institution and the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center. Their third-year report finds that the greater New Orleans area has recovered the vast majority of its pre-Katrina population and jobs but that recovery trends have slowed in the past year. Tens of thousands of blighted properties, a lack of affordable housing and thin public services continue to plague the city. Rents are 46 percent higher than before the storm.

New Orleans residents expressed mixed attitudes about their prospects. Three-fourths told Kaiser that they remained optimistic about the future even though most felt that both Washington and the American public have largely forgotten them. What is worrisome is that half of the residents are dissatisfied with or angry about the lack of progress, most think it is a bad time for children to grow up in New Orleans and 22 percent (predominantly young) are seriously considering moving away.

Unless government agencies and private organizations pick up the pace of recovery efforts, New Orleans may see its future pack up and go with them.

kapeman
08-12-2008, 04:42 PM
I didn't mean to bum anyone out by posting this. As the 3rd anniversary approaches, we may see more things like this. Personally, Im glad to see
it. We, here are somewhat insulated by our devotion to this city. But we have to remember how important it is to keep talking about the city, and
telling folks it is ok to go there to visit again. The publicity from this sad annivesary is welcome indeed.

swag
08-12-2008, 05:08 PM
The good news is that 6 in 10 Katrina survivors say that their lives are almost or largely back to normal, and most see recovery moving in the right direction. The bad news is that 4 in 10 respondents say their lives are still disrupted, and more than 7 in 10 see little or no progress in making housing affordable or in controlling crime, which they view as the city’s top problem.

So doing some math here, that means at least 3 in 10 consider lack of affordable housing and uncontrolled crime to be normal for New Orleans.

Not surprising, but sad.

duende
08-12-2008, 05:11 PM
I just sent links to a friend who's well-traveled and had asked (again), when we last ran into one another, to see my Fest pix and videos. I realized that he really was just waiting for anecdotal recommendations about the city from someone whose judgement he trusts before he books a trip to visit. It helps that he's no babe-in-the-woods and I don't have to candy-coat the stories to make the city more appealing. Now if everyone can just get 4 new people to visit...

mightyradgumbo
08-13-2008, 01:37 PM
So doing some math here, that means at least 3 in 10 consider lack of affordable housing and uncontrolled crime to be normal for New Orleans.

Not surprising, but sad.

Or that they do see progress in one or the other, said the guy with the glass half full

Having been down here a mere month and a half, I have seen minor progress but they are still forward steps. Sure there are things like the NOAH snafu but there is also stuff like City Park Golf Course opening back up. While a different scale of progress for sure, it is progress. As Jerry sang in Touch of Grey "We will survive" :cool:

I believe the city needs a new mayor if only because the reputation of C-Ray is beyond repair to many folks. No matter what he does it ain't gonna be good enough for some people. That is a sign of the need for a new chief. /Gumbo steps down off his soapbox/

freebo
08-13-2008, 02:10 PM
The future's here:
We are it.
We are on our own...