FEMA Help: Can you tell me if there is truth in a rumor that FEMA plans to offer/loan money to each head of household (approx. $26K each)? Please leave a comment or email me.
FEMA Update: A FEMA FAQ on acquiring disaster assistance, housing assistance, food and water and unemployment. Call 1-800-621-FEMA (3362) or sign up online.
Unemployment: Katrina has left up to 750,000 temporarily jobless. Nevertheless, employment is available – “thousands of jobs to clean-up … followed by construction jobs to rebuild the thousands of damaged or destroyed homes and businesses.”
The Dept. of Labor “approved $20.7 million to hire 10,000 dislocated workers to aid recovery and clean-up efforts … prepared to authorize another $41.4 million, when the rescue situation stabilizes enough to get more people to work.”
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Exactly a week after evacuating New Orleans, I wonder, “Has it only been a week?” Close on the heels of the initial thought is, “Wow, that week went by quickly!” Despite that New Orleans has yet to start large-scale recovery, take some peace in knowing that time happens. Our patience and encouragement are paramount.
- The water will be drained.
- The power grid will be reassembled. Entergy has 92 transmission lines out of service. Power has been restored to approximately 500,000 customers; another half a million remain without power due to limited access to flooded neighborhoods
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Habitat For Humanity is currently accepting all the help it can get.
If you’re having your house rebuilt with contractor help, here are some important tips. Basically, be careful whom you hire and save all of the paperwork for insurance purposes.
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The Chicago Tribune‘s front page bellyaches: Rebuilding a city “will be costly, and recreating New Orleans’ soul might be impossible.”
It took centuries to transform New Orleans from a mosquito-infested swamp into one of the world’s unique cities. And in a day long rampage, Hurricane Katrina demolished it.
Are they talking about the same city that I just left and to which I plan to return? New Orleans wasn’t demolished; it has been flooded and is in disrepair. Parts of Moss Point, Biloxi, Pascagoula, Bay St. Louis and other towns in Mississippi were demolished, but not New Orleans.
As for New Orleans soul, it doesn’t merely waft from colonial architecture in the French Quarter and red beans & rice in the Treme. The soul of the city is in the beating hearts of its people. As long as residents of the Crescent City believe in their city and each one helps rebuild, where is the room for loss? 80% of New Orleanians evacuated and are starting to help the 20% that didn’t.
For true inspiration, read the Tribune editorial written after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, “The ability of cities to survive and thrive after disaster depends on large part on what they aspire to be, and whether they can reinvent themselves to meet that goal.”
If Chicago did it in 1871, London and Paris did it in 1945 and Kuwait City did it in 1991, New Orleans can do it in 2005. We have all kinds of soul.





