Notebook: Katrina's Legacy
Harry Smith Takes A Sober Look At The State Of The Gulf Coast
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New Orleans Still Cleaning Up
A year after Hurricane Katrina, many New Orleans residents are still waiting for federal money to arrive. Some neighborhoods have rebounded but, as Teri Okita reports, others are still struggling.
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New Orleans A Year Later
A year after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans' Ninth Ward is still worn out. New Orleans City Council president Oliver Thomas talks with Harry Smith about emergency preparedness and the city's renewal.
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One Year After Katrina
One year after Hurricane Katrina devastated much of New Orleans, planners and residents have focused their attention on rebuilding their city. Cynthia Bowers reports from New Orleans.
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Sections of the new floodgates are lowered in the London Avenue Canal in New Orleans. (AP Photo)
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Sept. 1, 2005: Thousands of New Orleans residents wait at an evacuation staging area on Interstate 10 in Metarie, Lousiana. While the evacuation phase is long gone, many residents say their needs are still acute. (AP (file))
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Aug. 31, 2005: One of many helicopter rescues from flooded buildings in New Orleans. (AP (file))
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Aug. 30, 2005: Jonathan Harvey wades through flood waters after rescuing his dog "Cuddles" in Gulfport, Mississippi. (AP)
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Sept. 1, 2005, Biloxi, Mississippi: Thomas Walker, sexton of Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, carries a plaque pulled from the rubble as he walks through what is left of the building, Sept. 1, 2005. (GETTY IMAGES/Win McNamee)
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You need to know that it doesn't really matter which neighborhood you're in. If your house was filled with water, you have a big expensive mess on your hands. State recovery money is starting to flow but it's ridiculously difficult to get anything done. There are not enough contractors and plumbers and electricians to work on the tens of thousands of damaged houses that need work.
Everyone who comes down here for the first time has the same reaction: "I didn't know it was this bad. It looked bad on TV but, my God, it's so much worse." Well, it's still like that.
The streets are clean and the power is back on, but honestly, all it does is make it easier to get around and see how bad everything still is. The streets are filled with pickup trucks, there are a lot of people down here working really hard but they are barely scratching the surface.
The city's population is half of what it was and if the city is ever to come back, the people need to come back. I keep wondering: What I would do? A friend of mine down here told me some of his middle class friends just can't take it any more -- the red tape, the delays, the ineptitude. They're angry at the Army Corp of Engineers for leaving the levees in such bad shape.
Now that the levees are pretty much rebuilt, they would kind of like to see a hurricane come through just to see if the levees would hold up. No joke, they're thinking, "If the levees won't hold, why should I rebuild?"
I get their point. Last week we were in Mississippi and in St. Bernard Parish, southeast of New Orleans. Folks are pretty tired down there, too. We met an old lady in a FEMA trailer park who said other than the drugs and crime, she appreciated having a roof over her head.
Down in Chalmette, La., we stood with a woman who cried and couldn't stop -- standing in what was left the house she and her husband had retired in a little more than a year ago. The home was one of 1,700 that got socked by the oil that came out of the ruptured tank in the Murphy Oil refinery. If you pick up a fist full of the dirt from the neighborhood, you can still smell the oil.
I asked a lot of people if they had a message for the rest of America on this one year anniversary of the storm. It was simple: "Don't forget us."
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- No Offense to Harry Smith but as a Louisiana Native, I'm sick to death of hearing the media pontificate about Hurricane Katrina; or at least with regard to New Orleans. There were other areas totally devasted by that same storm but its a miracle if anyone ever highlights those poor souls. And, what about that other major storm that hit the Louisiana Gulf Coast just one month after Katrina, hmmmm, don't remember, don't care? IT WAS RITA... Rita brought its own brand of chaos and havoc to our State. Those who lost everything they spent their lives to build and whose towns were just washed away, not even any debris to pick through, will they be remembered at the one year mark in September? Will some movie star or rock n roll god jump on the Rita bandwagon? Nope, and ya know why, because there is no wagon, there's only a rusted out wheelbarrow with a flat tire guided by people who have to help themselves because they've been forgotten by everyone else. So the next time you hear something about New Orleans and Katrina, ignore that dog and pony show and remember the other forgotten Katrina victims and their brethen, the victims of Rita.
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- Good old Harry. Like the rest of the media, he wants to blame Bush and Washington. What about the illusterous Mayor and Governor of Louisanna? Get real Harry or get out of the business. When we decide not to blame the President, we may become a great nation again. Thanks for helping to take us straight down the drain.
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- It seems that stupidity is still on the loose and some of these folks posting comment are out with their nets. The disaster from Katrina can not be blamed on one person. There were several idiots at the helm for this one. The Mayor of New Orleans, the Governor of Louisiana, the Director of Fema and the President of the good ole USA. Everyone is willing to point fingers, but no one is man or woman enough to say "I'm deeply sorry for the loss, I dropped the ball, or I did not do my job to the best of my ability." As for ignoring the "dog and pony show", why can't we just remember all of the victims. Some of the victims of Katrina are also victims of Rita. The Katrina victims SHOULD be remembered and the victims of Rita MUST NOT be forgotten.
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