I took 2 high schoolers to the gulf coast for spring break. Here's my report:
We stayed at the Bayou Liberty Relief Camp in Slidell, LA. This camp provides food and housing (tent and a bunk house) for volunteers working with any group, as well as providing a 2 day respite for volunteers working other places around the gulf. If you need a break, you can come hang out for a couple days and return refreshed to work. There were several volunteers AND residents doing this while we were there.
One volunteer was giving haircuts:
We helped deconstruct a flooded house in Slidell:
And reconstruct another flooded house in E. New Orleans, son had stayed during Katrina, went to attic and had to chop through roof during flood, was rescued the next day though neighbors weren't for a couple more days. This son is staying mid-state, crys all the time, is not doing well, PTSD:
We met merh and drove across the southern edge of Mississippi:
We didn't stay at this hotel:
Or shop at this WalMart, though we heard of the young people hired to spend the hurricane there to keep an eye on it. Another reason to not shop at WalMart, financially it made sense to hire a couple kids for cheap. Too bad they died:
We helped out at Food for Love/Emergency Communities community kitchen and distribution center in Chalmette, MS, cooking and serving 1500 meals a day to residents and volunteers who do not have electricity water sewage or grocery stores nearby, sorting clothes for the free store, moving pallets of stuff:
Here is a volunteer that could perhaps use a break, nice dress:
We saw a photograph session in New Orleans French Quarter:
We worked one day with Animal Relief New Orleans, filling petfeeding stations around the Upper 9th Ward:
Before driving over the canal to the Lower 9th Ward:
Where we saw a ventilated bedroom:
And a cadaver dog working, it's owner said they were finding "lots of places bodies used to be":
We attended a gathering in support of St. Augustine's church in New Orleans, got the see/hear Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, and hear the Treme band play. Here's the inside of the church since my photo of Jesse and Al didn't work:
Finally, a picture of puppy wranglers at EC:
Some things have changed since Sept, some look the same. Houses in New Orleans and Slidell being worked on range from 1/4-3 per block where we saw (E. New Orleans, Upper 9th Ward, 7th Ward, Slidell). Piles of debris move around, so work is being done. Some residents said they wanted to muck and gut their houses, but not reconstruct until after this new hurricane season to see if levees hold (New Orleans). More cadaver dogs and workers MUST be used to canvass the areas that need bulldozing before they bulldoze. Several bodies were found in the last month in residential areas of the Lower 9th and Chalmette.
The Mississippi coast is mostly totally devastated for several blocks inland, then just massively flooded and destroyed, then a bit less to finally just flooded or windblown (130 mph winds make a mess). Pass Christian's governmental buildings are trailers/manufactured homes, with a very big Americorps army-tent site. Bay St.Louis is bad. Biloxi has serious problems. All across Mississippi it is bad. I have seen the pictures here on DU and other places, and heard reports, but it still very much surprised me how bad.
Again I am struck with how little we really need to survive and to be happy. Summer socks. Homemade cookies. A place to relax and call your own. How spoiled most of us, including me, are. How little we can expect from our government as far as disaster help. I want a place on my income tax form to be able to specify where my tax money goes.
I don't think I'll be back until fall, can't take the heat/humidity very well. The teens want to return this summer between school and school.
More pictures at
http://s6.photobucket.com/albums/y233/jlaskey/Katrina%20relief%20March-April%202006/