oyuki
Sunday, November 27, 2005
Thanksgiving on the Gulf Coast
Thanksgiving Day dawned clear and cool on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. In fact the weather for Thanksgiving and what retailers call Black Friday were both beautiful, warm, and clear days.
Two churches in Long Beach held outside dinners on Thanksgiving Day at picnic tables. There were many people who enjoyed good food, new friendships, and shared struggles while enjoying the beautiful weather that seemed almost magical in contrast to what everyone suffered on August 29, 2005.
Friday I cruised along some of the Gulf Coast seeing damage that still remains. Going I-110 south off I-10 to where the Beau Rivage still looms, I took the off-ramp for Imperial Palace since that is the only casino still in operation. I turned right instead and followed the road along Back Bay and witnessed some of Katrina's storm surge. What used to be nice single story houses looking out over the water are now gutted out ruins where roofs are supported by skeletal walls while For Sale signs were on the lawns. Blue plastic is still a favorite roof color as people struggle with insurance companies and roofing contractors. Already one small insurance company has folded while the District Attorney is prosecuting fraudulent roofers. There are still large quantities of debris being picked up and some attention is being paid to clearing out the Mississippi Sound of all the debris Katrina washed into it.
For the literary minded on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the only option for bookstores is north. Waldenbooks in Edgewater mall is closed, store empty. The Books-a-Million next to Edgewater Mall is firmly closed while half of the strip mall was gutted by water surge. Meanwhile the Barnes&Nobles north of I-10 has a sign saying it will re-open in 2006. And the used bookstore just south of Gulfport airport is gutted out.
The bridge to Ocean Springs and the one to Bay St. Louis are still out. Pops Ferry bridge in Biloxi is almost repaired, which will re-open a northward hurricane evacuation route. The Ocean Springs bridge was progressing until some snags developed. Ocean Springs mayor Connie Moran, after initially supporting MDOT's 6-lane replacement bridge, is now advocating more study; this endangers the casinos coming back since this is a vital east-west traffic link and the only real by-pass is for Gautier/Ocean Springs to go north to I-10, then west until I-110 south. A bigger snag is MDOT has run out of highway funds to carry out repairs even though other projects in the state have been shut down. One of the biggest crimps in funding is the non-existence of funds from the Federal government[see following paragraph for more detailed explanation of this lack of funds]. MDOT is hoping construction will start in January 2006 instead of the planned December 2005.
Meanwhile the neighboring state to the west continues to cause trouble. It is because of Louisiana and its submitted cost of rebuilding that the Federal coffers for all the affected states slammed shut quicker than a bear trap springing on a bear. The state of Louisiana submitted a $200billion request. A state that sucked down $1.9billion in Corps of Engineer funding annually and who's budget is $18billion a year requested $200billion. Naturally Congress went from 'how can we help' to 'there need to be hearings' when among the things requested are tunnels for students to use on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge, it must be noted that Baton Rouge is north of New Orleans and was not flooded but being typical greedy selfish parochial politicians the robber barons of Louisiana are trying to swindle the US government. Ray Nagin has even told people in New Orleans that they are going to be rich once the government windfall arrives.
Which leads to another problem and a glaring warning of how broke the welfare system still is. Both on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and in New Orleans, non-reconstruction businesses are re-opening but finding workers hard to find. Service industries like fast food and oil change places on the Gulf Coast are looking for employees. The McDonald's outside Gate 7 of Keesler AFB had a mostly trainee crew. Burger King in New Orleans is offering a $6000 signing bonus along with $10/hr wages and still most franchises are under-staffed. Some of this scarcity is because the survivors are still putting their lives together and those people I have no gripes against for not going back to work yet. It is the others that I will rail against, the parasites who suck the government teat. I saw healthy young males of a certain demographic at the shelter I volunteered at not working while the older folk worked to help at the shelter or found work in the local community. Similar report comes from El Paso, TX where the older folk are getting employment while the 20-40 age group males are doing nothing.
There is one place I know of where you can see the Mississippi Sound. As you turn off Pass Road to go south past the Hobby Lobby and across the railroad tracks. This road separates Edgewater Mall from the strip mall next door that had Books-a-Million, Hagen-Daz, and other stores. Be warned two stoplights are still out on this road which means they are now four way stops. But if you persist and keep driving south, you will see a stop sign and much empty real estate in front of you. Go through the stop sign and park in the empty parking lots on either side, just watch for broken glass. I talked with several people who stopped there and they had come from other parts of the country just to see the damage wrought to an area they grew up in. The picture at the top of this post is what is left of the McDonald's that was facing Hwy 90 and the beach. It stood over twelve feet above sea level and you can see what Katrina's storm surge did. Right next to this McDonald's was a Wendy's; save for the foundation and some clumps of bricks there is nothing left of it. Further down towards the grounded remains of the Treasure Bay pirate ship casino was an O'Charley's Restaurant, all that remains of it is a foundation and its sign.
I had to snap a picture of this McDonald's just because it showed the devastating effect of the storm surge and for the flag in front. Like all of the flags that were run up after Camille telling the world that the Coast was not out and would rise again, that is what this flag tells me. Katrina may have beaten down the Gulf Coast, but the coast will rebuild once again stronger and better.
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4 comments:
Anna, it's interesting, up here in the north, from all of the news reports we see, our impression is that New Orleans was the only town hit by the hurricaine. Also from what we see, the only victims are black. And also what we have noticed, is almost everyone in N.O. is sitting around saying- "When is the government going to help US, when is some going to do something for US". If you listen to the MSM, there were no other states involved.
Contrast that with the natural disaster that happened up here a couple of weeks ago. We had a couple of tornadoes go through south of where I live. One of the tornadoes went through Amish country. There was quite a bit of material damage, but no deaths. It wasn't but one or two days later that we saw on the news that the Amish and Mennonites were getting together to rebuild barns and houses. Mot only their own, but also helping neighbors with their rebuilding. No waiting for the government to come in, no wringing of hands with "when is someone going to come in to help US", they just buckled down and started rebuilding again.
Quite a difference in cultures, on the one hand, the "nanny state" mentality of when is someone going to take care of us and on the other hand, "let's roll up our sleeves and get the job done".
I know from the FEW news reports from places other than N.O. that got hit by the hurricaine, that there were quite a few instances of the Amish philosophy present, but those were not stressed, only the victimhood of the N.O. residents.
Anna, it's interesting, up here in the north, from all of the news reports we see, our impression is that New Orleans was the only town hit by the hurricaine. Also from what we see, the only victims are black. And also what we have noticed, is almost everyone in N.O. is sitting around saying- "When is the government going to help US, when is some going to do something for US". If you listen to the MSM, there were no other states involved.
Contrast that with the natural disaster that happened up here a couple of weeks ago. We had a couple of tornadoes go through south of where I live. One of the tornadoes went through Amish country. There was quite a bit of material damage, but no deaths. It wasn't but one or two days later that we saw on the news that the Amish and Mennonites were getting together to rebuild barns and houses. Mot only their own, but also helping neighbors with their rebuilding. No waiting for the government to come in, no wringing of hands with "when is someone going to come in to help US", they just buckled down and started rebuilding again.
Quite a difference in cultures, on the one hand, the "nanny state" mentality of when is someone going to take care of us and on the other hand, "let's roll up our sleeves and get the job done".
I know from the FEW news reports from places other than N.O. that got hit by the hurricaine, that there were quite a few instances of the Amish philosophy present, but those were not stressed, only the victimhood of the N.O. residents.
Sorry about the double posting, it was either my ISP or maybe your site, the first comment didn't show up so I reposted
Sorry again
AndyJ
It is a nanny state mentality that expects someone else to do everything for them. It is very sad and yet that is waht is being peddled by local politicians, both at lack of relief and who was responsible for the fiasco in the first place. Which ignores Blanco's cavalier request for everything as Katrina roared ashore. Or Nagin somehow forgetting all those school buses located a few short miles from the Superdome that ended up being flooded out and rendered useless.
Why are you hearing about only New Orleans? Bad news sells papers and airtime. And it serves a partisan motive to blame everything on the Bush administration and on Brown. There is enough blame to cover everyone and to ignore some for partisan reasons is to set conditions for more people to die.
People on the Gulf Coast are doing things themselves. Neighbors helping neighbors recover swept away items. Helping each other rebuild. The Knights of Columbus bought the skating rink in Long Beach to serve as the school house for St. Thomas and St. Paul and serve as the church of St. Thomas since Katrina washed the church away. There has been a lively discussion in the Sun Herald over hanging Christmas lights this year with a clear majority desiring the lights.
Compare this to New Orleans where sections of the city still lack services like electricity. Where the Legislature just finished a four day special session that accomplished nothing. The $200 billion wish list included money for alligator farms and sugar cane farmers. Mayor Nagin has taken a vacation to Jamaica while Governor Barbour of Mississippi spent Thanksgiving in Iraq with the troops. And did I mention the FBI is doing an investigation on everything that transpired to cause the levees to fall apart?
One exasperated editorailist of the Clarion Ledger suggested the US sell off Louisiana for $200 million. And I am tempted to agree with him since I realized that $200 billion divided by the roughly 260 million in the US equals a $769 tax being levied on every man, woman, and child in this country to support Lousiana's pilfering habit.
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