Post-Katrina Promises Unfulfilled
Post-Katrina Promises Unfulfilled:
Nearly five months after Hurricane Katrina swamped New Orleans, President Bush's lofty promises to rebuild the Gulf Coast have been frustrated by bureaucratic failures and competing priorities, a review of events since the hurricane shows.
While the administration can claim some clear progress, Bush's ringing call from New Orleans's Jackson Square on Sept. 15 to "do what it takes" to make the city rise from the waters has not been matched by action, critics at multiple levels of government say, resulting in a record that is largely incomplete as Bush heads into next week's State of the Union address.
The problems include the slow federal cleanup of debris in Mississippi and Louisiana; a lack of authority for Bush's handpicked recovery coordinator, Donald E. Powell; the shortage and poor quality of housing for evacuees; and federal restrictions on reconstruction money and where coastal communities can rebuild.
With the onset of the hurricane season just four months away, there is no agreement on how to rebuild New Orleans, how to pay for that effort or even who is leading the cross-governmental partnership, according to elected leaders. While there is money to restore the city's flood defenses to protect against another Category 3 hurricane, it remains unclear whether merely reinforcing the levees will be enough to draw residents back.
New strains emerged this week when Bush aides rejected a plan by Rep. Richard H. Baker (R-La.) to set up a government corporation that would buy back the mortgages of storm-damaged homes around New Orleans. Instead, the government limited the use of $6.2 billion in grants to the rebuilding of 20,000 homes destroyed outside federally insured flood zones.
He's too busy getting people killed in the middle east.
Technorati tags: Katrina, New Orleans, Bush, FEMA, Lieberman
Technorati tags: Katrina, New Orleans, Bush, FEMA, Lieberman
1 Comments:
His name is href="http://vitter.senate.gov/">Vitter, He's been a Republican Senator for 6 years. As far as I know he's still a senator, Bush didn't nominate him for anything.
He doesn't appear to be anything special. He's pretty much a cookie cutter senator. He's anti-abortion, (possibly) anti-evolution, Lector at a church that sits on a science commitee.
Wait Science?!?!?!
Why you never see him? It looks like that's his choice.
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