Katrina Networking

I am using my networking and marketing skills to pass along vital information to organizations, volunteers and survivors of the 2005 hurricane season. Grants, networking, advocating, assistance resources, articles and more. Updated regularly to better assist you.

Monday, August 28, 2006

LA Hurricane Whistle Blower

HURRICANE EXPERT THREATENED FOR PRE-KATRINA WARNINGS
A Greg Palast special investigation for Democracy Now!
Monday, August 28. From New Orleans.

DON'T blame the Lady. Katrina killed no one in this town. In fact, Katrina missed the city completely, going wide to the east.

It wasn't the hurricane that drowned, suffocated, de-hydrated and starved 1,500 people that week. The killing was done by a deadly duo: a failed emergency evacuation plan combined with faulty levees. Behind these twin failures lies a tale of cronyism, profiteering and willful incompetence that takes us right to the steps of the White House.

Here's the story you haven't been told. And the man who revealed it to me, Dr. Ivor van Heerden, is putting his job on the line to tell it.

Van Heerden isn't the typical whistleblower I usually deal with. This is no minor player. He's the Deputy Director of the Louisiana State University Hurricane Center. He's the top banana in the field -- no one knew more about how to save New Orleans from a hurricane's devastation. And no one was a bigger target of an official and corporate campaign to bury the information.
Here's what happened. Right after Katrina swamped the city, I called Washington to get a copy of the evacuation plan.

Funny thing about the murderously failed plan for the evacuation of New Orleans: no one can find it. That's right. It's missing. Maybe it got wet and sank in the flood. Whatever: no one can find it.

That's real bad. Here's the key thing about a successful emergency evacuation plan: you have to have copies of it. Lots of copies -- in fire houses and in hospitals and in the hands of every first responder. Secret evacuation plans don't work.

I know, I worked on the hurricane evacuation plan for Long Island New York, an elaborate multi-volume dossier.

Specifically, I'm talking about the plan that was written, or supposed to have been written two years ago by a company called, "Innovative Emergency Management."

Weird thing about IEM, their founder Madhu Beriwal, had no known experience in hurricane evacuations. She did, however, have a lot of experience in donating to Republicans.

IEM and FEMA did begin a draft of a plan. The plan was that, when a hurricane hit, everyone in the Crescent City would simply get the hell out in their cars. Apparently, the IEM/FEMA crew didn't know that 127,000 people in the city didn't have cars. But Dr. van Heerden knew that. It was his calculation. LSU knew where these no-car people were -- they mapped it -- and how to get them out.

Dr. van Heerden offered this life-saving info to FEMA. They wouldn't touch it. Then, a state official told him to shut up, back off or there would be consequences for van Heerden's position. This official now works for IEM.

So I asked him what happened as a result of making no plans for those without wheels, a lot of them elderly and most of them poor.

"Fifteen-hundred of them drowned. That's the bottom line." The professor, who'd been talking to me in technicalities, changed to a somber tone. "They're still finding corpses."

Van Heerden is supposed to keep his mouth shut. He won't. The deaths weigh on him. "I wasn't going to listen to those sort of threats, to let them shut me down."

Van Heerden had other disturbing news. The Hurricane Center's computer models showed the federal government had built the levees around the city a foot-and-a-half too short.

After Katrina, the Hurricane Center analyzed the flooding and found that, had the levees had just that extra 18 inches, they would have been "overtopped" for only an hour and a half, not four hours. In that case, the levees would have held, and the city would have been saved.
He had taken the warning about the levees all the way to George Bush's doorstep. "I myself briefed senior officials including somebody from the White House." The response: the university's trustees threatened his job.

While in Baton Rouge, I dropped in on the headquarters of IEM, the evacuation contractors. The assistant to the CEO insisted they had "a lot of experience with evacuation" -- but couldn't name a single city they'd planned for when they got the Big Easy contract. And still, they couldn't produce the plan.

An IEM press release in June 2004 boasted legendary expert James Lee Witt as a member of their team. That was impressive. It was also a lie. In fact, Witt had nothing to do with it. When I asked IEM point blank if Witt's name was used as a fraudulent hook to get the contract, their spokeswoman said, weirdly, "We'll get back to you on that."

Back at LSU, van Heerden astonished me with the most serious charge of all. While showing me huge maps of the flooding, he told me the White House had withheld the information that, in fact, the levees were about to burst and by Tuesday at dawn the city, and more than a thousand people, would drown.

Van Heerden said, "FEMA knew on Monday at 11 o'clock that the levees had breached… They took video. By midnight on Monday the White House knew. But none of us knew ...I was at the State Emergency Operations Center." Because the hurricane had missed the city that Monday night, evacuation effectively stopped, assuming the city had survived.

It's been a full year now, and 73,000 New Orleanians remain in FEMA trailers and another 200,000, more than half the city's former residents, remain in temporary refuges. "The City That Care Forgot" -- that's their official slogan -- lost a higher percentage of homes than Berlin lost in World War II. It would be more accurate to call it, "The City That Bush Forgot."
Should they come home? Rebuild? Is it safe? Team Bush assures them there's nothing to worry about: FEMA won't respond to van Heerden's revelations. However, the Bush Administration has hired a consulting firm to fix the failed evacuation plan. The contractor? A Baton Rouge company named "Innovative Emergency Management." IEM.

******

Watch this special investigative report about Katrina on Democracy Now! this morning or hear it on your local Pacifica or NPR station. You can also download it at DemocracyNow.org.

And catch the one-hour special report, "Who Drowned New Orleans?" on LinkTV, with Greg Palast in New Orleans plus an exclusive interview with Amy Goodman. (Get it on Direct TV channel 375 and Dish TV channel 9410. Or check your cable listing at LinkTV.com.)

And for more on IEM and Katrina, read Greg Palast's new NYT bestseller, "Armed Madhouse" (Penguin 2006).

A Jacquie Soohen BigNoise Films Production, produced by Matt Pascarella.And very, very, special thanks to our Associate Producers on this particular story -- without their generosity and financial support this report would not have been possible. ******

MS Coast Job Fair


Date: 11/14/06
Time: 9:00AM - 2:00PM
Location: Edgewater Mall - Biloxi, MS
Mailing Address: MDES/Gulf Coast Job Fair, PO Box 1699 Jackson MS 39215
Contacts: Joe Buckner 601.321.6154 Mark Landry 228.539.6825
Employer Registration: $100

http://www.jobfairs.ms.gov/jobfairsweb/events.aspx

Date: 10/24/2006
Time: 9:00 am - 2:00 pm
Location: National Guard Armory
City:Quitman
State:MS
Mailing Address:MDES/Clarke Co. Job Fair ,Po Bx 1699 Jackson MS 39215
Contacts: Joe Buckner 601.321.6154 Adam Todd601.321.6149
Employer Registration Cost:$125.00

Date: 11/7/06
Time: 9AM - 2PM
Location:Madison County Win Job Center
City:Canton
State:MS
Mailing Address: MDES/Madison Co Job Fair PO Box 1699 Jackson MS 39215
Contacts:
Joe Buckner 601.321.6154
Adam Todd 601.321.6149
Jessica Nichols 601.855.0113
Employer Registration Cost:$125.00

Unrelated links for jobs http://regionalhelpwanted.com/AdvSearch/AdvJobSearch_Result.cfm?SN=210&DC=City+is+Jackson
State of Mississippi Employment:
http://www.spb.state.ms.us/appltest/soctseq.asp
Mississippi Job Fairs:
http://www.jobfairs.ms.gov/jobfairsweb/events.aspx
From JobsNet.com:
http://www.top-jobs-net.com/ms/2.htm
From Indeed.com:
http://www.indeed.com/jobs?q=&l=Mississippi&sort=date&start=30
Mississippi National Guard employment:
http://www.ngms.state.ms.us/hroinfo/hrohomepage.htm
From Irby (Electrical Distributor)
http://www.irby.com/careers/current.asp
From the Clairion Ledger:
http://www.misscareers.com/vjobfair/clarionledger.html
Health Careers
http://www.mshealthcareers.com
may be eligible for temporary public service employment to help in the clean-up and recovery efforts.
• Available jobs may include:
o Debris Clean-up Workers
o Humanitarian Aideso Drivers
o Office Workerso Social Services Aides
o Construction Workerso Others as needed.
• You can earn up to $12,000 and work up to six (6) months.
• Your wages will be based on the prevailing rate for that job in the area.
• You may receive support service such as transportation assistance, uniforms and protective clothing, and safetye quipment.
There is a form you must fill out and submit - You will find this form at: http://mdes.ms.gov/wps/PA_1_0_6A/docs/DisasterRecoveryJobApp.pdf
(You will need Acrobat Reader to open and view this file.)

Saturday, August 26, 2006

MN Art Exhibit



9/1
We will be posting photos of our shows up here for all the artists of MS. Our Reception last week had Brian Sanderson, Deputy Director for the Committee on Rebuilding for Governor Barbour Friday evening August 18th. He attended our event in furtherance of our efforts to help so many who have lost so much in MS.Stay tuned to MinnesotaHelpers' website for further information about our event.Also visit: www.TheArtoftheStorm.com for more information.
Mary Gray, CEO
www.MinnesotaHelpers.org

MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 22, 2006—A unique exhibition is taking a Minneapolis art space by storm—literally.
Shards of broken glass, a chandelier, a computer hard drive, a blade from a ceiling fan, cement, bricks, slabs of concrete and other hurricane debris are all part of “The Art of the Storm: Nothing Can Destroy Passion,” on display at the Hennepin County Government Center Lower Level Art Gallery through Aug. 30, reports the Sun-Herald (Mississippi).
The debris—and the 30 artists—all hail from Hancock County, Miss, which suffered massive damage when Katrina swept through last year.
Exhibition organizer Mary Gray said the purpose is to help people realize the extent of Katrina’s destruction and assist artists who are striving to get back on their feet after the storm.
Gray, the CEO of MinnesotaHelpers.org, formed the “Mississippi Art Share” as a program of Minnesota Helpers to help artists affected by the storm. She said she visited Hancock County as a volunteer after the hurricane and saw the struggles they faced.
“This is about so much more than art,” Gray told the Minnesota Sun. “It needs to be kept in people’s minds that the Gulf Coast still needs help.”
The gallery where the work is displayed is very long, narrow, heavily trafficked indoor corridor, across from a popular restaurant; it serves as the underground walkway to the Minneapolis City Hall.
http://www.sunherald.com/mld/sunherald/15275796.htm
An exhibit of Mississippi art that is stopping people in their tracks in Minneapolis has quite a twist.
Hurricane debris brought from Hancock County is incorporated into its gallery design, which showcases about 140 pieces of work by 30 Coast artists.
Broken glass, a chandelier, a computer hard drive, one blade from a ceiling fan and shreds of material hanging in trees are some of what's there that used to be here. Plus, artists who arranged the display threw in some heavier things that would have been hard to haul, like chunks of concrete and bricks.
"You're trying to haul it away, and we're using it," said exhibit organizer Mary Gray of Wayzata, Minn.
The debris is there to make Katrina's destruction more real to people who have not seen it firsthand, said Gray, who is CEO of MinnesotaHelpers.org.
She formed Mississippi Art Share as a program of Minnesota Helpers in order to help the artists she saw struggling against all odds when she came to Hancock County as a volunteer after the storm.
"The Art of the Storm: Nothing Can Destroy Passion" is on display through Aug. 30 at Hennepin County Government Center Lower Level Art Gallery in Minneapolis, with a public reception set for 5-8 p.m. Friday.
The exhibit has a twofold intent.
One is to provide a selling opportunity for artists who are creating their work in Katrina's aftermath but now lack their once plentiful hometown venues and audiences. All of the show's proceeds from sales go to the artists.
The second is to rev up awareness of the Coast's continuing needs.
"This is about so much more than art," Gray said in a story published Aug. 2 in the Minnesota Sun. "It needs to be kept in people's minds that the Gulf Coast still needs help."
Earlier this year, Gray arranged exhibits for Mississippi Coast artists at three Minnesota-area galleries and coordinated transport of their artwork to Minnesota at no cost to them.
The art now on exhibit has both new work and work that remains from the earlier shows.
Even without piles of debris at each end, the gallery is uncommon looking.
It is a very long, very narrow glass showcase, 113 feet by about 4 feet, that meanders along a heavily traveled indoor walkway. It's across from a popular restaurant and is the underground walkway to the Minneapolis City Hall.
"It's really interesting how people respond," said LuAnn Schmaus, public affairs officer for Hennepin County.
"Some people are walking briskly, obviously on their way to something. Suddenly they stop. The exhibit speaks loudly: that art doesn't die; that passion still lives."
It's a welcome opportunity for artists.
For Mark Buszkiewicz, who lives in the Fenton community near Kiln and does sculptural ceramics, "It was a good thing," he said of his sales at the earlier exhibits.
He's been unable to work since six weeks after Katrina when he fell through his roof trying to fix it and broke six ribs and his collarbone, but he expects his doctors to let him resume throwing clay by Aug. 29.
"I didn't even care if it was a pity sale," he said. "Being broke, it really helped to have any money that comes in."
And he said he's excited about the chance to sell more at the exhibit.
Making it real
These items of storm debris from Hancock County accent the Minneapolis gallery where South Mississippi art is on exhibit.
Dishes
Broken glass
Broken framing materials from art gallery in Bay St. Louis
Silverware
Pipe fittings from sink
Chandelier
Shreds of material hanging in trees
Ceiling fan, one blade
Broken leg from table
Broken water pipe with patina effect
Baseball cards
Computer chips
Computer hard drive
Old vinyl 33 record
FAT CAT ART STUDIO,
Find out more
What:
"The Art of the Storm: Nothing Can Destroy Passion" exhibit of works by South Mississippi visual artists through August.
Where: Hennepin County Government Center Lower Level Art Gallery, 300 S. Sixth St., Minneapolis, Minn.; reception 5-8 p.m. Friday; guest speakers Brian W. Sanderson from Gov. Barbour's Office of Recovery and Renewal. Exhibit is free and open to the public 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
How: Organized by Mary Gray with MinnesotaHelpers.org, which volunteered in Hancock County after Katrina; design concept of incorporating hurricane debris into the display was the idea of Adam J. Gray; the creative director was Lisa Marek, all of Minnesota.
Who: Participating artists are Michelle Ailee, Vicki Niolet, Regan Carney, Julia Nelson, Mary Benton Shaw, Kathryn Taylor Gray, Mary and Ken Davidson, Rhonda Blasingame, Lori Gordon, Elizabeth Shafer, Bill Myers, Patt Odom, Joe Tomasovsky, Joe Key, Hamilton Guenard, Robert A. Brooks, Judy MacInnis, Mary Hardy, Don Beckmeyer, Ruth Thompson, David Wheeler, Brenda Randolph, Marcel Anderson, Mark Buszkiewicz, Carol Marie Stuart, Mary Pat Forrest, Joey Rice, Kathe Calhoun and Pamela Tripp.
Details: (763) 208-9920; mary@minnesotahelpers.org; http://www.co.hennepin.mn.us/ or minnesotahelpers.org

Friday, August 25, 2006

Ernesto Preparations

Recovery News

August 25, 2006
DR-1604-MS-430
Joint Information Center Media Contact:
FEMA/Mississippi News Desk: 228-385-5611

KEEP EYES ON TROPICS — PREPARE NOW

BILOXI, Miss. – Tropical Storm Ernesto is approaching the Gulf of Mexico and could be a hurricane by the end of the weekend. Are you ready?

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) say though a storm or hurricane may not come here, now is the time to finalize evacuation plans and make emergency preparations.

“The key message of the state’s ‘Stay Alert. Stay Alive’ hurricane preparedness campaign this year was to plan before the hurricane season,” said Mike Womack, MEMA’s interim director. “If folks haven’t already done so, now is the time.”

The plan should include an evacuation plan, a communication plan and a disaster supply kit.

“All those in travel trailers and mobile homes must evacuate when the order is given; no one is safe in them during a tropical storm or hurricane,” said Nick Russo, federal coordinating officer for the Mississippi recovery. “It is unlawful to move these temporary units because it is unsafe to do so and because they are federal property.”

Russo said FEMA will replace travel trailers and mobile homes if they are damaged beyond repair by a severe storm.

If local officials order an evacuation, travel trailer and mobile home occupants are advised to:

Leave unit in place;
Close and lock windows and roof vents;
Turn off electricity at the main circuit breaker;
Turn off main water valve outside unit and disconnect the hose;
Turn off the two propane tanks outside by tightening valves clockwise;
Take any items that may spoil out of your freezer and refrigerator;
Locate shelters or safe places to go before a storm;
Make arrangements for pets because most shelters do not allow them;
Establish a place to meet family members if separated and determine an out-of-state telephone number to use so others can find you after a storm (it’s usually easier to call in and out of state rather than within after a storm).

“Residents should familiarize themselves with evacuation routes now,” said Womack. “Routes are posted at www.mdot.state.ms.us.” “If you don’t have transportation, contact your local emergency management organization to make arrangements.”

-more-
Keep Eyes On Tropics…page two

MEMA and FEMA officials also ask residents to get their disaster kits ready immediately and store them in a portable container in case of evacuation.

The kit should include:

At least a three-day supply of food and bottled water for each family member;
Manual can opener;
Battery-powered radio and flashlights with extra batteries;
First aid kit with family members’ medications;
Hygiene and personal care items;
Emergency contact list and phone numbers;
Pet supplies;
Copies of important papers including insurance policies and bank account information;
Emergency cash or credit card in case of an evacuation with little notice.

“If Mississippians go through a check list of what to do and what to gather now and prepare to evacuate as soon as the order is given, they should be safe,” said Womack. “Residents’ safety is our concern but it’s ultimately their responsibility.”

For more information about disaster planning, visit: www.ready.gov. Emergency traffic routes or evacuation plans for Mississippi may be found at: http://www.mdot.state.ms.us/cetrp/default.htm.

FEMA manages federal response and recovery efforts following any national incident. FEMA also initiates mitigation activities, works with state and local emergency managers, and manages the National Flood Insurance Program. FEMA became part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security on March 1, 2003.

###

Ted Stuckey
Public Information Officer
Transitional Recovery Office
Biloxi, Mississippi
228-385-5088 – Office
703-254-7711 - Cell
228-385-5611 – News Desk

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Paid Fire Fighter Grants

THE JEREMIAH LUCEY GRANT PROGRAM

The Jeremiah Lucey Grant Program, named in honor of Denis Leary’s cousin who perished in a catastrophic fire in Worcester, Massachusetts, provides financial support for the training and equipment needs of uniformed firefighters in board-designated geographic areas. The Board of Directors of the Leary Firefighters Foundation invites grant requests from professional, uniformed Fire Departments in New York, Massachusetts, and areas affected by Hurricane Katrina along the Gulf Coast.

Limitations: No grants to individuals. Grants only to professional, Uniformed Fire Departments.

Average grant size: $25,000 - $50,000.

Application information: Fire Department representatives should send a letter of inquiry (not to exceed two pages) which includes the following information:

description of the organization seeking support
overview of project to be funded and grant amount requested
problem/challenges project will address
timeframe for implementation of project
summary of other sources being approached for support of project.

In addition to the letter of inquiry, a project budget should be included.

Applicants considered for funding will be contacted and asked to complete a full grant application form.

Deadline: None. Letters of inquiry and applications are reviewed as received.

Final notification: 3-6 months.

Background: The Leary Firefighters Foundation is a 501(c) 3 organization founded by actor Denis Leary in 2000 to provide support for the training and equipment needs of uniformed firefighters. To date, the Leary Foundation’s grants have been made in New York City, Worcester and Boston, Massachusetts.

The Leary Firefighters Foundation
594 Broadway, Suite 409
New York, NY 10012


Telephone: (212) 343-0240

Email: info@learyfirefighters.org

URL: http://www.learyfirefighters.org

Contact: Lys Hopper, Executive Director

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Articles On New Plagues

From the MS Press
http://www.gulflive.com/news/mississippipress/index.ssf?/base/news/1155982532205670.xml

24 arrested in FEMA trailer park drug sweep
Saturday, August 19, 2006
PASCAGOULA -- A two-day counter-drug operation targeting Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer parks in Jackson County resulted in the arrest of 24 people on various drug charges.

The roundup of drug suspects was the result of an operation called "Operation Katrina," in which the narcotics task force used undercover police officers to buy drugs in and around the FEMA trailer parks in the county.
The operation was conducted by the Narcotics Task Force of Jackson County. Other agencies participating in the roundup included the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, FBI Safe Streets Task Force, Pas-cagoula police, Jackson County Sheriff's Department, Biloxi police and the Mississippi Air National Guard counter-drug enforcement unit.
The largest group of arrests in the roundup involved nine people living at various trailer parks: Dawn Marcine Broadnax, Daniel O'neal Mitchell, Brian O'neal Moody, Gary Eugene Moore, Taurus Lafance Trooey, Curtis Chablis Walley, Tanya McVeay Lizana, Tristen Anderson and Cedrick Moody, who were all arrested on charges of sale of a controlled substance -- crack cocaine.
Charges filed against other suspects included transfer of a controlled substance, felony possession of a controlled substance, possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, possession of a controlled substance with the intent to distribute while in possession of a firearm, felony vehicle pursuit, misdemeanor possession of a controlled substance and possession of paraphernalia.
Agents also contacted officials with the City of Pasca-goula Code Enforcement Division, who condemned two houses and issued citations on another house where undercover officers reportedly bought illegal drugs.
FEMA inspectors evicted several violators who were distributing drugs from the trailers at the temporary housing sites and Mississippi Housing Authority officers arrested one person for trespassing in the Charles Warner Housing Development in Pascagoula. More arrests are expected, authorities said.
This ties in with an update on the Pearlington Relief site. This is so very real and was predicted with no real effort to prevent it. Very sad.

Sounding the alarm Firefighters' low pay cited in low morale, exodus
Friday, August 18, 2006
By Bruce EgglerStaff writer


Nearly a year after Hurricane Katrina, the New Orleans Fire Department is in bad shape and getting worse, the City Council was told Thursday.
The department has "a rapidly deteriorating morale problem" and post-Katrina personnel losses are undermining its ability to do its job, District Chief Tim McConnell said.
"I am here in a crisis mode," Fire Fighters Association Local 632 President Nick Felton told the council, pointing to what he said was firefighters' anger about the city's failure to include most of them in recently announced raises for police officers.
"I don't know how much longer I can hold the men and women together," Felton said, adding that "the stress level is past critical mass" and that pay is so low that fast-food chains are offering new workers higher per-hour wages than the Fire Department.
"Your Fire Department is whittling away to nothing," he said.
Shrinking force
Superintendent Charles Parent said that before Katrina, the department had 770 employees, 55 fewer than authorized. Because of resignations and retirements, it now has 695 employees, including 651 actual firefighters, but about 100 are out on sick leave on a typical day, meaning "manpower is down between 30 and 60 members on a daily basis," Parent said.
As a result, with the department's budget cut by $12 million and no money available for overtime, from three to eight of the department's 31 engine companies are out of service on a typical day because of lack of manpower, he said.
Meanwhile, as many as five fire trucks are inoperable each day because of mechanical problems, many of them caused by operating in saltwater while most of the city was flooded after the storm, Parent said.
To compensate for the loss of personnel, the number of firefighters per engine has been reduced from four to three. With two firefighters needed to direct water at a fire, that means the first company to arrive on the scene has only one person to go into a burning building to rescue trapped people, although normal procedure is never to go into such buildings alone, McConnell said.
In that situation, he said, firefighters must either violate procedure and go in alone; leave only one person at the engine, reducing its ability to pour water on the blaze; or ignore the pleas of bystanders to rescue friends or family members.
Few left in reserve
Because of the short-handed engines and other factors, more companies are being sent to many fires this year. For the first seven months of the year, Parent said, the number of multiple-alarm fires in the city increased by 145 percent, from 38 in 2005 to 93 this year. Three-alarm fires have gone from three to 17, and five-alarm fires from none to seven.
As he spoke, he said, a four-alarm fire was under way in Mid-City.
Chief Norman Woodridge, the Fire Department's director of public affairs, said the department normally sends two units and at least seven firefighters for a one-alarm fire, four units and 23 firefighters for a two-alarm, and seven units and at least 33 firefighters for a three-alarm. After that, two more units and at least six firefighters are added for every additional alarm.
Since Katrina, extra firefighters are being sent out for all fires in the Lower 9th Ward and eastern New Orleans, Woodridge said. Water-dropping helicopters also are placed on stand-by for all fires in those areas.
During a five-alarm fire that draws 100 firefighters, Felton and McConnell said, only 30 personnel are left to protect the rest of the city.
During a five-alarm blaze Saturday that injured four firefighters in the 300 block of Baronne Street, McConnell said, the first man to fall through a hole on the second floor radioed a warning to others, but because of a shortage of radios and batteries, some of his colleagues did not hear him and two more fell through the floor.
They stayed
Although the news media ignored it, Parent alleged, "not one firefighter left his post during the storm," even though 22 of the department's 33 firehouses were flooded and damaged. Starting a week after Katrina, he said, fire departments in New York, Illinois and Maryland responded to a call for help, sending 10 ladder trucks, 28 engines and more than 900 firefighters to assist the local department.
Eighty percent of firefighters lost their homes, Parent said, and many of their families remain displaced. Of the 31 remaining engine houses, just 15 are in their pre-Katrina buildings; the rest are operating from trailers.
A Centers for Disease Control report found that 89 of 133 firefighters surveyed showed signs of depression and 110 of 492 showed symptoms of post-traumatic stress, Parent said.
The low pay the department offers also is "hampering recruitment and retention offers," he said.
Felton, who has appeared before the council many times to argue for higher pay for his members, presented figures Thursday showing that a New Orleans firefighter's "basic pay for one year of service" amounts to $21,130, or $8.24 an hour, at a time when he said fast-food chains such as Burger King, Wendy's and McDonald's are offering $10 an hour.
Felton said comparable salaries in other cities include more than $32,000 in Houston and Memphis, Tenn.; more than $27,000 in Baton Rouge; more than $24,000 in Shreveport; and nearly $34,000 in Hammond.
In Jefferson Parish, firefighter recruits are paid 32 percent more a year than in New Orleans, and they earn from 10 percent to 46 percent more at each level as they advance in rank, figures presented by Felton showed.
Vast inequity
A survey of 40 major fire departments nationwide by the International Association of Fire Fighters found that first-year firefighters averaged $41,960, or $18.05 an hour, more than twice the figures for New Orleans.
As they have many times in the past, council members expressed sympathy for the firefighters' plight and said they would like to help, but made no promises. No one representing Mayor Ray Nagin's administration was on hand to hear the discussion.
Nagin last month announced plans to raise all police salaries by 10 percent and to boost the annual starting pay for rookie firefighters by $5,300 as a way to spur recruitment, but Felton said at the time that the raise would do nothing for firefighters already on the job. In fact, he said, under Nagin's proposal, new recruits would be earning more than some firefighters with two or more years' experience.
"This is absolutely preposterous. Is this doing anything for retention?" Felton asked then. "I'd say no."
He said Thursday that firefighters are furious that for the third time in recent years, they have been omitted from raises offered to other city workers. "It is wrong. It is inequitable. It is unacceptable," he said.
Explaining why not all firefighters would get a raise, Nagin noted that firefighters, unlike other municipal workers, get a state-mandated 2 percent annual pay increase starting in their third year on the job. Nagin also cited the so-called "longevity" raises as his reason for leaving firefighters out of previous citywide pay increases.
In addition, the city is under court orders to pay as much as $150 million to about 1,000 current and retired firefighters or their heirs to cover longevity raises the city failed to pay for many years. Even before Katrina, officials could not say where the cash-strapped city would get that money.

Operation Eden




Pearlington, NOLA, and "The K-hole".

Since I can't seem to find Clayton's original blog post on any of the blogs, SO - I guess I'll just have to make a new one. Darn. LOL

The main thing is, his work is so instrumental in the rise of countless volunteers, including me. Without him, his incredible writing style, his uncanny way of capturing the truest essence of a person on film, so many people would not be driven to help. And now, hopefully, more will. His photographic eye is going to be used to create public service announcements to raise the awareness of the emotional toll The Storm has taken on all of those having lived through it.

Like the other blogs I follow and respect, I'll post occasional posts from his.

Some of his portaits:
http://www.claytoncubitt.com/publish/katrina/

His most recent post:
http://operationeden.blogspot.com/2006/08/tear-drop.html
Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Tear Drop

My heart hurts for my hometown, for the Gulf. I can't sleep at night, my chest is tight. These amazing people, the huge hugs they give, the smiles they flash, the parties they throw. If you've ever experienced their spirit you never forget it. That's what makes this so hard for me.
"Summing up what has happened since the hurricanes destroyed large parts of four Gulf Coast states last August, doctors from the departments of psychiatry at the University of North Carolina, Duke University Medical Center and Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center paint a fairly grim picture of the instability that has followed:

• One survey found that 68 percent of female caregivers had a mental health disability because of symptoms of depression, anxiety or other psychiatric disorders.
• Another survey found that 19 percent of police officers and 22 percent of firefighters reported symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), while 26 percent of police and 27 percent of firefighters reported major depressive symptoms.
• A crisis-call center in Mississippi handling inquiries mostly from people dealing with depression and anxiety reported a 61 percent increase in volume between March 1 and May 31, 2006, compared with the period just after the hurricanes, Oct 31 and Dec. 31, 2005.
• The deputy coroner of New Orleans recorded almost a threefold increase in suicide rates, from nine per 100,000 to 26 per 100,000 in the four months after Katrina hit. And the murder rate in New Orleans, which fell in 2005, has risen by 37.1 percent above pre-hurricane levels for the first half of 2006.
• In Louisiana, mental health counselors supported by federal government agencies made 158,260 referrals. This doesn't include people who sought support independently.
• Recent estimates suggest that only 140 of 617 primary-care physicians have returned to practice in New Orleans. Only 100 doctors along the Gulf Coast area are participating in the Medicaid program, compared to 400 before Katrina hit.
• And estimates also suggest that only 22 of 196 psychiatrists continue to practice in New Orleans, while the number of psychiatric hospital beds has been sharply reduced: as of June 14, the authors said, there were only two psychiatric beds within a 25-mile radius of New Orleans.

Part of the reason he's doing this campaign (taken from his blog)

The campaign hopes to help the victims and first responders who have been impacted by the hurricanes and are in need of mental health services. Those affected are encouraged to take a break, and assess how they and their families are handling the recovery. They are invited to call a confidential toll-free number: 1-800-789-2647 for victims, or 1-800-273-TALK for first responders to get help and speak to a trained mental health professional.

You can read Traveling Mermaid's post on the subject:
http://4travelingmermaid.blogspot.com/2006/08/post-katrina-mental-health-volunteers_15.html

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Ken Tenn Relief Team


512 Main Street Williamsburg, Kentucky 40769

Phone: 606.549.2111
email: jpaul@kentennreliefteam.org

11/10
Jim contacted me last week regarding a 26' truck he had rented and was wanting to fill with food to take to Hancock County. After many emails among the Citizen Action Team database members, we found the food to fill the truck! Woo! I do love networking.
The plan was for him to contact the Hancock County Food Pantry to donate the food to them. I've not heard back yet, but honestly don't know if Jim has made it there yet. Will post the information as I get it.

Taken from their website:
KEN-TENN RELIEF TEAM, ORIGINALLY THE WILLIAMSBURG TRI-COUNTY RELIEF FUND, WAS ESTABLISHED TO AID THE GULF COAST AREA IN MISSISSIPPI AFTER HURRICANE KATRINA.
ON SEPTEMBER 12TH, JIM PAUL WENT TO BATON ROUGE AS A VOLUNTEER WITH NATIONAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS. HE WORKED FOR THREE WEEKS HELPING FAMILIES AT THE FIND FAMILY NATIONAL CALL CENTER. IT WAS HERE THAT HE LEARNED OF OTHER FAMILIES THAT WERE NOT RECEIVING THE ASSISTANCE THEY NEEDED. JIM VISITED WAVELAND, MS ON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH, WHILE THERE HE REALIZED THAT RESIDENTS WERE IN DESPERATE NEED OF BASIC ESSENTIALS TO LIVE ON.
HE RETURNED HOME, TO WILLIAMSBURG, KY, AND ON SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2ND, BEGAN MAKING CONTACTS WITH LOCAL CHURCHES. ON SUNDAY NIGHT AT 8:30PM, FRANKIE BALL, JENNIFER, JEFF, AND JONATHAN WYATT AND JIM PLANNED THE DETAILS FOR THEIR FIRST TRIP TO MISSISSIPPI.
IN FOUR DAYS, THEY RAISED $10,000 IN CASH DONATIONS FOR THE WAVELAND POLICE DEPARTMENT AND VARIOUS OTHER CHARITIES IN THE AREA, $20,000 IN SUPPLIES AND DECIDED TO HEAD FOR THE MISSISSIPPI GULF COAST. THE GROUP WAS MADE UP OF JIM PAUL, FRANKIE BALL, TROY SHARP, JEFF WYATT, SHARON HENRY, AND JIM WALLACE.
ARRIVING IN THE GULF AREA ON THURSDAY, OCT. , WE SET UP OUR DISTRIBUTION AT THE HOME OF MRS. BETTY CREASY IN BAYSIDE, HANCOCK CO. MS. SINCE THEN THE GROUP HAS MADE 11 MORE TRIPS TO THE GULF COAST AREA AND DISTRIBUTED MORE THAN $500,000 IN SUPPLIES AND DONATIONS.

SUNDAY, JUNE 25, 2006
WE HAVE BEEN INVOLVED WITH HELPING MEMA AND THE IRD. OFFICE IN GULFPORT, AND OTHER ORGANIZATIONS. WE ARE TRYING TO GET AS MANY PEOPLE BACK IN THEIR HOMES AS POSSIBLE BEFORE THE COAST GETS HIT WITH ANOTHER STORM. THIS WEEK YOU WILL BE ABLE TO READ MORE ABOUT THOSE WE ARE TRYING TO HELP IN OUR NEEDS SECTION.

PLEASE, THE NEED FOR WATER AND FOOD IS GREAT,
IF YOU CAN HELP PLEASE CONTACT US

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Photo Restoration

http://www.restorepict.com/

The Professional Photo Restoration Studio
PO Box 286157
New York, NY 10128
212-876-5012
Restorep@restorepict.com

Leslie Teltoe found this link, and I followed up on what these folks are willing to do to assist folks from The Storm.

I'll put it in a FAQ format. If you have any other questions, please feel free to contact them. They are incredibly rapid with their response! I was very impressed.

Your offer of one free photo restoration per Katrina Client is great! What if people have more than one photo?

We are willing to consider multiple submissions from one customer at a reduced price. They must have proof of residence in the affected area at the time The Storm came through.

On your website, you have a pre-1980 cut-off for photos. Is there a reason?

The reason we chose the 1980 cut-off date is because we wanted to work with photographs that have historical importance or are significant in the family history, as well as photos that have great sentimental value. Of course we will consider more recent photos, with those criteria in mind.

How do you prefer folks send the photos? While you have free pickup in NYC, most people are on the coast.

The clients may send the photos by US Mail (don't send by any private courier service such as FEDEX). They are responsible for making sure the photos are well-packaged and secure, adding insurance if they want. When we return the restored version, along with the damaged original, we will use US Mail insured. We will charge the client ahead of time for the return shipping-- it will be itemized on the statement along with other charges, if there are any. Obviously, whatever it costs for the client to send, that will be approximately the cost to return. Unless additional items are ordered, such as additional prints, that is the general rule.

Clients can also scan the photo and send it by e-mail: Scan should be at 100%, 300 dpi (high resolution), RGB mode, JPEG format. Make sure the resulting file is no more than 5 mgs in size.

Is there any other information you'd like?
Yes. Please detail exactly how the photo was damaged - flooding, found in a tree, petroleum products, fire, mold, etc.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Hurricane Fraud Unit

Hurricane Fraud Unit

State Auditor Phil Bryant will locate his hurricane fraud unit in offices in Hattiesburg and Biloxi. Bryant made the announcement during a news conference Friday in Biloxi.
Bryant and Gov. Haley Barbour had said in April that the auditor had set up a unit that will target fraud cases related to housing grants. No location was announced at that time.
Bryant said investigators will look into complaints about fraudulent applications and shoddy work by contractors in Hancock, Harrison, Jackson and Pearl River counties.
"From the point where these tax dollars enter the system until they are paid to the builder, we will be there to assure protection for the citizens,'' Bryant said Friday.
Bryant plans to hire 10 law enforcement officers for the unit. About five to six of them will work out of the Hattiesburg branch office and the rest will work out of a Biloxi office.
A $1.9 million federal grant from the U.S. Department Housing and Urban Development agency will fund the fraud unit for the next two years. Another $3 million could fund the unit for an additional three years.
To learn more about the Hurricane fraud unit, or to file a complaint, click here, or call 1-800-956-1846.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

MS Coast In Danger

8/9
WAPT.com
Toxicologist: Arsenic Levels In Soil Are Not Dangerous

JACKSON, Miss. -- Mississippi Poison Control Center director Doctor Robert Cox said there are no findings to support claims of dangerous levels of arsenic in the soil on the coast.
Cox was responding to claims by Wilma Subra, a chemist who last week said arsenic levels were dangerously high.
Subra said she came to work along the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina, and has taken soil samples in Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas and Alabama.
She said 90 percent of the samples have exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for arsenic.

WAPT.com
Chemist Finds High-Level Of Arsenic In Katrina's Wake
POSTED: 9:07 am CDT July 31, 2006
UPDATED: 9:14 am CDT July 31, 2006

BILOXI, Miss. -- A chemist said soil samples taken in the wakes of hurricanes Katrina and Rita show dangerously high levels of arsenic in some areas along the coast.

Wilma Subra said she believes arsenic, other heavy metals and bacteria in the soils of coastal areas battered by hurricanes last year are causing residents to become sick with unexplained illnesses.

Some who attended a meeting organized by the Outreach of Love to publicize Subra's findings said they or their family members are suffering from unexplained health problems.
Subra said 90 percent of the samples taken in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas have exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency's standards for arsenic.

She found the highest levels in Mississippi at Moss Point, Gulfport and Pearlington, where arsenic is at levels 27 times beyond what the Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality considers safe.

Copyright 2006 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved.