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Current Events /
History
CWO Bill Burks
Subject: The Black Faces Driving Katrina
Recovery The Black
Faces Driving Katrina Recovery
Black Generals who are taking
change and leading Katrina recovery. It is the story every
American needs to hear. By Garland L. Thompson and
Tyrone D. Taborn
Hurricane Katrina’s
devastation of Gulf Coast communities is painful for Blacks to
watch, for obvious reasons and ones that seem not so obvious to
white fellow citizens.
History
returns to haunt. Almost all Blacks are themselves Southerners or
the descendants of Southern families freed by the Civil War, lifted
from peonage by the Great Migration. And almost all have relatives,
friends and college classmates still in the affected states of
Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Texas. Now, with the lives of
thousands jeopardized by floods, destruction of homes and
businesses, and ailments spread by contaminated water, comes the
disheartening news of widespread lawlessness among the hurricane’s
victims.
This we
get while watching a disaster unfold that should never have happened
in the first place. TV pictures keep showing lines of Black
evacuees, not looting or shooting at police, but holding on as best
they can, waiting for the emergency help their government has rushed
to other disaster victims, in America or halfway around the world.
Waiting still, even as their leaders from Washington congratulate
themselves on their coping skills. The image of Black looters and
criminals keeps getting resurrected, while the images of Black
leaders driving the recovery efforts is minimized.
New Orleans Mayor Ray
Nagin, struggling to keep order after an estimated 70 percent of his
police force walked off, is still working, in a city with filthy
water covering 70 percent of its streets. Lt. Gen. Russell Honoré, a
graduate of historically Black Southern University, took charge as
soon as he was sent, changing the dynamic on the streets as he
ordered soldiers and civilian police to point their guns toward the
ground: “This is not Iraq.” Brig. Gen. Robert Crear, who actually
capped oil wells in Iraq, cleared up in days a problem the armchair
experts said would take weeks: blocking the gaps in two levees whose
failure let Lake Pontchartrain flood the whole of the New Orleans
basin, so pumping operations could begin.
Ex-Army Lt. General Joe
Ballard, another Louisianan and the first Black commander of the
Corps of Engineers, makes the most painful point of all: This
disaster, predicted by “every Corps of Engineers commander since
1927,” did not have to happen.
What he’s talking about
is that New Orleans’ levees, built in the mid-1950s to withstand a
Category Three storm, could not in fact stand up to that much
battering. The Mississippi River, made to run straight by high
levees after devastating floods in 1927, washed away barrier islands
that should have protected the city from the full brunt of Nature’s
fury. With the barriers gone, Army engineers kept asking their
leaders in Congress and the White House for money to build up the
levees to prevent exactly the kind of flooding New Orleans has
endured.
Gen. Ballard, for his
part, put forward a plan that Congress denounced as wasteful in the
extreme. He wanted to spend more than $100 million to build up the
levees to withstand a “100-year storm,” but was excoriated as a
would-be big spender, and retired after that. Now that a 100-year storm
has proved his point, Congress has targeted $68 billion for a
cleanup many experts believe will cost $150 billion, and Gen.
Ballard’s spending plan looks to have been the more prudent
investment. Who’s the big spender now?
It was all so
unnecessary, especially the negative characterizations of the
Blacks, who are after all American citizens. So few of gave up to
lawlessness, amid a catastrophe so great its police force
disintegrated, that the continued focus on criminality is an affront
to the dignity and nobility so many have displayed. That, sadly,
magnifies the tragedy we witness.
Garland Thompson is
Editorial Director and Tyrone D. Taborn is Editor-in-Chief of US
Black Engineer magazine


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