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Purging the Poor
The Nation
Naomi Klein
September 22, 2005 (October 10, 2005 issue)
Outside the 2,000-bed temporary shelter in Baton Rouge's River Center, a
Church of Scientology band is performing a version of Bill Withers's classic
"Use Me"--a refreshingly honest choice. "If it feels this good getting used,"
the Scientology singer belts out, "just keep on using me until you use me
up."
Ten-year-old Nyler, lying face down on a massage table, has pretty much the
same attitude. She is not quite sure why the nice lady in the yellow
SCIENTOLOGY VOLUNTEER MINISTER T-shirt wants to rub her back, but "it feels so
good," she tells me, so who really cares? I ask Nyler if this is her first
massage. "Assist!" hisses the volunteer minister, correcting my Scientology
lingo. Nyler shakes her head no; since fleeing New Orleans after a tree fell on
her house, she has visited this tent many times, becoming something of an
assist-aholic. "I have nerves," she explains in a blissed-out massage voice. "I
have what you call nervousness."
Wearing a donated pink T-shirt with an age-inappropriate slogan ("It's the
hidden little Tiki spot where the island boys are hot, hot, hot"), Nyler tells
me what she is nervous about. "I think New Orleans might not ever get fixed
back." "Why not?" I ask, a little surprised to be discussing reconstruction
politics with a preteen in pigtails. "Because the people who know how to fix
broken houses are all gone."
I don't have the heart to tell Nyler that I suspect she is on to something;
that many of the African-American workers from her neighborhood may never be
welcomed back to rebuild their city. An hour earlier I had interviewed New
Orleans' top corporate lobbyist, Mark Drennen. As president and CEO of Greater
New Orleans Inc., Drennen was in an expansive mood, pumped up by signs from
Washington that the corporations he represents--everything from Chevron to
Liberty Bank to Coca-Cola--were about to receive a package of tax breaks,
subsidies and relaxed regulations so generous it would make the job of a
lobbyist virtually obsolete.
Listening to Drennen enthuse about the opportunities opened up by the storm,
I was struck by his reference to African-Americans in New Orleans as "the
minority community." At 67 percent of the population, they are in fact the
clear majority, while whites like Drennen make up just 27 percent. It was no
doubt a simple verbal slip, but I couldn't help feeling that it was also a
glimpse into the desired demographics of the new-and-improved city being
imagined by its white elite, one that won't have much room for Nyler or her
neighbors who know how to fix houses. "I honestly don't know and I don't think
anyone knows how they are going to fit in," Drennen said of the city's
unemployed.
New Orleans is already displaying signs of a demographic shift so dramatic
that some evacuees describe it as "ethnic cleansing." Before Mayor Ray Nagin
called for a second evacuation, the people streaming back into dry areas were
mostly white, while those with no homes to return to are overwhelmingly black.
This, we are assured, is not a conspiracy; it's simple geography--a reflection
of the fact that wealth in New Orleans buys altitude. That means that the
driest areas are the whitest (the French Quarter is 90 percent white; the
Garden District, 89 percent; Audubon, 86 percent; neighboring Jefferson Parish,
where people were also allowed to return, 65 percent). Some dry areas, like
Algiers, did have large low-income African-American populations before the
storm, but in all the billions for reconstruction, there is no budget for
transportation back from the far-flung shelters where those residents ended up.
So even when resettlement is permitted, many may not be able to return.
As for the hundreds of thousands of residents whose low-lying homes and
housing projects were destroyed by the flood, Drennen points out that many of
those neighborhoods were dysfunctional to begin with. He says the city now has
an opportunity for "twenty-first-century thinking": Rather than rebuild
ghettos, New Orleans should be resettled with "mixed income" housing, with rich
and poor, black and white living side by side.
What Drennen doesn't say is that this kind of urban integration could happen
tomorrow, on a massive scale. Roughly 70,000 of New Orleans' poorest homeless
evacuees could move back to the city alongside returning white homeowners,
without a single new structure being built. Take the Lower Garden District,
where Drennen himself lives. It has a surprisingly high vacancy rate--17.4
percent, according to the 2000 Census. At that time 702 housing units stood
vacant, and since the market hasn't improved and the district was barely
flooded, they are presumably still there and still vacant. It's much the same
in the other dry areas: With landlords preferring to board up apartments rather
than lower rents, the French Quarter has been half-empty for years, with a
vacancy rate of 37 percent.
The citywide numbers are staggering: In the areas that sustained only minor
damage and are on the mayor's repopulation list, there are at least 11,600
empty apartments and houses. If Jefferson Parish is included, that number soars
to 23,270. With three people in each unit, that means homes could be found for
roughly 70,000 evacuees. With the number of permanently homeless city residents
estimated at 200,000, that's a significant dent in the housing crisis. And it's
doable. Democratic Representative Sheila Jackson Lee, whose Houston district
includes some 150,000 Katrina evacuees, says there are ways to convert vacant
apartments into affordable or free housing. After passing an ordinance, cities
could issue Section 8 certificates, covering rent until evacuees find jobs.
Jackson Lee says she plans to introduce legislation that will call for federal
funds to be spent on precisely such rental vouchers. "If opportunity exists to
create viable housing options," she says, "they should be explored."
Malcolm Suber, a longtime New Orleans community activist, was shocked to
learn that thousands of livable homes were sitting empty. "If there are empty
houses in the city," he says, "then working-class and poor people should be
able to live in them." According to Suber, taking over vacant units would do
more than provide much-needed immediate shelter: It would move the poor back
into the city, preventing the key decisions about its future--like whether to
turn the Ninth Ward into marshland or how to rebuild Charity Hospital--from
being made exclusively by those who can afford land on high ground. "We have
the right to fully participate in the reconstruction of our city," Suber says.
"And that can only happen if we are back inside." But he concedes that it will
be a fight: The old-line families in Audubon and the Garden District may pay
lip service to "mixed income" housing, "but the Bourbons uptown would have a
conniption if a Section 8 tenant moved in next door. It will certainly be
interesting."
Equally interesting will be the response from the Bush Administration. So
far, the only plan for homeless residents to move back to New Orleans is Bush's
bizarre Urban Homesteading Act. In his speech from the French Quarter, Bush
made no mention of the neighborhood's roughly 1,700 unrented apartments and
instead proposed holding a lottery to hand out plots of federal land to flood
victims, who could build homes on them. But it will take months (at least)
before new houses are built, and many of the poorest residents won't be able to
carry the mortgage, no matter how subsidized. Besides, it barely touches the
need: The Administration estimates that in New Orleans there is land for only
1,000 "homesteaders."
The truth is that the White House's determination to turn renters into
mortgage payers is less about solving Louisiana's housing crisis than indulging
an ideological obsession with building a radically privatized "ownership
society." It's an obsession that has already come to grip the entire disaster
zone, with emergency relief provided by the Red Cross and Wal-Mart and
reconstruction contracts handed out to Bechtel, Fluor, Halliburton and
Shaw--the same gang that spent the past three years getting paid billions while
failing to bring Iraq's essential services to prewar levels [see Klein, "The
Rise of Disaster Capitalism," May 2]. "Reconstruction," whether in Baghdad or
New Orleans, has become shorthand for a massive uninterrupted transfer of
wealth from public to private hands, whether in the form of direct "cost plus"
government contracts or by auctioning off new sectors of the state to
corporations.
This vision was laid out in uniquely undisguised form during a meeting at
the Heritage Foundation's Washington headquarters on September 13. Present were
members of the House Republican Study Committee, a caucus of more than 100
conservative lawmakers headed by Indiana Congressman Mike Pence. The group
compiled a list of thirty-two "Pro-Free-Market Ideas for Responding to
Hurricane Katrina and High Gas Prices," including school vouchers, repealing
environmental regulations and "drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge." Admittedly, it seems farfetched that these would be adopted as relief
for the needy victims of an eviscerated public sector. Until you read the first
three items: "Automatically suspend Davis-Bacon prevailing wage laws in
disaster areas"; "Make the entire affected area a flat-tax free-enterprise
zone"; and "Make the entire region an economic competitiveness zone
(comprehensive tax incentives and waiving of regulations)." All are poised to
become law or have already been adopted by presidential decree.
In their own way the list-makers at Heritage are not unlike the 500
Scientology volunteer ministers currently deployed to shelters across
Louisiana. "We literally followed the hurricane," David Holt, a church
supervisor, told me. When I asked him why, he pointed to a yellow banner that
read, SOMETHING CAN BE DONE ABOUT IT. I asked him what "it" was and he said
"everything."
So it is with the neocon true believers: Their "Katrina relief" policies are
the same ones trotted out for every problem, but nothing energizes them like a
good disaster. As Bush says, lands swept clean are "opportunity zones," a
chance to do some recruiting, advance the faith, even rewrite the rules from
scratch. But that, of course, will take some massaging--I mean assisting.
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