I am asking all those on this list from the USA to write your senators and
congressmen and the president and ask them to move quickly on a plan and
funding for levee protection of New Orleans.  I am attaching an editorial
which I think says it better than me.

New York Times Editorial

Death of an American City

Published:  December 11, 2005

We are about to lose New Orleans. Whether it is a  conscious plan to let the
city rot until no one is willing to move back or  honest paralysis over
difficult questions, the moment is upon us when a major  American city will
die, leaving nothing but a few shells for tourists to visit  like a museum.

We said this wouldn't happen. President Bush said it  wouldn't happen. He
stood in Jackson Square and said, "There is no way to  imagine America
without New Orleans." But it has been over three months since  Hurricane
Katrina struck and the city is in complete shambles.

There are  many unanswered questions that will take years to work out, but
one is  make-or-break and needs to be dealt with immediately. It all boils
down to the  levee system. People will clear garbage, live in tents, work
their fingers to  the bone to reclaim homes and lives, but not if they don't
believe
they will be  protected by more than patches to the same old system that
failed during the  deadly storm. Homeowners, businesses and insurance
companies all need a  commitment before they will stake their futures on the
city.

At this  moment the reconstruction is a rudderless ship. There is no
effective leadership  that we can identify. How many people could even name
the president's liaison  for the reconstruction effort, Donald Powell?
Lawmakers need to understand that  for New Orleans the words "pending in
Congress" are a death warrant requiring no  signature.

The rumbling from Washington that the proposed cost of better  levees is too
much has grown louder. Pretending we are going to do the necessary  work
eventually, while stalling until the next hurricane season is upon us, is
dishonest and cowardly. Unless some clear, quick commitments are made, the
 displaced will have no choice but to sink roots in the alien communities
where  they
landed.

The price tag for protection against a Category 5 hurricane,  which would
involve not just stronger and higher levees but also new drainage  canals
and environmental restoration, would very likely run to well over $32
 billion. That is a lot of money. But that starting point represents just
1.2  percent of
this year's estimated $2.6 trillion in federal spending, which  actually
overstates the case, since the cost would be spread over many years.  And it
is barely one-third the cost of the $95 billion in tax cuts passed just last
week by the House of Representatives.

Total allocations for the wars  in Iraq and Afghanistan and the war on
terror have topped $300
billion. All  that money has been appropriated as the cost of protecting the
nation from  terrorist attacks. But what was the worst possible case we
fought to  prevent?

Losing a major American city.

"We'll not just rebuild,  we'll build higher and better," President Bush
said that night in
September.  Our feeling, strongly, is that he was right and should keep to
his word. We in  New York remember well what it was like for the country to
rally around our city  in a desperate hour. New York survived and has
flourished.
New Orleans can  too.

Of course, New Orleans's local and state officials must do their  part as
well, and demonstrate the political and practical will to rebuild the  city
efficiently and responsibly. They must, as quickly as possible, produce a
comprehensive plan for putting New Orleans back together. Which schools will
be
rebuilt and which will be absorbed? Which neighborhoods will be shored up?
Where will the roads go? What about electricity and water lines? So far,
local and state officials have been derelict at producing anything that
comes close to a coherent plan. That is unacceptable.

The city must rise to the occasion.  But it will not have that opportunity
without the levees, and only the office of  the president is strong enough
to goad Congress to take swift action. Only his  voice is loud enough to
call people home and convince them that commitments will  be met.

Maybe America does not want to rebuild New Orleans. Maybe we have  decided
that the deficits are too large and the money too scarce, and that it is
 better just to look the other way until the city withers and disappears. If
that  is truly the case, then it is incumbent on President Bush and Congress
to admit it, and organize a real plan to help the dislocated residents
resettle into new  homes. The communities that opened their hearts to the
Katrina refugees need to  know that their short-term act of charity has
turned into a permanent commitment.

If the rest of the nation has decided it is too expensive to  give the
people of New Orleans a
chance at renewal, we have to tell them so.  We must tell them we spent our
rainy-day fund on a costly stalemate in Iraq,  that we gave it away in tax
cuts for wealthy families and shareholders. We must  tell them America is
too broke and too weak to rebuild one of its great  cities.

Our nation would then look like a feeble giant indeed. But  whether we admit
it or not, this is our choice to make. We decide whether New  Orleans lives
or dies.




--
Rachel


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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