Saturday, September 30, 2006

Pearlington




Road down Hwy 90 toward Pearlington, Mississippi this morning.

Some of you may have heard of Pearlington through Clayton Cubitt's blogspot, "Operation Eden".

It's a small town, just east of Slidell.

They got slammed. You could tell that before the storm it was beautiful, so many majestic live oaks. Some of the oaks survived.

thanks, Katrina.

u2-greenday


I have not yet tired of watching this video.
It's moving in so many ways.

Friday, September 29, 2006

look closer....


Looked like a sunspot,



but upon closer inspection

It is the space shuttle and space station.

Here's the story.

Saturday's Elections

Saturday is election day.
here is the sample ballot

Besides the 13 constitutional amendments, there are two statewide offices open for elections

Secretary of State
The secretary of state's office is largely administrative but performs the important function of running all elections, including being the central registry of all voters; buying, maintaining and delivering voting machines; hiring polling commissioners; and counting votes. In addition, the office maintains all state and corporate records and runs museums. The office must also attest to the signature of the governor on every single official state document.


Here's the link for the official Secretary of State site

League of Women Voters' profiles on candidates

My choices are in yellow font


SECRETARY OF STATE CANDIDATES

- Mary Chehardy Real Estate agent (no webpages, info on her)
- Rayburn Clipper - Libertarian
- James Crowley: Small businessman - Coins and Collectibles, Licensed Real Estate Broker and Notary Public
- Jay Dardenne: Senator since 1992 (!!)
- Mike Francis: Owner Francis Drilling Fluids, Crowley, LA
"

"
- Francis Heitmeier: Career Politician - in Louisiana politics since 1972 (!!!)

- Allen Leone: Owner - Keller Williams Realty River Parishes

Commissioner of Insurance
The Commissioner of Insurance has complete jurisdiction over the Life, Health and Accident, Property and Liability, Marine and Inland Marine, Fidelity and Surety, and Title insurance industries in Louisiana; is ultimately responsible for the collection of Insurance Premium Taxes and Fees as well as the approval of all policy forms offered to Louisiana citizens, and has a host of licensing and regulatory duties to ensure a fair and safe market for Louisiana's insurance consumers.


One blogger's opinions on this election


COMMISSIONER OF INSURANCE CANDIDATES
- James Cain Professional Politician - 30+ years in the legislature/senate (incumbent)
- Jim Donelon: Professional Politician - 30+ years in Louisiana politics
- S.B.A. Zaitoon: "Since insurance affects a lot of citizens, why not have it as part of the Cabinet of the governor, like the Department of Health? Why should it be an elective office?”


The Conservative Cajun's take on this race



Click here
to view the candidates' ethic disclosure reports

The 13 amendments

I'm voting for all amendments except 5,6 & 9.

I'm not going to list my reasons here….suffice it to say
that I've studied them all and mostly agree with the
recommendations of the CABL
and it is what I've based my decisions on

Housing Summit


HOUSING SOLUTIONS SUMMIT
CONVENTION CENTER
FRIDAY 9/29 AND SATURDAY 9/30
9AM - 9PM


FREE TO THE PUBLIC

Opening Ceremony
Friday 9:00am - 10:15am
Dan Packer - President and CEO, Entergy New Orleans
City Council President Oliver Thomas, City of New Orleans
Mayor Ray Nagin, City of New Orleans
Governor Kathleen Blanco
Lieutenant General Russel Honoré

here's the agenda home page

Saturday's agenda includes

Financial Track
9:00am - 10:30am
Louisiana Recovery Authority
Road Home Program

9:00am - 10:30am
Removing Barriers to Affordable Housing for Low Income

1:00pm - 2:40pm
Opening Doors To Home Ownership

2:45pm - 3:15pm
Advancing Affordable Housing


Remodeling/Renovation Track
10:45am - 12:15pm
City of New Orleans Building Requirements

New Construction Track
9:00am - 9:45am
Site Built Homes

10:45am - 11:45am
Alternative Building Systems
Panelized/Modular/Concrete

1:00pm - 2:00pm
Decisions: New Construction vs Renovation

1:00pm - 2:40pm
Emerging Building Systems

2:15pm - 3:15pm
Independent Speakers
Building to Save Energy
Andre Desjarlais
Oak Ridge National Lab

Design for Minimum Flood Damage
Achilles Karagiozis
Oak Ridge National Lab

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

vote

VOTE VOTE VOTE
This Saturday is a very important election.

You can either vote or you can ignore what's going on. The choice is yours.
If you truly care for Louisiana, spend a little time reading the
amendments and making a decision, be prepared when you go into that voters booth.

I've found three websites that offer details on the 13 constitutional amendments
in plain English, as well as their recommendations on how to vote for each
amendment.

There is no excuse to not vote. If you don't vote, you don't have a right to bitch.
Make a change.

Here are the websites offering clear explanations on the ballot:


The Bureau of Governmental Research is a private,
nonprofit, independent research organization dedicated
to informed public policy making and the effective use
of public resources for the improvement of government
in the New Orleans metropolitan area.
This report is available on BGR’s website



CABL
Council for a Better Louisiana



Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana

Monday, September 25, 2006

What it's all about

The hoopla.....
The incessant talk.....
The Saints....

Some people would rather just talk about rebuilding

Others are taking the fun and going with it

some people are just plain grinning ear-to-ear happy.

It's a "coming-back" party

It's more than just a football game.

It's what has this area alive with talk, feeling great - if only for an evening.

It's about time there is something to celebrate here.

Waveland


(click on pictures to view full size)

During our weekend wandering, we took Highway 90 from Slidell, through Pearlington and into Waveland. Poor, sweet Waveland was leveled by the storm.

We hadn't been there since July of 2005 when we took a day trip to check out the beaches and souvenier shops (no gamblers here).

We saw progress in work on the main road, but heading toward the beaches showed us a different story


The first thing that caught my eye was the trees. The were all leaning away from the gulf and dead. All of the pine trees, that is. The oak trees - although they don't look lush - have survived.




Houses that once sat facing the gulf were now just slabs and stairs.



One impressive survivor is some of St. Stanislaus College on Bay St. Louis.



Even though their elevated sidewalk no longer connects one building with another

September 30th election

There are thirteen amendments on this Saturday's election ballot.
The Public Affairs Reasearch Council of Louisiana has done an excellent job of putting each amendment into everyday language and explains what your vote means for each.

For example, the first proposed amendment is for the Coastal Protection & Restoration Fund. PAR explains the current situation, what changes are being proposed, offers comments and gives some background info on proponents and opponents.
In summary, here's what they tell you about how your vote will affect the outcome of amendment one:

You Decide
- A vote for would change the name of the Wetlands Conservation and Restoration
Fund to the Coastal Protection and Restoration Fund and would deposit into that fund all potential federal revenues from Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas activities.

- A vote against would retain the current name and allow potential federal revenues
from Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas activities to be deposited in the general state treasury fund.


Go to their website,
become informed and vote intelligently this Saturday.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Weekend Stuff

Another three day weekend has come and gone. We stayed very busy this weekend.

On Friday, hubby and I drove Hwy 90, east of New Orleans in search of more boats orphaned by Katrina

We found several on a levee that "protects" Hwy 90 from Lake Borgne.
(click on each picture to view full size)

>


Being eaten alive by mosquitoes was bearable, but for me, the sight of this guy




Made me turn back.

One thing I found amusing is this tag placed on boats along Hwy 90:


Yeah, okay.

These notices seem to have been placed on the boats in June, as evidenced by this:



Went to visit my daughter in Thibodaux yesterday. It's nice to go somewhere that doesn't have debris all over the place.

Last night we watched Hexing a Hurricane, a film by Jeremy Campbell. I highly recommend this film.

VOW Festival


STAGE IS SET FOR VOICE OF THE WETLANDS FESTIVAL

Dr. John Appearing with All-Stars at Festival, Weekend Event Announcement


Houma, LA – The Voice of the Wetlands Festival will take over Southdown Plantation once again this year. The third annual festival will be held on October 13, 14 and 15 – a three-day event – celebrating the unique culture from the region that the wetlands directly protect and support. The underlying mission of the festival is to gain national awareness for the wetlands crisis and turn community initiatives into actions. By utilizing the culture of South Louisiana to promote the wetlands crisis, the wetlands are now being returned the favor with critical support from musicians and the community through events such as this. It’s a unique way to connect the community with those working with the wetlands and also spreading the word about the issues. Together, there’s an opportunity to build a national voice that is louder and stronger than the individual parts can offer.

“We’ll all get together and have some fun, but it’s important that we get something done in the process,” Tab Benoit, president of Voice of the Wetlands has passionately stated in regards to this year’s event. Tab spends 250+ days a year on tour sharing a moment at each performance about his first hand accounts of the coastal crisis with audiences nationwide. His fan base and music career has gained this year’s Voice of the Wetlands Festival national recognition in the media as well as with other organizations such as the Blues Foundation. They are finding ways to bring the music, culture and coastal erosion issues to their readers and help gain support for VOW on a national level.

“It’s important to keep the festival free to the public, so the information about the wetlands crisis is available to everyone,” Rueben Williams, festival promoter and VOW member explains. Donations throughout the year’s benefit events, along with sponsorship, have kept the festival running the two previous years. Since last year’s efforts were shifted towards hurricane relief to benefit Katrina survivors, budgeting is very tight for the 2006 festival. VOW organizers are opening up every avenue for support through donations and sponsorship, including possible naming rights to the festival. There was no doubt that the festival needed to be held this year, especially when many other festivals have been discontinued in the region. The wetlands issues aren’t going away so the mission of the festival has grown stronger.

Festival promoters are also excited to announce Dr. John (Mac Rebennack) will take the stage with Voice of the Wetlands All-Stars as part of Sunday evening’s finale. The All-Star line up features
Dr. John, Tab Benoit, Cyril Neville, Anders Osborne, Waylon Thibodeaux, George Porter, Jr., Jumpin’ Johnny Sansone and Big Chief Monk Boudreaux. Prior to the hurricanes, the VOW All-Stars were already working together to raise awareness of coastal erosion. Their message has become even more critical now than before with the threat of losing this area’s unique culture, heritage, wildlife, people and way of life. Each one of the musicians involved in the project appreciates the influence that Louisiana has had on them musically.

Schedule of Events

Friday Evening (festival hours 5:30pm to 10pm) – Community involvement and national initiatives are being addressed throughout the weekend with political stump speeches kicking off the festival Friday evening. Local politicians and wetland experts are invited to take the stage and share what actions are taking place and the involvements necessary for results. Exhibitors are being sought to provide information for the festival-goers to learn about the wetlands. Festivities follow the speeches with the X-Treme Guitar Showdown featuring Tab Benoit. He’s inviting special guests to join him on stage for an unyielding dose of blues, rock and roots music.

Saturday & Sunday All Day Events (festival hours 12:00pm to 10pm both days) – The festival swings into full gear with local, regional and national music acts based in Louisiana’s diverse musical roots and culture. Performances include
Louisiana LeRoux, Cyril Neville and Tribe 13, The Chubby Carrier Band, The Treater Band, The Waylon Thibodeaux Band, Southern Cross, The Pershing Wells Louisiana Songwriting Revue, The Dream Junkies and The Hurricane Levee Band. Estuary exhibits and informative wetlands experts will be on-hand to share first hand accounts of the actions and issues faced in protecting and restoring the coast of Louisiana and its people. And with all local festivals, you can’t serve up the culture without serving up the great cuisine of South Louisiana. Local chefs, family recipes and special ingredients will take center stage under the pavilion. This year’s festival adds something for the kids as well with inflatable jumping tents and concessions.

Additional Events – Voice of the Wetlands Benefit Poker Run sponsored by Cycle World of Houma on Sunday, riders will check in at Cycle World early in the morning and follow a run ending at the VOW Festival in the afternoon. Prizes will be presented during the festival. Local music clubs are also combining efforts to continue the festival mission at downtown locations with live music continuing the late night. Door proceeds will benefit VOW. Download the application here.

For more information on Voice of the Wetlands organization and festival, visit their website.

Contact:
Kristal McManigal
(985) 655-VOW1
(504) 451-2642
vow@cox.

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Debunking Dome Deaths

During the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, rumors were flying about how may people had been murdered in the Superdome. Oyster takes the rumors to task with his post Why the Superdome is a Sacredome not a Thunderdome

Here's a piece of the post:

that FEMA's deputy coordinating officer estimated there were 200 homicide "bodies" between the Convention Center and the Super Dome. That when FEMA's mortician crew arrived at the Super Dome with refrigerated trucks to collect the bodies, they found precisely NONE in the arena. Overall, the Dome's dead numbered six bodies: a heart attack victim, three natural deaths, a suicide and a drug overdose.

The excitement builds

It feels like the last weekend of Mardi Gras around here, except football is the main focus. To those outside of this area who cannot understand the local feelings regarding Monday night's game, Chris Martel so eloquently speculates in this post....

Here's the last paragraph:
Monday night's game is perhaps the biggest in Saints history. It may not be the biggest on paper, but symbolically, it's huge. The team and the city have never shared such an intimate bond. Their story is our story. Their rebirth is our rebirth. Of all the significant events since Katrina, this might be the only one not mired by controversy and division. Monday night will be one of the first times since Katrina that we're all unified in the pursuit of a common goal and dream. And that's definitely something worth celebrating.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

STS115 Landing

The Space Shuttle is slated to land tomorrow (9-21-06) at 5:21 a.m.

NASA said it has researched the "mysterious objects" co-orbiting with the Orbiter and an inspection of the heat shields satisfies the agency that it will be safe to land.



Want info on the Shuttle landing?
go here

Scuzzbucket of the week

From the American Heritage Dictionary:
scuzz·buck·et (skzbkt)
n. Slan.
A repulsive or disgusting person or thing.





I'm sorry I bet on baseball

Positive feelings



I'm not normally a fan of football or the New Orleans Saints.

But there is something electric in this area this week. You can feel the excitement.
It's more than just the normal annual rivalry game with the Falcons. It's bigger
than that. It's a positive electricity hovering over us.

And it feels GOOD!

After a year of one depressing happening after another; over twelve months dealing
with Ray Ray's
foot-in-mouth problems,
it seems like we are going thru a window of unmitigated good feelings. And everyone who's lived the
Post-Katrina experience deserves it.

So, all you Saints Fans, bless you! This is your time. This is a shot in the arm, a weekend diversion for Katrina's veterans. Let's enjoy it. We're all Saints fans this weekend.

Yes, there are still miles to go before we sleep.

And months before people move out of FEMA trailers .

We continue to wonder if the blatant cold blooded murders in the reopened public housing projects will ever stop.

But for today, for the next five days, we can smile and feel good about something, even if we're not football fans.

Monday, September 18, 2006

New Preamble

This is probably the best e-mail I've seen in a long, long time.  The following has been attributed to State Representative Mitchell Aye Lewis Napper from GA. This guy should run for President one day...

"We the sensible people of the United States, in an attempt to help everyone get along, restore some semblance of justice, avoid more riots, keep our nation safe, promote positive behavior, and secure the blessings of debt-free liberty to ourselves and our great-great-great-grandchildren, hereby try one more time to ordain and establish some common sense guidelines for the terminally whiny, guilt ridden, delusional, and other liberal bed-wetters.  We hold these truths to be self evident: that a whole lot of people are confused by the Bill of Rights and are so dim they require a Bill of NON-Rights."

ARTICLE I: You do not have the right to a new car, big screen TV, or any other form of wealth.   More power to you if you can legally acquire them, but no one is guaranteeing anything.

ARTICLE II:  You do not have the right to never be offended.  This country is based on freedom, and that means freedom for everyone -- not just you!  You may leave the room, turn the channel, express a different opinion, etc.; but the world is full of idiots, and probably always will be.

ARTICLE III: You do not have the right to be free from harm.  If you stick a screwdriver in your eye, learn to be more careful, do not expect the tool manufacturer to make you and all your relatives independently wealthy.

ARTICLE IV: You do not have the right to free food and housing.  Americans are the most charitable people to be found, and will gladly help anyone in need, but we are quickly growing weary of subsidizing generation after generation of professional couch potatoes who achieve nothing more than the creation of another generation of professional couch potatoes.  (This one is my pet peeve...get an education and go to work....don't expect everyone else to take care of you!)

ARTICLE V: You do not have the right to free health care.  That would be nice, but from the looks of public housing, we're just not interested in public health care.

ARTICLE VI: You do not have the right to physically harm other people.  If you kidnap, rape, intentionally maim, or kill someone, don't be surprised if the rest of us want to see you fry in the electric chair.


ARTICLE VII: You do not have the right to the possessions of others.   If you rob, cheat, or coerce away the goods or services of other citizens, don t be surprised if the rest of us get together and lock you away in a place where you still won't have the right to a big screen color TV or a life of leisure.

ARTICLE VIII: You do not have the right to a job.   All of us sure want you to have a job, and will gladly help you along in hard times, but we expect you to take advantage of the opportunities of education and vocational training laid before you to make yourself useful.

ARTICLE IX: You do not have the right to happiness.   Being an American means that you have the right to PURSUE happiness, which by the way, is a lot easier if you are unencumbered by an over abundance of idiotic laws created by those of you who were confused by the Bill of Rights.

ARTICLE X: This is an English speaking country.   We don't care where you are from, English is our language.   Learn it or go back to wherever you
came from! ( lastly....)

ARTICLE XI: You do not have the right to change our country's history or heritage. This country was founded on the belief in one true God.   And yet, you are given the freedom to believe in any religion, any faith, or no faith at all; with no fear of persecution.   The phrase 'IN GOD WE TRUST' is part of our heritage and history, and if you are uncomfortable with it, TOUGH!

Sunday, September 17, 2006

Fort Pike & Lake Catherine

Got up early and drove down Hwy 434 to Hwy 90.
click on small photos to view full size photos

Crossed the old Rigolets bridge into New Orleans. On the Orleans side of the bridge is a very
old, very damaged Fort Pike.



Built in the late 1820's, Fort Pike was used to defend Rigolets Pass, approach through Lake Pontchartrain to New Orleans and named after Brigadier General Zebulon Montgomery Pike. Up until Katrina,
Fort Pike
was a great, live piece of history.

After the mosquito's got to be too much, I decided to drive thru the small community of Lake Catherine, Louisiana.

I was curious to see any new developments since my last journey to Lake Catherine about a month ago A lot of debris has been cleared and the road looked pretty clean.


The Marina was open. Any and all entrances to Lakes Pontchartrain and Borgne were packed with pickup trucks pulling trailers. Must be some good fishing out there.


Doesn't look like much is going on at the Community Center

On the way home, I noticed 5 pelicans flying toward Lake Borgne

but I only managed to snap a picture of the straggler.

One positive note: work on the new Rigolets bridge is progressing nicely.


More photos can be seen at this website.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

Charity's Story

What happened at Charity Hospital during and after Katrina?



Go here.

Sept 30 Elections

We will be asked to vote on thirteen (13) constitutional amendments in two weeks on September 30th. And additional eight amendments will be on the November 7th election.

You can read these amendments at this website.

WWL had political pollster Bernie Pinsonat on to discuss three of the 13:

Here are Mr. Pinsonet's opinions:

Amendment Four

Limits the amount that juries can award to a property owner should private property be siezed by the government for damage mitigation. This amendment is considered pro government.


Amendment Five

Property cannot be taken by the state except for public purposes (a general public right to definite use of the property). It also provides provide exceptions use of the property and that just compensation to be paid to the owner of the expropriated property.(pro landowner)


Amendment Six

Prohibits the transfer of property expropriated by the state to any person without first offering the property to the original owner; to provide that unused expropriated property be declared surplus property to be first offered to the original owner prior to sale to the general public by competitive bid.


the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana (PAR) details all amendments in great detail.
Go to PAR website to review and make your intelligent decision at this website.



VOTE, DAMMIT!!!

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Scuzzbucket of the week

Actually, this guy is sadder than a scuzzbucket. Maybe he was just hungry.
I needed the laugh.



A one-legged shoplifter was arrested days after allegedly taking a rack of beef ribs, police said Wednesday.




story here WWL.com



According to Lt. Todd Duplantis, a Houma Police spokesman, officers were called to the Rouses Grocery Store on St. Charles Street in reference to a shoplifter on Saturday, September 9. The store manager told them a one-legged man on a scooter picked up a 14-pound pack of ribs and left the store without paying for them.

The manager said he chased the man down and got the ribs back outside the store, Duplantis said. Police patrolled the area but could not find the suspect.

On Wednesday, police, acting on several tips, apprehended 48-year-old Darryl Chauvin and charged him with theft of goods, Duplantis said. Investigators also discovered that Chauvin had seven outstanding warrants against him for writing bad checks. He was also charged for those warrants.

PTSD and it's children

Suicide rate higher, but nowhere near double than pre-Katrina,

story here

Whew! that's a relief

The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — New Orleans' suicide rate appears to have gone up in the first six months after Hurricane Katrina evacuees were allowed back home, but the increase could be due to chance instead of post-storm depression, a new study by Louisiana's state epidemiologist found.


So what does THAT mean? chance?

Dr. Raoult Ratard took a unique approach to studying the death and suicide rate because there have been no firm estimates of how many people have returned after the storm. Various sources have put the number at anywhere from less than 200,000 to around 250,000 out of the pre-Katrina Census figure of just under 455,000.

So, Ratard compared the number of deaths from October 2005 (when the city was re-opened after the storm) through March 2006 to the number of deaths for the same period the year before. The pre-storm death total was 2,507; post storm, 1,024. The ratio was 0.41.

The number of pre-storm suicides was 16; post storm, 11. The ratio was 0.69.

So, the suicide ratio was higher than the death ratio. But the totals are too small to conclude that Katrina caused the increase. "They are not big enough so that you can say with certainty that it would not be due to chance," he said.



some people will do ANYTHING for study money.


...a recent study which found that seriously depressed survivors of the storm thought about suicide far less often than people in that shape before Katrina.

But, since the number of seriously depressed people is much higher, the total percentage of people considering suicide could still be higher or about the same....


STOP!!! stop the number manipulation! my head hurts!


It's hard to say whether figures will show that suicides increased after March or around the recent Aug. 29 anniversary, Kessler said. Anniversaries of traumatic events such as divorce or a child's death do increase the chance of suicide, but concern by public figures and a feeling of pulling together may counterbalance that.

"It's hard to know. It could go either way," he said. "I'm much more concerned about the long-term grinding effect on people ...


The mayor just gave another speech saying people have got to realize it's going to be a while, and people say, `A while! It's been a while. How long is a while?'"

No, they're not quite saying THAT. Here's what they're saying...


Ratard's study also found a significant drop in the rate of homicides. However the study period ended just as the city's homicide lull did.

There had been 19 homicides in the October through March after the storm, compared to 129 in the same period a year earlier. But there were 13 in June, followed by 21 — just under the monthly average before Katrina — in July, and 98 so far this year.



Welcome to Hard Times...

Alligator Bend

A $19.6 million proposal may be the first among four projects recommended for approval by the Breaux Act Task Force at its Oct. 18 meeting.

If the task force agrees, as expected, the federal Natural Resources Conservation Service and the state Department of Natural Resources would choose a contractor and oversee the work
to rebuild a land bridge, sandwiched between Lake Pontchartrain and Lake Borgne in an area known as Alligator Bend, (shown below, with the red star) the contractor would mine about 3 million cubic yards of sediment from Lake Borgne to fill in 410 acres of open water, in part created by Hurricane Katrina.

The project also includes planting vegetation along 7 1/4 miles of the Lake Borgne shoreline, which retreated 5 feet during the storm.

For more info, go here.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Just what everyone needs....




from Cajun Creations dot com:

Da Mayor in Your Pocket
Price: $10.00

Things got bad, and then he got mad. New Orleanians' have an interesting sense of humor, and Da Mayor in Your Pocket is a must have all New Orleanians.We suggest you buy two, because someone you know is going to fall in love with it and you'll have to buy another one anyway. Batteries included. Good clean fun.

Includes six of our Mayor's famous sayings (you know the ones he made on national radio or TV)...

You gotta be kidding me
This is a national disaster
Get their asses movin' to New Orleans
And let's fix the biggest Goddamn crisis in the history of this country
Excuse my French everybody in America
But, I am pissed.


So are we, Ray, Ray

Saturday, September 09, 2006

Mr. Responsibility

Seems like the scuzzbucket of the week last week has redeemed himself....a
little bit.

From the Times Picayune:
John Lyons Jr. has decided not to pursue his lawsuit against a Broadmoor man who said he rescued more than 200 residents from post-Katrina floodwaters after commandeering Lyons' boat.


Looks like Mr Lyons finally came to his senses and thought over how ridiculous and
self-serving his suit was. But he couldn't stop at that. He just had to say
"The big issue here is not the monetary damages that I incurred from the loss of the boat," he wrote. "It is about holding people responsible for their actions.

"Does a natural disaster give an individual the right to break into private property, take possessions of others, not return them and then have no responsibility to the rightful owner? If this becomes a precedent, then we, the citizens, will ultimately pay the price."

Lyons said he too was a victim of Hurricane Katrina and that he evacuated 10 people from a flooded home, including several elderly women and a young child.

"To complete this evacuation, I borrowed a pirogue and personally paddled these people eight blocks through fallen trees to dry ground. After numerous trips back and forth, when everyone was out and safe, I waded back through chest-deep floodwater to return the pirogue to the owner's home."

Isn't he special.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Weather

We've been blessed this week with a taste of low humidity (60% is low). It's been awesome. I even worked in my yard this morning before the sun got high in the sky. Cooler weather wakes us up. Makes us feel alive again. We didn't have much of this cooler weather last year, post Katrina. Here's a post that says it so much better than I can

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Welcome back, Cap!!

Hubby and I went to eat at the newly reopened Captain Humble's restaurant last night.



It was very good. The restaurant has opened in a new location, just down the street from the old one. Unfortunately, Katrina ripped the roof off of the old building and ruined all of Cap's pictures from when he was a DJ at WRNO back in the 80's.

If you want generous poboys, come to Cap's. It's a small, nicely decorated restaurant in a convenient location. The food is delicious. If you're a fan of a big, fat, sloppy award winning roast beef poboy, check out Cap's.

To get your sandwiches to go, call 985-649-7801

While we were there, Cap was saying he wanted to open for Selene. Not knowing
much about mythology, I assumed he was talking about a Mardi Gras parade and thought (he's either early or late!). Didn't get it until I visited TravelingMermaid's blog today. Thanks for clearing that up, TM!!!

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

So we're boring

I'm having a difficult time in understanding what it is that some New Orleanians
don't like about the denizens north of Lake Ponchartrain.

Here's an example. Be sure to check out the comments.

Granted, we didn't receive the devastation the NOLA did from Katrina. Is that it?
Or is it that we're just downright boring? Is that a legitimate reason to
dislike us? Why the need to derogate us? Does our being boring offend them in some way?

Are they angry because the government failed them in so many ways? Well move over, kids,
you ain't alone.

80% of the homes were damaged by Katrina in the city of Slidell.

Here's more on what we've been through
and where we are going.

I don't want to get into a pissing contest over who's suffered the most.
It doesn't matter.
What DOES matter is that we all SURVIVED Katrina.
Both southshore and northshore.
Like it or not, we're in this together.

We're both fighting insurance companies, power companies, contractors.
We're both trying to pick up the pieces and restart our lives.
We're both experiencing a rise in crime since Katrina.
We'll ALL have the horrendous memories of that storm for the rest of our lives.

People who live north of Lake Pontchartrain do so for their own reasons and needs,
just as people who live in "the city". Why is it so difficult for some to accept?

We're in this together, let's quit this infighting and get on with the battle.

Who cares?



Why is THIS news?

Scuzzbucket of the week

Driver who seated blacks at back of school bus to retire

9/6/2006, 7:18 a.m. CT

The Associated Press

COUSHATTA, La. (AP) — A northwestern Louisiana school bus driver who was suspended for seating black children in the back of her bus will be allowed to retire effective Oct. 4.

Deloris Davis, who will have been employed with the Red River Parish School District for 25 years on that date, offered her retirement, through her attorney, in a letter handed to Superintendent Kay Easley minutes before the start of Tuesday night's parish school board meeting meeting.

The board voted 4-3 to accept the retirement.

Iva Richmond, whose 14- and 15-year-old children were on the bus, said last month that her children had ridden with a black bus driver in previous years, but their bus assignment changed this year. When the new school year started, the white driver told them she had assigned them seats, with the black children at the back of the bus.

Richmond said she complained to a local principal, who told the driver that if any children were assigned to seats, all would have to be. The next week, the driver assigned black students to two seats in the back of the bus, Richmond said.

Board attorney Jon Guice said Davis had no record of previous reprimands. He also said that Easley investigated the complaints and believes Davis' actions were not motivated by race. He said Davis contended that the nine black children were the last ones to get on the bus on her route.

Some at the Tuesday meeting were unhappy with the decision to allow Davis to retire. The crowd overflowed the 49-seat meeting room and when the decision was announced to those standing outside, it was met with shouts such as "Fire the superintendent" and "Do we pay for her to retire?"

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Information from: Alexandria Daily Town Talk, http://www.thetowntalk.com

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Kudo's to NOLA bloggers

I'd like to congratulate several New Orleans' bloggers mentioned in an upcoming article in The Nation.

Taken from the above link, The Nation says
The most comprehensive list is currently posted at thinknola.com/wiki/List_of_New_Orleans_bloggers.

Most bloggers offer political commentary, on-the-ground reports of life in New Orleans, and links to other bloggers. The most insightful include:

Your Right Hand Thief (Oyster)
People Get Ready,(Schroeder)
Suspect Device (Greg Peters)
The American Zombie (Dambala)
The G Bitch Spot (G)
Gentilly Girl (Morwen)
Library Chronicles
Ashley Morris


All great bloggers, these folks are passionate about New Orleans and her recovery. I admire their tenacity and their individual points of view and their courage for hanging in there.

Neither a New Orleans native nor a resident, I still possess a deep love for the city and all the beauty she offers.

I'm a Slidell resident. Slidell is a quiet bedroom community 25 miles northeast of NOLA. We're not glamorous like "The City", but we here are true southerners. We experienced Katrina with both wind and flood damage. From the city's webpage The Weather Service reports that Slidell had sustained winds of 176 mph and gusts of 190+ mph during Hurricane Katrina. In addition, Slidell was hit by a 23' - 26' storm surge that devastated much of the city.


There are still FEMA trailers all over Slidell - 1 year Post K. We are recovering, but - like the rest of the Gulf Coast - We are still not okay

Please remember that New Orleans is not the only Katrina victim. There are thousands of us from Mobile, Alabama to the Louisiana-Texas border.

Deepest, heartfelt thanks go out to all who came to our aid in the past year. You cannot know how much all of you have helped. I still cry when I think of the outpouring of care that was sent this way one year ago. I cry tears of appreciation for our fellow citizens of the world.

Go to the thinknola wiki for the full list of New Orleans area bloggers. Great reading and insight there.








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Saturday, September 02, 2006

Recovery Ignorance

Damabala gives us prime example of the widespread problem of "recovery ignorance" that exists in this country in this post.

I truely wish more people would see When the Levees Broke to realize the breadth of Katrina's destruction. Some people believe that the recuperation should be over. "I mean, it's been a year...." is the attitude often heard outside the Gulf South.

"You had Mardi Gras, you must be back to normal" is another misinterpretation of why we had carnival .

No matter how hard you try, you can't change what people think without educatin' them. There are A LOT of people who need educating out there.

As everyone from Katrina's footprint will tell you, you cannot understand the size and scope of what has happened down here without being here . You need to smell it, see it first hand.

It will take years for this area to recover. New Orleans is having a hard time getting back on their feet The Mississippi gulf coast is coming back business-wise. There still are a lot of people who need real homes to live in.

Initially forgotton Pearlington is coming back .

If you want to compare recovery between NOLA and Mississippi's Gulf Coast, I'd say the main reason our neighbors to the east are coming back faster is the fact that they don't have Ray Nagin as a "leader". He's a pretty crazy sonofabitch.

Here is a great interactive map detailing comeback struggles of some New Orleans' businesses. Containing audio and video experiences, I think it's worth checking out.

Katrina's path affected Mississippi differently than NOLA in that New Orleans drowned where Mississippi was just flat wiped out.

Again, the only way people "not from here" who question the recovery are going to understand the enormousness of Katrina's wrath is through education. I started this blog and my Katrina Webpage to do just that.

Here are some good places to start:

Katrina One Year Later Essays and Epilogues

NPR's article on one year later Worth a look.

The Washington Post gives us a photo essay of the last year down here.

The Gulf Coast news Katrina Photos Bear in mind, folks that these are NOT pictures of isolated destruction. This destruction happened ALL OVER. These are photos of the norm.



"Having opinions without knowledge is not of much value; not knowing the difference between them is a positive indicator of ignorance."
-- Diane Ravitch

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