Wednesday, July 09, 2008

The Mississippi Gulf Coast

Chris Rose writes about a recent trip to the Mississippi Gulf Coast in his latest article.

The social and familial bonds that link places like Biloxi and Pass Christian to New Orleans have always struck me as some of the most symbiotic and even romantic interstate relationships that exist in our country.

Sure, the place still looks like hell. My daughter, who has seen some pretty rough stuff around New Orleans the past two years, summed it up succinctly. "Daddy," she said. "This place really got destroyed."

Indeed, where once-glorious mansions stood there are now mostly just tangles of overgrowth.



There's not a lot to warm the heart, even though a few brave souls have built houses atop towering beams.





I took Highway 90 from Bay St. Louis to Biloxi last weekend to pick up my daughter at the airport (sooo much better than Moisant to get to). Aside from the casinos,
there is very little being built in some places. It still resembles this picture, taken last year



I was also reminded of my 'Art from Destruction' post when I saw the beautiful carvings made from live oaks that were killed by Katrina





They're coming back, but it'll take time.

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Plaquemine Parish Update

Michael Homan chronicles his recent trip to Plaquemine Parish and how it appears nearly three years post K.

I previously wrote about Plaquemine Parish's slow recovery
here

Another victim of Katrina

Sad, Sad, Sad.

Nearly three years after Katrina, people who survived the storm and its aftermath are still dealing with all sorts of
mental problems. These problems can be directly related to the horrific stress we were all under. People deal
with it in their own ways. Some are okay and some will never be okay again.

Case in point:


From the Times Picayune the story of a 58 year old well-educated man in so much painful denial

For months after Lon Adams' 81-year-old father died, the decomposing body lay in an upstairs bedroom of the Metairie home they shared, raising questions that not even Adams can answer.

"He died. I couldn't deal with it so I just left him there", Adams said Monday while fighting back tears. "I blocked it out of my mind. I was stressed out after Katrina. I just, just don't know."

Adams, 58, said his father died of natural causes, possibly Alzheimer's disease.

Despite being a well-educated, accomplished military and career man, Adams said he still cannot understand why he didn't notify authorities sooner, why he allowed his father's body to stay in bed in an upstairs bedroom for so many months and how he managed to shut out the reality of it all for so long.

I can't explain what happened, Adams said. "I regret it very much."

Lon Adams was taken into custody while his mentally handicapped son, Chad, 31, who also lived at the residence, was turned over to relatives. Lon Adams was taken to West Jefferson Hospital in Marrero for an eight-day mental evaluation and released.

Adams said he was very close with his father. The two lived next-door to one another in eastern New Orleans for 20 years and had lunch every Saturday and Sunday. Leroy Adams was from Bay St. Louis, Miss., but his son grew up in New Orleans and attended Cor Jesu High School. Adams said he graduated from Loyola University in 1971 with a bachelor's degree in political science and earned a master's degree in business administration from the University of New Orleans in 1979.

Adams served 28 years in the Army Reserve, retiring in 1999 as a lieutenant colonel. Adams said he worked for AT&T for 27 years as a project manager until he retired after Hurricane Katrina in November 2005, exhausted and burned out.
He served as a caregiver for his father to keep him from having to go to a nursing home. He said he took his father for treatment at the VA Medical Center in New Orleans until the storm closed the facility.



I know there are some crackpots out there who will view this as 'just another wacko from that crazy place that shouldn't be rebuilt' and I feel sorry
for them for being so narrow minded and cold hearted. This story is quite tragic and I'm sure there are many versions of this within the miles and
miles of devastation wrought by the storm.

Monday, July 07, 2008

Grand Isle post K

From the "daily comet" dot com, an article that discusses Louisiana's Grand Isle's rebirth from Katrina.




Tourists are back, business is bustling, construction is everywhere.



That's good to know. Grand Isle State Park is undergoing beach reclamation at this point, so it's closed to camping right now.




Grand Isle State Park is also enjoying a building boom of sorts. The U.S. Army Corp of Engineers is currently pumping sand onto the beach, in an effort to rebuild what was lost to Katrina. This has closed beachside camping and is causing a lot of noise for those campers who braved one of the park’s off-beach campsites.

“We’ve got three hundred feet of new beach,” the manager of the park Jason Cline said. “The corp is moving really fast. They started on the tenth of June. I know it’s right in the middle of the tourist season, but that’s when the corp said they could do it … We’ve got a lot of projects coming up. As soon as we finish the new bathhouse, we’re going to renovate the old one. I see no reason that beach camping won’t be back by next summer.”


Guess I'll start planning a road trip to Grand Isle next year. It's been too long.

Sunday, July 06, 2008

Bay St. Louis & Waveland- three years post K

I've posted about the state of two small Mississippi towns that were pulverized by the winds that were to the east of Katrina's eyewall.

Waveland and Bay St. Louis were serene, sleepy coastal towns before the storm. And by the looks of things this past weekend, they're on their way back, although they still have a long way to go.

click on pictures for full size versions

Hubby and I decided to spend July 4th at the

Our Lady of the Gulf 24th Annual Crabfest in Bay St. Louis.

This church somehow survived Katrina's 28 foot storm surge pretty much intact



True to the theme of the festival, they had some succulent boiled crabs. The first thing we did was devour these two plates of seafood, washed down by ice cold Abita beer


The festival was pretty low-key, which was actually quite enjoyable. I must be getting old. The band Relative Unknowns played and they were damn good.


The food was great and the weather was tolerable with a nice breeze off the bay.

In between courses of boiled seafood and fried catfish, we took a walk around the grounds of the festival and spotted a few interesting sites.

Bay St. Louis City Hall still appears to be closed due to storm damage




St. Stanislaus School has repaired the pier that juts out from it's grounds



There is a really neat little gazebo built around an oak right next to City Hall


And a few blocks away is the rebirth of Old Town Bay St. Louis, an area of shops and eateries that we've yet to discover .


On the way home we took Hwy 90 along the coast to check out how the recovery was coming.

You can still see a lot of Katrina Cottages springing up along the Waveland coast.

But now there are big, beautiful bay front homes being completed like these two:





Of course, some people have been screwed by the insurance companies



With much thanks to all of those who have taken part in the rebuilding of Katrina's vast wasteland. We salute you

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Bigotted Scuzzbucket

Howieluvzus blogs about Terrebone Parish School Board Member
Rickie Pitre
who wants to force students to use English only at graduations.




From a Houma today article
Cousins Hue and Cindy Vo, who spoke in Vietnamese during their valedictorian addresses during Ellender High’s commencement May 19. -- Cindy Vo faced the audience at Ellender High School’s graduation last month wearing a valedictorian’s vestments.

The American-born daughter of Vietnamese immigrants spoke of high-school memories, friends and the future. Then she recited a sentence in Vietnamese, dedicated to her parents as they looked on.

"Co len minh khong bang ai, co suon khong ai bang minh," she said into the microphone.

The 18-year-old graduate told classmates that the line, roughly translated, was a command to always be your own person.

That part of her speech has resulted in unintended consequences that may affect how local public-school graduations ceremonies function in the future.

Some Terrebonne Parish school officials now say all commencement speeches should be spoken in English only, and they want a formal rule that says so.

Supporters of proposed changes, discussed at a recent School Board Education and Policy Committee meeting, say they want graduations to be "uniform procedures."

(that's how they hide their bigotry methinks)

Board member Rickie Pitre is leading the charge for change.

"As board members, we get to observe the different ceremonies and there’s some inconsistencies I think the board or administration more importantly needs to address," Pitre said in committee.

He supports English as the only language at graduations. If a message is spoken in another language, it should be phrased in English first and then paraphrased in translation.

"I don’t like them addressing in a foreign language," Pitre said. "They should be in English."


"them"?, Rickie? How narrow minded you are. Looking at the makeup of the
Terrebonne Parish School Board , it appears that 5 out of the nine members have French surnames. Have you forgotten where your forefathers came from? You are indeed a scuzzbucket, Rickie.


More details of this story, including what other members of the School Board think of this idea, are at this link .

Scuzzbucket of the Week

For the second time in a month, our favorite Scuzzbucket is none other than Senator Ann "I'm better than the little people" Duplessis. Reacting to the
governor's veto of her bill, Duplessis said the issue is now dead and that she would not try to override the veto and that she would not bring up a scaled-down version of the pay raise in future sessions.

The Senator expressed her displeasure with what she saw as Jindal's broken promise. "The first thing I was told when I got into office was, your word is all you have," she said, "and we were given his word."

Click here to listen to the entire interview
.



Is she in a cave or something? From WWL TV:
Duplessis said she did not believe that there was the big backlash against the raise that the media had been reporting, but that a couple of ‘radio personalities’ had led the charge and overstated how the public felt.
She said the constant barrage by the ‘personalities’ was something she couldn’t fight.
“I don’t have a PR budget that will allow me to do a campaign to tell the other side,” she said.

Funny thing, just a few weeks ago she found some "PR Budget" to do damage control after the pay raise was a success. From Bayoubuzz dot com:
Ann Duplessis and Damage Control
Senator Ann Duplessis, ever since Pay Raise Gate has gone on the offensive with her own PR machine. It was her bill that passed the Senate tripling the legislator’s pay raise. Now she is sending out emails touting her involvement in the community. The other day one email marketer promoted her and a fashion event. Today, Senator Duplessis’s email is "Taking Care of Business" promoting her “Clean and Beautiful Campaign”. Duplessis serves residents of Eastern New Orleans, Holy Cross, and the Lower Ninth Ward. She rarely sent out any emails prior to this Pay Raise Gate debacle. She and the legislators who voted for their own payraise and who threatened the Governor with shutting down the government will have a lot of business to take care of before they regain the trust of the people of her district with whom she has ignored for the benefit of her buddies in the legislature who have never needed the pay raise in the first place


More reactions:

CB Forgotston (great cartoon)
Swampwoman has an idea to take care of the selfish leges.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

American Zombie: I love it

American Zombie: I love it

NOLA-dishu: C Ray loves someone else taking heat

NOLA-dishu: C Ray loves someone else taking heat

A Sleeping Giant Awakens

If you have the time and means of transportation, get yourself to Baton Rouge next Monday, July 7th.
Stephen Sabludowsky over at Bayou Buzz is leading an anti-pay raise march on the Louisiana Capitol in Baton Rouge on Monday July 7, 2008, the day before the deadline for PBJ to veto the pay raise.

From Bayou Buzz:

"will initiate a peaceful rally on the Capitol steps prior to the day the bill becomes law. It is the democratic way to let the people know that we mean business and we want this legislation vetoed. The Governor needs to see live bodies demanding change, not simply emails and phone calls. We will need the help of organizations, of individuals and yes, you--who feel left out in the cold by our Governor and by the legislature. It is time for Louisiana to take our state back from the power brokers seeking power for their own person gain while the people go broke. If you want to help in a large or small way, contact me and let us begin to become Citizen Can."


Website Central La. Politics will soon provide a link to the rally in the near future.

Hopefully, the days of letting the good ole boy network do what they want and get away with it seem to be finally over.

Jeff Croere puts it better than I could:
I doubt that our legislators realized that their push for a 124% increase in salary would lead to an awakening of the sleeping giant, the voters of Louisiana.

Never before had Louisiana voters, long accustomed to political shenanigans reacted with such fury to an action of the Legislature.

This issue struck a responsive chord for a number of reasons. The pay raise was too large and it came at a time that the “regular” people were suffering. Citizens cannot vote themselves a pay raise and neither should politicians.



A recall petition is available here.
This site provides the petition (in pdf format) and recall rules as well as quotes of Jindal regarding his stance on the pay raise
A recall petition would require verifiable signatures from well over 900,000 registered Louisiana voters. This can be done, folks.


Thanks to Swampwoman for this info

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