...As The Saints Go Marching In
Tears dripped down her face as she searched for her missing suitcase in
the busy New Orleans bus station. “It had my ID, my children’s birth
certificates, my money and my credit cards,” she softly cried. It was
Sunday morning, one week after she was bused out of New Orleans to a
military base in Arkansas. She was supposed to be at work. Her three
children needed her. But she needed that suitcase.
A single older woman, clinging to her heavy bag and a single crutch,
sighed as she got off the bus from Kentucky. A little boy with a
Lightning McQueen backpack, almost bigger than he was, gave a tiny fist
bump to the first person he saw. A middle aged woman sat in a plastic
chair, eyes closed, head in her hands, slowly rocking.
Outside, black and gold fans of the New Orleans Saints were drinking
and barbecuing preparing for the noon game. Their smoke drifted over
the bus station and mixed with the exhaust from dozens of big buses and
the contents of dozens of port o lets.
Over a thousand people are expected to be bused home to New Orleans
sometime Sunday. They are the last of around 30,000 people evacuated by
the government to hundreds of shelters across the country.
Though 26% of Louisiana was reported Sunday to still be without power, people were more than ready to come home.
The bus station was full of dark blue uniformed police, camouflaged
National Guard soldiers, Health Department workers in sky blue shirts,
red shirted Catholic Charities and Red Cross personnel, lime green day
glo jacketed volunteers from the local Medicaid office and many others.
One local judge observed after days at the bus station, “It is
unbelievable just how many disabled and elderly people actually live in
our community. They just keep getting off these buses with their
wheelchairs, their canes and crutches. Dozens, then hundreds, then
thousands. Many must usually be housebound, because we rarely see
them.”
A disabled older woman trudges along with a cane and a garbage bag of
belongings as a volunteer pushes the wheelchair of her full-grown
absolutely silent son. “Next time,” she said, “we’re just going to have
to ride it out at home. This was too much.”
An old man angrily spurned the offer of ready to eat meals from a
volunteer. “I need money. Can you help me with that? No? I didn’t think
so! I spent all my money on this and I’m about to get put out of my
house!”
A University of New Orleans professor is collecting information from
returning evacuees and will release a study soon. Reports from the New
Orleans Worker Justice Center for Racial Justice point out that 1500
people were housed in an abandoned Sam’s Club warehouse that was not
set up for habitation. “Mothers have been forced to bathe babies in
portable toilets parked outside while diabetics are receiving food that
puts them at risk.” The Worker Center also published a state policy
memo that sent people who evacuated on their own to one type of shelter
and people who used public transportation to another type entirely.
Another 1200 were housed in an old Wal-Mart in Bastrop with
insufficient toilets and had no shower facilities for at least 3 days.
Others complained that shelter officials rationed everything, even
tampons, telling evacuees to come back later when they needed another
one.
Another problem were the arrests of evacuees after local officials on
their own decided to run unauthorized background checks on each person.
Arrests were reported in Atlanta, Bastrop, Chicago, Knoxville,
Louisville, Marshall, Memphis, Oklahoma City, and Shreveport. Many
arrests were for outstanding warrants. The problem is that the New
Orleans warrant system is widely criticized as unreliable.
Officials in New Orleans told the Associated Press they had no
knowledge of the background checks. Those wishing to use the city's
assisted evacuation system had been assured they would not be pressed
for identification in order to board buses out of town. The evacuation
is seen as key to saving lives and maintaining order during and after a
hurricane.
"The problem is there have been massive holes in the warrant system in
New Orleans for years," said New Orleans civil rights attorney Mary
Howell. "Sometimes the warrants have been thrown out but are still in
the system; some people don't know they have warrants out for them."
What's worse, Howell said, is that such arrests will have a chilling
effect on getting people to evacuate in the future.
At noon, the Saints kicked off in the Superdome. A few blocks away,
publicly contracted buses continued to return with hundreds of
passengers. The elderly, the disabled, children and those to poor to
evacuate on their own, who had not been home in a week. The teary eyed
woman continued the search for her missing suitcase.
Links:
[1] http://katrinareader.cwsworkshop.org/justice-new-orleans
[2] http://katrinareader.cwsworkshop.org/taxonomy/term/46