With the crashing economy dominating national news, the
problems of a few Gulf Coast communities hit by hurricanes
might not amount to a hill of beans in the big picture. But for
many people in places like Galveston, Texas, New Orleans,
Louisiana, and Gulfport, Mississippi, coming back from
Hurricane Ike, or even Hurricane Katrina, is still life's top
priority.
Galveston officials traveled to a hearing January 7 with state
legislators to plead for help — if only in the form of
a refund to the city of sales taxes collected there for the
state. Read about it in this
Houston Chronicle story. Galveston city employees,
including firefighters and police, have agreed to a 3% pay cut
to help the city get by. Even so, layoffs are looming if the
city can't fend off a cash-flow crisis caused by a 30% drop in
revenue. The state legislature voted to create an emergency
recovery fund for Galveston — but has not appropriated
any money to put in the fund.
Making landfall on Saturday, September 13, 2008, Hurricane
Ike was rated at Category 2, but it's low central pressure was
more typical of a stronger storm. Ike’s storm surge
wiped away hundreds of homes and businesses from some of the
most exposed stretches of the barrier island.
Galveston residents looking 200 miles to the east could be
forgiven if they find the lesson of New Orleans, Gulfport, and
Biloxi discouraging. In New Orleans, reports the
Times-Picayune, the game clock is running down on the
funding window for business recovery or development projects
with Gulf Opportunity Zone bonds, federally supported
low-interest, tax-exempt financing. With only 4% of the money
tapped, unused funds will go to other parishes if New Orleans
planners can't manage to get projects in gear soon.
And life is still tough for many individuals hoping to rebuild
their own homes. A January 6 PBS Frontline documentary,
"The
Old Man and the Storm," focuses on the problems of New
Orleans through the eyes of one old man trying to start
over.
On the Mississippi side, hundreds of people still living in
Katrina cottages are facing a deadline to get out. (While
living in their cottages "for free" on the sites where their
homes used to stand, Katrina victims have been continuing to
pay their mortgages in order to avoid being foreclosed and
losing the land as well as the house.) That story is covered in
USA Today and also in the
Biloxi
Sun-Herald.
If Katrina cottages aren't suitable for permanent housing,
nobody has told that to Lowe's. The home center giant is
offering a range of
Katrina Cottage packages, ranging from the basic
one-bedroom, 308-sqft model, up to a 5-bedroom, 1807-sqft
expanded version.