Sunday, December 09, 2007

What Scout has posted:

Next Monday, Dec. 10, is international Human Rights Day. It's also the day when activists in New Orleans are calling for actions opposing the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development plans to tear down more than 4,600 public housing units in four complexes across the city -- while replacing them with private, mixed-income developments that will set aside only 744 apartments for low-income people.
The decision to demolish these public complexes, which suffered only relatively minor damage [PDF] during Hurricane Katrina, comes as rents across the city have doubled since the storm -- as has the homeless population.

The activists are asking concerned citizens across the country to join the actions in New Orleans or to take action at home. According to a statement from Kali Akuno, director of the Stop the Demolition Coalition:

What is at stake with the demolition of public housing in New Orleans is more than just the loss of housing units: it destroys any possibility for affordable housing in New Orleans for the foreseeable future. Without access to affordable housing, thousands of working class New Orleanians will be denied their human right to return.

Although this situation is unique and urgent in the city of New Orleans, it does not occur in isolation. The plans for redevelopment here are part of a national assault on public housing, in which tens of thousands of homes have been demolished in the past decade.





Check the link to Scout's post for more.

My birthday is Tuesday. At this point, nothing would make me happier than to reverse this decision. I ask the city's leaders to make this aging mama happy and give these folks a home rather than a vacant lot. If you're gonna knock solid stuff down, have some solid plans in place to get that stuff rebuilt. All those who just wanna come home will thank you.

My three-and-a-half-decades old bones will be happy to their core.

1 comment:

asoom said...

Happy early birthday!

The decision as to which properties were deemed uninhabitable and knocked down versus those left standing is largely politics, politics mixed with "convenience"