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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: paret who wrote (699262)9/2/2005 12:07:37 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 769667
 
$2 Million each? That is it! Should be more like $2M per team

MLB, NBA each donating $2 million
Southeastern Conference to give $1 million for Katrina relief

Updated: 11:27 p.m. ET Sept. 1, 2005
NEW YORK - Major League Baseball and the NBA have each pledged $2 million to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina, and the Southeastern Conference is donating $1 million to disaster relief.

MLB and its players’ association and the NBA and its teams will give $1 million to the American Red Cross. In addition, the National Basketball Players Association has said it will raise $1 million to aid the relief effort.

“Major League Baseball wants to do its share to help those who are suffering from the devastating wreckage caused by Hurricane Katrina,” commissioner Bud Selig said in a statement Thursday. “I thank the players’ association for joining us in making this initial contribution and I thank in advance our clubs, players, employees, business partners and fans who offer assistance in the days ahead.”

In addition to the SEC’s donation, the league announced Thursday that each of its 12 universities will coordinate fund-raising efforts at home football games during the next several weeks.

“Hurricane Katrina has devastated the lives of victims in four of the SEC’s states, Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi, and may continue to do so for months and years to come,” SEC Commissioner Mike Slive said.

Baseball will pass collection plates at all 15 games on Sept. 7 — Roberto Clemente Day — and has offered to match up to $1 million in proceeds. Players will wear Red Cross patches and bases will include the logo and a telephone number to call to contribute to the relief effort. The 15 visiting teams will host individual relief efforts on future dates.

Clemente, a Hall of Fame outfielder for the Pittsburgh Pirates, died on Dec. 31, 1972, during a relief effort in Nicaragua. He was delivering goods to earthquake victims when his plane crashed.

Major League Baseball also announced a $1 donation for every item purchased at MLB.com.

The Atlanta Braves will donate $1 for every new ticket sold in the month of September to the Mississippi American Red Cross and hurricane relief efforts. The Braves and the Braves Foundation will donate a minimum of $100,000.

Several other organizations announced relief efforts on Thursday.

The U.S Tennis Association will donate $500,000 from U.S. Open proceeds to the American Red Cross for affected communities. Commercials devoted to the relief effort will be aired during Open broadcasts, and public service announcements will be made on the grounds of the National Tennis Center. Fans attending the Open can make donations beginning Friday.

The two players associations — the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour and ATP — said their members are donating autographed tennis equipment, apparel and memorabilia for an auction to aid victims of the disaster. Players who already have committed to supporting the relief efforts include Andy Roddick, Maria Sharapova, Andre Agassi, Lindsay Davenport, Robby Ginepri, Justine Henin-Hardenne, Donald Young, Amelie Mauresmo, and Bob and Mike Bryan.

A title for Hawaii, and that’s using your head, nose and body!

“It’s a tragedy, it’s terrible,” Agassi said. “I hope there’s something I can do. I’ll be a part of anything that might make a difference.”

Many other players, including Serena Williams, are making individual donations and filming public service announcements.

The Atlanta Falcons hope to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for victims of the hurricane, and began fund-raising efforts at a kickoff luncheon Wednesday, raising more than $60,000 through a silent auction and by collecting donations as fans left the Georgia Dome. Team owner Arthur Blank wants to collect $300,000 from players, coaches and employees of his various businesses and foundations, and all donations would be matched on a 2-to-1 basis by management. He challenged Falcons fans to raise another $300,000 at the Sept. 12 season opener against Philadelphia.

Major League Soccer, as well as members of the U.S. national team and Mexican national team, are contributing autographed game-worn jerseys to be auctioned. Players competing in the World Cup qualifier in Columbus, Ohio, on Saturday, and all MLS games this weekend will sign jerseys, which will be auctioned online at www.MLSnet.com

The MetroStars will hold a silent auction during Saturday’s game at Giants Stadium to benefit AmeriCares and the Red Cross, while Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair announced through his foundation that he’ll send six tractor-trailers with supplies for Katrina victims in his home state of Mississippi. A 12-hour relief drive will be held Tuesday in the parking lot at The Coliseum in Nashville.

The WNBA’s Connecticut Sun will donate the proceeds from box office sales for Friday night’s playoff game against Detroit to the Red Cross. The team said the donation is expected to total more than $50,000.

The San Antonio Spurs will give away up to 10,000 tickets for their four preseason games for donations to the relief effort. Donors will receive two tickets for making a $50 donation.



To: paret who wrote (699262)9/2/2005 12:43:54 PM
From: DuckTapeSunroof  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Budget cuts delayed New Orleans flood control work

By Andy SullivanThu Sep 1, 7:33 PM ET
news.yahoo.com

Bush administration funding cuts forced federal engineers to delay improvements on the levees, floodgates and pumping stations that failed to protect New Orleans from Hurricane Katrina's floodwaters, agency documents showed on Thursday.

The former head of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the agency that handles the infrastructure of the nation's waterways, said the damage in New Orleans probably would have been much less extensive had flood-control efforts been fully funded over the years.

"Levees would have been higher, levees would have been bigger, there would have been other pumps put in," said Mike Parker, a former Mississippi congressman who headed the engineering agency from 2001 to 2002.

"I'm not saying it would have been totally alleviated but it would have been less than the damage that we have got now."

Eighty percent of New Orleans was under water after Katrina blew through with much of the flooding coming after two levees broke.

A May 2005 Corps memo said that funding levels for fiscal years 2005 and 2006 would not be enough to pay for new construction on the levees.

Agency officials said on Thursday in a conference call that delayed work was not related to the breakdown in the levee system and Parker told Reuters the funding problems could not be blamed on the Bush administration alone.

Parker said a project dating to 1965 remains unfinished and that any recent projects would not have been in place by the time the hurricane struck even if they had been fully funded.

"If we do stuff now it's not going to have an effect tomorrow," Parker said. "These projects are huge, they're expensive and they're not sexy."

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the administration had funded flood control efforts adequately.

Tensions over funding for the New Orleans levees emerged more than a year ago when a local official asserted money had been diverted to pay for the Iraq war. In early 2002, Parker told the U.S. Congress that the war on terrorism required spending cuts elsewhere in government.

Situated below sea level, New Orleans relied on a 300-mile

network of levees, floodgates and pumps to hold back the waters of the Mississippi River and Lake Pontchartrain.

Levees were fortified after floods in 1927 and 1965, and Congress approved another ambitious upgrade after a 1995 flood killed six people.

Since 2001, the Army Corps has requested $496 million for that project but the Bush administration only budgeted $166 million, according to figures provided by the office of Louisiana Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu (news, bio, voting record).

Congress ultimately approved $250 million for the project during that time period.

Another project designed to shore up defenses along Lake Pontchartrain was similarly underfunded, as the administration budgeted $22 million of the $99 million requested by the Corps between 2001 and 2005. Congress boosted spending on that project to $42.5 million, according to Landrieu's office.

"It's clear that we didn't do everything we could to safeguard ourselves from this hurricane or from a natural disaster such as Katrina but hopefully we will learn and be more prepared next time," said Landrieu spokesman Brian Richardson.

The levee defenses had been designed to withstand a milder Category Three hurricane and simply were overwhelmed by Hurricane Katrina, said senior project manager Al Naomi.

"The design was not adequate to protect against a storm of this nature because we were not authorized to provide a Category Four or Five protection design," he said.

A study examining a possible upgrade is under way, he said.

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