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


To: goldworldnet who wrote (704255)9/27/2005 3:52:07 PM
From: paret  Respond to of 769670
 
From the LAKE NEW ORLEANS thread:

To: paret who wrote (942) 9/26/2005 4:36:49 PM
From: ~protege Read Replies (1) of 951

When the Government Helps -- and Hurts
finance.yahoo.com

After the Mississippi floods of 1993, FEMA (which administers the flood insurance program) literally paid some flood-ravaged towns to pick up and move to higher ground. The entire town of Valmeyer, Illinois, is now a mile and a half east of its former location -- and 400 feet higher. It doesn't flood anymore. Shouldn't we think about that as we look to spend billions of public dollars rebuilding New Orleans?



To: goldworldnet who wrote (704255)9/27/2005 4:13:31 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Leader of New Orleans Police Resigns
Journal News ^ | September 27, 2005 | JULIA SILVERMAN

NEW ORLEANS — Police Superintendent Eddie Compass resigned Tuesday after four turbulent weeks in which the police force was wracked by desertions and disorganization in Hurricane Katrina's aftermath.

"I served this department for 26 years and have taken it through some of the toughest times of its history. Every man in a leadership position must know when it's time to hand over the reins," Compass said at a news conference. "I'll be going on in another direction that God has for me."

As the city slipped into anarchy during the first few days after Katrina, the 1,700-member police department itself suffered a crisis. Many officers deserted their posts, and some were accused of joining in the looting that broke out. Two officers Compass described as friends committed suicide.

Neither Compass nor Mayor Ray Nagin would say whether Compass was pressured to resign.

"It's a sad day in the city of New Orleans when a hero makes a decision like this," Nagin said. "He leaves the department in pretty good shape and with a significant amount of leadership."

Lt. David Benelli, president of the union for rank-and-file New Orleans officers, said he was shocked by the resignation.

"We've been through a horrendous time," Benelli said. "We've watched the city we love be destroyed. That is pressure you can't believe."

Benelli would not criticize Compass.

"You can talk about lack of organization, but we have been through two hurricanes, there was no communications, problems everywhere," he said. "I think the fact that we did not lose control of the city is a testament to his leadership."

Earlier in the day, the department said that about 250 police officers — roughly 15 percent of the force — could face discipline for leaving their posts without permission during Katrina and its aftermath.

Each case will be investigated to determine whether the officer was truly a deserter or had legitimate reasons to be absent, Deputy Chief Warren Riley said.

"Everything will be done on a case-by-case basis. The worst thing we could do is take disciplinary action against someone who was stranded in the storm or whose child is missing," Riley said.

Sally Forman, a spokeswoman for the mayor, said it is not clear whether the deserters can be fired. She said the city is still looking into the civil service regulations.

Benelli said true deserters should be fired.

"For those who left because of cowardice, they don't need to be here," Benelli told the paper. "If you're a deserter and you deserted your post for no other reason than you were scared, then you left the department and I don't see any need for you to come back."

But Benelli said he believes only a small fraction of the officers will wind up being deserters.

"We know there were people who flat-out deserted," he said. "But we also know there were officers who had to make critical decisions about what to do with their families."

Riley said some officers lost their homes and some are looking for their families. "Some simply left because they said they could not deal with the catastrophe," Riley said.

Also on Tuesday, the state Health Department said Katrina's death toll in Louisiana stood at 885, up from 841 as of Friday.

Tuesday marked the second day of the official reopening of New Orleans, which had been pushed back last week when Hurricane Rita threatened. Nagin welcomed residents back to the Algiers neighborhood on Monday but imposed a curfew and warned of limited services.

Nagin also invited business owners in the central business district, the French Quarter and the Uptown section to inspect their property and clean up. But he gave no timetable for reopening those parts of the city to residents.



To: goldworldnet who wrote (704255)9/27/2005 4:16:49 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Sally Forman, a spokeswoman for the mayor, said it is not clear whether the deserters can be fired. She said the city is still looking into the civil service regulations.



To: goldworldnet who wrote (704255)9/27/2005 5:02:31 PM
From: paret  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
New Orleans Gangs, Drug Dealers May Re-Emerge Elsewhere
ClickonDetroit ^ | September 27, 2005 | AP

BATON ROUGE, La. -- Hurricane Katrina did what authorities couldn't: put a stop to illegal drug operations in New Orleans and pushed its ruthlessly violent gangs from the streets of the city's poorest neighborhoods.

The exact landing point of gang members isn't known for sure, though federal authorities suspect popular evacuation sites like Baton Rouge, Lafayette and Houston. But no matter where they land, the thugs from the Big Easy have been put at a distinct disadvantage, authorities say.

"They are crippled," said U.S. Attorney Jim Letten. "They don't have the buddies, don't have the turf they're familiar with."

Gangs were largely responsible for the city's pre-Katrina murder rate of nearly 10 times the national average. Though gang members only made up a few hundred of the city's core population of 450,000, they terrorized highly concentrated areas of poor neighborhoods, often shooting at will during drug disputes and intimidating potential witnesses into silence - or killing them.

"They prey on the paupers," Letten said. "We know who some of them are and where some of them are, but we still have to get a better grip on it."

Though there's no proof New Orleans gangs have regrouped in other cities, authorities agree the emptying of New Orleans presents a unique opportunity for law enforcement. With the city's criminal element dispersed, gang activity is easier to spot.

For example, when a Gretna, La., man was killed in a drive-by shooting in Baton Rouge, where the population since Katrina has reportedly doubled to at least 800,000, law enforcement swarmed.

"Gangs are a top priority for us because they can have a big, negative impact on a community," said Mark Chait, special agent in charge of the New Orleans office of the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

The ATF is paying close attention in Louisiana and Texas to cities along Interstate 10 west of New Orleans, the highway long used as a major drug corridor. And police are looking for spray-painted insignia and other signs of gang activity, even checking suspects for gang-affiliated tattoos.

Unlike larger, nationally organized gangs, those from New Orleans are small, elusive and harder to track. Sometimes consisting of as few as two or three members, they're known to use children to push their drugs, Letten said.

"We've seen them shoot each other over a parking spot, a word, a hand gesture," Letten said. "They have no regard for human life."

Because of the population boom in Baton Rouge, the anti-gang task force once based in New Orleans has moved here, along with one of the ATF's Violent Crimes Impact Teams - the 21st of as many in the nation. The VCIT program was launched roughly a year ago in more than a dozen of the country's most violent cities, including New Orleans, Miami, Los Angeles, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.

Besides Baton Rouge, the city of Lafayette, about 135 miles northwest of New Orleans, has been a concern for violent crime, said Chait, whose field division covers Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas.

Lafayette officials say the city has had no armed robberies, car jackings, drive-by shootings or other crimes associated with gang activity since refugees began evacuating there.

"If we saw any sign, whether a tattoo, colors, we would address it," said Lt. Craig Stansbury, spokesman for the Lafayette Parish Sheriff's Office.

After Katrina, Lafayette kept security tight at its Cajundome, the sports arena that was serving as a shelter to hundreds of evacuees before Rita forced them to relocate.

Because Houston and San Antonio took in many New Orleanians, authorities have also been paying attention to criminal activity in those cities.