| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"greg" |
| Date: |
29 Aug 2006 02:53:58 AM |
| Object: |
Bush Goes To Gulf Coast (a year late) |
with every mistake I must surely be learning
still my guitar gently weeps
http://talkleft.com/bushplaysguitar.jpg
Posted on Mon, Aug. 28, 2006
http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/nation/15383379.htm
By William Douglas and Steven Thomma
McClatchy Newspapers
(MCT)
GULFPORT, Miss. - President Bush saluted the resilience of Hurricane Katrina
survivors here Monday and promised that their plight hadn't been forgotten a
year after the storm cut a swath of death and destruction along the
Mississippi and Louisiana coasts.
"Even though we've been through about one year together, one year doesn't
mean that we'll forget," Bush told community leaders at a luncheon in
Biloxi, Miss. "As a matter of fact, now is the time to renew our commitment
to let people down here know that we will stay involved and help the people
of Mississippi rebuild their lives."
Bush's stops in Mississippi and New Orleans were part of a two-day trip to
mark the first anniversary of a hurricane that killed 1,695 people,
displaced 770,000 others and caused at least $96 billion in damage when it
hit land on Aug. 29, 2005.
Bush is using the anniversary to reassure gulf residents and Americans that
his administration is on top of the recovery effort after doing an
admittedly poor job in the initial days following the hurricane.
Before leaving Washington, he was briefed by Homeland Security officials on
Tropical Storm Ernesto, which has cut through the Caribbean, put Florida on
alert and caused some jitters in this region.
Last week, the White House put out a four-page document detailing what the
administration has done for Gulf Coast residents in the past year.
It said that Bush's stewardship helped secure $110 billion in federal funds
for recovery efforts, for repairs to New Orleans' damaged levee system in
time for the 2007 hurricane season and for removing tons of post-Katrina
debris from the gulf.
But several experts say that even those recovery efforts have been
problematic. Of the $110 billion, only $77 billion has been released and
only $44 billion has been spent.
Funds from a $17 billion program to rebuild about 204,000 homes in Louisiana
and Mississippi are just now starting to flow into the region. Federal
emergency officials have expressed confidence that New Orleans' levees are
ready for a major hurricane, though the head of the Army Corps of Engineers,
which repaired the system, said it's not clear whether the levees can
withstand a big hurricane.
Bush acknowledged some of the problems on Monday, particularly in getting
people back into their homes.
"I know there's some frustration," he said of federal-state efforts to get
homeowners money so they can rebuild their properties. "The checks have
begun to roll. They're beginning to move."
Still, despite White House attempts to show Bush leading a more focused
recovery, his early handling of Katrina's aftermath continued to dog him. An
Associated Press-Ipsos poll released this week showed complaints about
Katrina have eroded confidence in Bush's handling of the disaster and trust
in the country's ability to handle another one.
The survey found that 31 percent of Americans now approve of the way Bush
handled the hurricane, down from 46 percent a year ago. It also found that
56 percent don't believe that the country is ready for another disaster.
Bush doesn't share the nation's pessimism. He marveled at the progress made
in one neighborhood that he had visited four days after Katrina hit.
"I was struck by the beauty of the beaches," he said. "The beaches were
pretty rough after the storm, as you know. Today they are pristine and
they're beautiful. They reflect a hopeful future, as far as I'm concerned."
Sensing a political opening, Democrats planned to counter Bush's trip with a
broad array of events on the Gulf Coast and around the country designed to
underscore complaints about the federal government's response to the
hurricane.
The main effort was a three-day trip to the region starting Monday by 25
House Democrats and Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the House minority leader.
Their schedule included tours, town hall meetings and daily news
conferences.
Individual Democrats planned a conference call Tuesday morning along with
the Campaign for America's Future, a pro-Democrat group, to outline the
federal government's "failures" and to charge that hurricane rescue and
recovery was hurt by "the conservative ideology of disinvestment, cronyism
and corruption."
Several Democratic congressional candidates planned media events Tuesday to
link their Republican opponents to the failures of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency after Katrina.
In suburban Philadelphia, for example, Democratic House candidate Joe Sestak
planned to use a Tuesday news conference to ask, "Do the people of this
district want more of the same FEMA-style government, or do they want a new
direction in the way Congress handles the critical needs of the American
people?"
.
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| User: "Zizek!" |
|
| Title: Re: Bush Goes To Gulf Coast (a year late) |
29 Aug 2006 03:58:15 AM |
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"greg" <g@b.v> wrote in message
news:qoSIg.378335$bN2.133628@fe09.news.easynews.com...
with every mistake I must surely be learning
still my guitar gently weeps
http://talkleft.com/bushplaysguitar.jpg
Posted on Mon, Aug. 28, 2006
http://www.grandforks.com/mld/grandforks/news/nation/15383379.htm
By William Douglas and Steven Thomma
McClatchy Newspapers
(MCT)
GULFPORT, Miss. - President Bush saluted the resilience of Hurricane
Katrina survivors here Monday and promised that their plight hadn't been
forgotten a year after the storm cut a swath of death and destruction
along the Mississippi and Louisiana coasts.
"Even though we've been through about one year together, one year doesn't
mean that we'll forget," Bush told community leaders at a luncheon in
Biloxi, Miss. "As a matter of fact, now is the time to renew our
commitment to let people down here know that we will stay involved and
help the people of Mississippi rebuild their lives."
Bush's stops in Mississippi and New Orleans were part of a two-day trip to
mark the first anniversary of a hurricane that killed 1,695 people,
displaced 770,000 others and caused at least $96 billion in damage when it
hit land on Aug. 29, 2005.
Bush is using the anniversary to reassure gulf residents and Americans
that his administration is on top of the recovery effort after doing an
admittedly poor job in the initial days following the hurricane.
Before leaving Washington, he was briefed by Homeland Security officials
on Tropical Storm Ernesto, which has cut through the Caribbean, put
Florida on alert and caused some jitters in this region.
Last week, the White House put out a four-page document detailing what the
administration has done for Gulf Coast residents in the past year.
It said that Bush's stewardship helped secure $110 billion in federal
funds for recovery efforts, for repairs to New Orleans' damaged levee
system in time for the 2007 hurricane season and for removing tons of
post-Katrina debris from the gulf.
But several experts say that even those recovery efforts have been
problematic. Of the $110 billion, only $77 billion has been released and
only $44 billion has been spent.
Funds from a $17 billion program to rebuild about 204,000 homes in
Louisiana and Mississippi are just now starting to flow into the region.
Federal emergency officials have expressed confidence that New Orleans'
levees are ready for a major hurricane, though the head of the Army Corps
of Engineers, which repaired the system, said it's not clear whether the
levees can withstand a big hurricane.
Bush acknowledged some of the problems on Monday, particularly in getting
people back into their homes.
"I know there's some frustration," he said of federal-state efforts to get
homeowners money so they can rebuild their properties. "The checks have
begun to roll. They're beginning to move."
Still, despite White House attempts to show Bush leading a more focused
recovery, his early handling of Katrina's aftermath continued to dog him.
An Associated Press-Ipsos poll released this week showed complaints about
Katrina have eroded confidence in Bush's handling of the disaster and
trust in the country's ability to handle another one.
The survey found that 31 percent of Americans now approve of the way Bush
handled the hurricane, down from 46 percent a year ago. It also found that
56 percent don't believe that the country is ready for another disaster.
Bush doesn't share the nation's pessimism. He marveled at the progress
made in one neighborhood that he had visited four days after Katrina hit.
"I was struck by the beauty of the beaches," he said. "The beaches were
pretty rough after the storm, as you know. Today they are pristine and
they're beautiful. They reflect a hopeful future, as far as I'm
concerned."
Sensing a political opening, Democrats planned to counter Bush's trip with
a broad array of events on the Gulf Coast and around the country designed
to underscore complaints about the federal government's response to the
hurricane.
The main effort was a three-day trip to the region starting Monday by 25
House Democrats and Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., the House minority
leader. Their schedule included tours, town hall meetings and daily news
conferences.
Individual Democrats planned a conference call Tuesday morning along with
the Campaign for America's Future, a pro-Democrat group, to outline the
federal government's "failures" and to charge that hurricane rescue and
recovery was hurt by "the conservative ideology of disinvestment, cronyism
and corruption."
Several Democratic congressional candidates planned media events Tuesday
to link their Republican opponents to the failures of the Federal
Emergency Management Agency after Katrina.
In suburban Philadelphia, for example, Democratic House candidate Joe
Sestak planned to use a Tuesday news conference to ask, "Do the people of
this district want more of the same FEMA-style government, or do they want
a new direction in the way Congress handles the critical needs of the
American people?"
An Unhappy Anniversary
1,833 lives lost. 270,000 homes destroyed. $55 billion in insured damage.
Up to $1.4 billion in American tax dollars wasted by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA).
Today, the costs of Hurricane Katrina are still staggering. But even more
staggering has been the slow pace of recovery on the Gulf Coast. No one was
happy with the federal government's initial response to the hurricane.
Eighty percent of the American public think the federal government's
response could have been "much better," and in September President Bush
stated, "This government will learn the lessons of Hurricane Katrina." But
on the eve of Katrina's one year anniversary, it is clear that the nation is
still waiting for the help Bush promised.
Yesterday, as part of the White House's "public relations blitz," Bush
trumpeted in his weekly radio address that the federal government has
"committed $110 billion to the recovery effort." But those billions of
dollars have yet "to translate into billions in building."
Perhaps most disappointingly, Bush has forgotten about his promise to the
nation to confront poverty "with bold action."
As Newsweek's Jonathan Alter writes, "The mood in Washington continues to be
one of not-so-benign neglect of the problems of the poor." Lessons haven't
been learned and time has run out for excuses. (The Progress Report has
compiled a comprehensive timeline of the past year's events:
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=175702754&url_num=31&url=http://thinkprogress.org/katrina-timeline
and American Progress has developed a list of actions America needs to
ensure preparedness and recovery capacity for natural disasters.)
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=175702754&url_num=32&url=http://www.americanprogress.org/atf/cf/%7BE9245FE4-9A2B-43C7-A521-5D6FF2E06E03%7D/KATRINA_AND_COMMON_GOOD.PDF
Bush is pathetic but his supporters are worse of the worst.
.
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