Posted on 09/05/2005 4:09:26 PM PDT by hipaatwo
Before residents had ever heard the words "Hurricane Katrina," the New Orleans TIMES-PICAYUNE ran a story warning residents: If you stay behind during a big storm, you'll be on your own!
Editors at TIMES-PICAYUNE on Monday called for every official at the Federal Emergency Management Agency to be fired. In an open letter to President Bush, the paper said: "Our people deserved rescuing. Many who could have been were not. That's to the government's shame."
But the TIMES-PICAYUNE published a story on July 24, 2005 stating: City, state and federal emergency officials are preparing to give a historically blunt message: "In the event of a major hurricane, you're on your own."
Staff writer Bruce Nolan reported some 7 weeks before Katrina: "In scripted appearances being recorded now, officials such as Mayor Ray Nagin, local Red Cross Executive Director Kay Wilkins and City Council President Oliver Thomas drive home the word that the city does not have the resources to move out of harm's way an estimated 134,000 people without transportation."
"In the video, made by the anti-poverty agency Total Community Action, they urge those people to make arrangements now by finding their own ways to leave the city in the event of an evacuation.
"You're responsible for your safety, and you should be responsible for the person next to you," Wilkins said in an interview. "If you have some room to get that person out of town, the Red Cross will have a space for that person outside the area. We can help you."
Developing...
Or it will be used to buttress the cries of "the FEDERAL government should have done something because the state and local governments already 'admitted' they couldn't."
Tried to post new thread, Admin Moderator pulled it.
I think it's in Bloggers/Personal now. Check the Katrina link and see if you see it.
this will never get reported....
And this is on Drudge? Well, good for him.
BTTT
Ping.
Is it my computer, or was this thread just pulled from "Breaking News" for the SECOND time tonight?
"I love the city's assumption that people too poor to own a car will certainly own a DVD player."
Well, I'd be willing to bet a heck of a lot of them did, but that's besides the point. It sounds as if they were trying to get them to Churches and "other groups" (whatever that means) to get the word out to their members.
Does anybody know who the Times-Picayune endorsed for President, Governor and Mayor last time around for each? I wonder if they are giving cover for "their" candidates.
Why weren't police cars going through the neighborhoods with loudspeakers urging the people to evacuate?
Damn Oceania. Hang their King and burn his boats.
Oh.. wrong thread.
Maybe if the school system wasn't so busy stealing 70 mil in federal money they could have hirred a few bus drivers to get people out!\
Link:http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/education/2002245573_schools19.html
Crises multiply at schools in New Orleans
By Adam Nossiter
The Associated Press
Superintendent Anthony Amato's reforms failed.
NEW ORLEANS Dozens of employees indicted or convicted on corruption charges. Tens of millions of dollars unaccounted for. Eight superintendents in seven years. Rock-bottom test scores. Shootings, sirens and police uniforms, often. The threat of bankruptcy and bounced checks, constantly.
In the dismal gallery of failing urban school systems, New Orleans' may be the biggest horror of them all.
"Urban districts, in general, will often have problems with instruction, with finances, with operations," said Michael Casserly, executive director of the Council of Great City Schools in Washington. "But they don't always occur at the same time. And New Orleans is really facing a three-front challenge."
New Orleans "is almost a national scandal," said James Harvey of the Center on Reinventing Public Education at the University of Washington. "The consistent gossip about favoritism and corruption is extremely troubling." And the city has become "murderers row for superintendents."
Long ago abandoned by this city's middle class, New Orleans public schools are in sad shape academically. New Orleans accounts for 55 of Louisiana's 78 worst schools. More than two-thirds of the school system's fourth-graders do not have basic competence in math.
The latest crisis in the 64,000-student system broke two weeks ago. First, teachers nearly missed a paycheck, the system was so broke. Then, the state threatened a takeover. Finally, the superintendent a reformer from New York who, like many before him, entered with grand plans was forced out by a school board disenchanted with his reform ideas.
Superintendent Anthony Amato's fate was sealed last week at a board meeting crackling with racial hostility. Much of the hooting was directed at him and his white supporters in the school system, which is almost 94 percent black.
Financially, the school system is a "train wreck," Louisiana's top government watchdog, legislative auditor Steve Theriot, told lawmakers in Baton Rouge. No one knows for certain how much money it has, or how much money it owes.
At the glass-and-steel school administration complex across the Mississippi River from downtown New Orleans, FBI agents and other federal and state investigators have opened an office to pick through the evidence of graft.
Just last week, a payroll clerk was sent to jail for stealing $250,000 she had kept her job with the New Orleans schools, even after being indicted on charges of stealing from a bank. A year ago the district's insurance manager pleaded guilty to taking kickbacks. One of the bribe-givers was former Mayor Marc Morial's aunt.
In February, the U.S. Education Department said nearly $70 million in federal money for low-income children was either not properly accounted for or misspent.
State officials said one reason is that for years, teachers and principals wanting promotions to more lucrative central-office positions have been put into accounting jobs for which they are not qualified.
"There is not one accountant working in the accounting department," Theriot said. "There's not one in the trenches."
State and federal officials are demanding that every aspect of the district's finances be turned over to an outside accounting firm. The locals are balking, but they probably cannot resist much longer: Washington and Baton Rouge, which give New Orleans more than half of its $577 million budget, have the upper hand.
Meanwhile, morale in the beleaguered teaching corps is sagging.
"We're constantly hit by these disasters," said Leo Laventhal, a French and Spanish teacher at one of the city's magnet schools. Often, colleagues at his school never receive their paychecks. And it is no use complaining: "We call the central office, and nobody answers the phone," Laventhal said.
Copyright © 2005 The Seattle Times Company
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Okay, hold that thought. If research at the Time Picayune goes back more than Tuesday a week ago, they might have noticed that New Orleans had an evacuation plan, which called for using buses to get the people who don't have/can't afford cars out of the City. But that requires the Mayor to have the brains to speak the three-word title of a Spike Lee movie, "GET ON THE BUS."
Okay, hold that thought. Now if any reporter for the Times Picayune would get off his/her butt and toddle down to the parking lots where the school and municipal buses are parked, they might discover that the BUSES ARE STILL THERE.
Now, as long as that reporter has the capacity to type, he/she has a story. Was that so difficult? Or is the entire staff of that newspaper "A Confederacy of Dunces"?
Congressman Billybob
Latest column: "Tide of Lies Swamps NY Times: Employees Riot and Steal Office Supplies"
John / Billybob
just saw this picture on fox.....but with out the diagram.....can you send it to cnn....msnbc....cspann?
Yes...Liberal in denial. Some things never change.
Should have used those buses in the emergency plan.
Aw gee, DU will be so upset. They want it to be all Bush's fault.
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