Showing posts with label FEMA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FEMA. Show all posts

Thursday, September 04, 2008

And since we're talking about hurricanes and second-handers...

What the hell...?
FEMA may cover hotel costs for hurricane evacuees

NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- The federal government says it will pay the hotel expenses of some of the nearly 2 million people who fled their homes ahead of Hurricane Gustav, but exactly who will be eligible for assistance and how much it will cost taxpayers was uncertain.

Officials from the Federal Emergency Management Agency planned a telephone news conference Thursday to answer questions.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said Wednesday in Baton Rouge that FEMA would pay hotel costs "to make sure that people don't feel economic pressure to return home prematurely, before it's safe."

He said FEMA would pay hotels directly, so it was unclear whether those who had already paid for rooms and checked out would be eligible for reimbursement.

With two other hurricanes threatening the East Coast, the decision to pay for hotels could make it easier to evacuate residents during the next disaster. But doing so would also burden the agency with huge expenses.

The news that hotel costs might be reimbursed came too late for people who have been sleeping at public shelters, such as those in a convention center in Birmingham, Ala. Some of those evacuees said they would have preferred a hotel if they had known FEMA money would be available.

"You can just get cat naps here," said Aaron Clark, 63, as he sat under a shade tree outside the center. "We didn't get breakfast this morning because they said something was broke down. It's just surviving, that's all it is."

FEMA officials in Louisiana urged residents affected by the storm to register with the agency and to save receipts that document their spending during the evacuation.

"We'd need receipts, and we'd need to know whether the area they were evacuated from is one of the mandatory evacuation areas," said Ed Conley, a FEMA spokesman.

Conley was asked, as an example, whether a family could be reimbursed for hotel expenses after leaving New Orleans on Sunday, checking into a Tennessee hotel, then returning after two, three or four nights.

"That's exactly the family we want to get in touch with us," Conley said.

But he was uncertain what the agency would offer such a family, in part because various other factors - including the family's insurance coverage and whether their house was damaged - could come into play.

Also, the minimum number of days that would be covered had not been determined, and it was unclear whether food and fuel costs incurred while on the road would be covered.

A Georgia Emergency Management Agency spokesman said Thursday that the agency had received a handful of calls in recent days from evacuees asking for gas money to return home. The state is referring those people to FEMA and the Red Cross.

Some evacuees also wondered whether FEMA would cover their lost wages and other expenses after they return to New Orleans.

In the Birmingham shelter, Carlos Pavilus of New Orleans said he would give anything to be in a hotel.

"I'm so tired of smelling tennis shoes and diapers. We have no laundry. We have nothing," Pavilus said.
OK, let's get one thing straight. Everyone who lives in the hurricane areas lives there by choice. The rest of us didn't make them live there, any more than we force people to live in earthquake-threatened homes on scenic cliff sides or on the Montana plains where blizzards make life hard every winter. So why exactly should we be paying the costs associated with these people's geographic residency choices? (I'll also point out that people in Montana don't run to us every time it snows and demand money from taxpayer coffers the way that these "professional victims" in New Orleans do. Wonder why that is?)

There's not an endless supply of money in the Treasury. In fact, every dollar there had to be taken from someone, and any dollars handed out to people to cover nice hotel rooms will have to be replaced by--you guessed it--taking more money from other people.

This is wrong on many levels. I know that Democrats routinely do this sort of thing, because a person (or government) who robs Peter to pay Paul will always have the support of Paul come election time, but I vote Republican in the hope that this crap won't happen. Hey, it sucks that a bunch of people have to leave the places that they chose to live because of a storm that they knew could come, but reimbursing them for their costs out of MY pocket and the pocket of every other person smart enough not to live in the hurricane-prone areas just isn't right.

I had no problem collecting needed supplies and raising money to voluntarily help people after Katrina, but when the government starts taking my money without even bothering to ask... screw it. My largess and sympathy for these people who have now had to be evacuated twice in three years just because they desire to live there is now at an end. I respect their choice to live where they want, but fundamental fairness dictates that any costs or risks associated with that choice be borne by the people who made the choices, not by the rest of us.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

No good deed goes unpunished--Katrina refugees destroying the FEMA trailers loaned to them as aid.

Sometimes I wonder why we should even bother.

Here we (the taxpayers) go, buying brand new travel trailers for around $20,000 each and giving them to those who claim to be in need following hurricane Katrina, and apparently a lot of the recipients of this aid program have decided to show their respect and gratitude by destroying the trailers through theft, neglect, or outright vandalism, or else they've stolen the trailers outright--either selling them, dragging them off to hunting leases or turning them into illegal meth labs.

And what is FEMA doing about this? Well it may surprise you (but it probably won't) to find out that FEMA's doing absolutely nothing about it beyond sending letters to the trailer recipients asking them to pay for the damages. And that only in cases where FEMA actually knows who they gave the trailers to, which is not always the case. And since FEMA has no legal authority to prosecute people who have ruined the trailers to the point where they aren't ever usable again, it's just falling on us taxpayers to suck it up and eat the losses while the welfare sponges who got the trailers and wrecked them go off scot-free, no doubt proud of how they've gotten over on the rest of us.
And let me be fair here. It's not just inner-city hoodlums and lifetime welfare recipients from New Orleans this time. Many of those trailers went to rural residents, including homeowners in Arkansas, Mississippi, rural Louisiana and Texas. One would think that at least some of these people still own property which could be attached to cover the costs of the property that they've ruined but apparently FEMA's content to just let them ride because it's easier to stick you and me with the bills. You see, while FEMA might not have a clue as to who they loaned many of these brand new trailers to, they definitely know your billing address and mine.

Related article

Related article

Related article

Monday, March 12, 2007

How much longer will we have to carry them?

This story in the Washington Post today got me piqued. It's about FEMA's famed post-Katrina trailer parks, which us taxpayers are still paying for a year and a half after the storm. FEMA is closing one in particular--Yorkshire--and moving the refugees to other trailer parks, and predictably the people getting the free trailers are upset. Heck, I'm upset that these people still haven't done what they needed to do to run their own lives without me and the rest of us paying their rent. From the story:

"People say we shouldn't still be living in a FEMA park," said one former Yorkshire tenant, a Wal-Mart worker who wanted to be identified only as "P." "But take a look at the rents people have to pay in New Orleans now -- who can afford that?"


Well it would seem to me that you need to go out and get a better job, or failing that, a second job. And if you can't afford to live in New Orleans now, you go live somewhere else. It's not up to the rest of us to pay your rent indefinitely until an apartment opens up in your price range right where you want to live. The rest of us have to work and manage our own money to buy housing in choice areas, and I have to wonder why this woman and the others haven't been able to set aside thousands of dollars over the last year and a half since they haven't had to make any rent payments? BUt of course it's not their fault. If you ask them, it's ours.

The tenants said the sense of rootlessness that comes with the trailer life is affecting their children.

"I'm tired of tossing my kids around like a bouncing ball," LaFrance said. "And I hate waking up every day wondering what's going to happen next."


I winder if it ever occurred to her that her kids wouldn't get bounced around from welfare trailer to welfare trailer if she'd just use her own money to rent an actual apartment where her and her kids could actually set down some roots?

Nah. Sadly, the welfare crowd never seems to make that leap from dependency to self-sufficency and security. And what's even worse if that the Democrats who keep them in poverty to mine them for votes wouldn't have it any other way.

Friday, March 03, 2006

New Orleans... Mardi Gras is over and the bitching resumes

OK, Mardi Gras is over. Everyone had fun, there were no mass shootings this year to mar the event, and everyone's gone home now. The slogan for this year was "Drink until Ray Nagin makes sense!" and Old Willie Wonka the Chocolate Mayor didn't help his own image one bit by dressing in army garb and riding in the parades on a horse making like he had something to do with the rescue of all the people that the federal government actually saved.

But now that the fun's over, most of the former residents of that city are back to sitting around demanding that the rest of us hurry up and buy them new houses. And the worst part is that the Democrats just keep proposing plans that will actually do that.

Sorry, but I object as loudly as I can. It's not my job to buy a new house for some sap who chose to live below sea level without buying flood insurance. The people who bought insurance are going to be fine. Those who didn't need to deal with it on their own, just like the tens of thousands of other Americans who are rendered homeless each year by storms, fires, earthquakes and other natural disasters. Did the rest of us pay to rebuild coastal North Carolina after Hurricane Hugo? How about Florida after FIVE back-to-back hurricanes? Of course we didn't. So why should we rebuild the 9th Ward of New Orleans and replace all those crummy trashed shotgun houses with brand spanking new nice ones? The 9th Ward was crap BEFORE the storm and it was that way because the people living there made it that way and refused to do a thing to clean it up or make it safe. Now they want all new stuff for free? Screw that. And screw any politician who tries to ride that issue into office by trading support for these stupid plans for re-election votes.

We already got everyone out of harm's way. That's expected. We also gave everyone thousands of dollars in cash whether they were actually put out or not. FEMA audits have shown that over 900,000 of applications for the 2.5 million cash awards given out contained false information, indicating that the recipients generally screwed us taxpayers over. We also saw that money spent on tattoos, strip clubs, jewelry, guns, and of course drugs and booze. And this was done by people living high on the hog in hotel rooms much nicer than the houses and apartments that most of them had in New Orleans. Of course we paid for those rooms for months too. And did they say "thanks"? No! They filed a bunch of lawsuits when we finally stopped paying their rent 8 months later!

Most of these people have gotten more in cash, clothing, food and rent than they could ever have provided for themselves this past year, and anyone who was really trying to find a job and their own housing could have done so months ago. Many did, leaving behind a hard-core remainder of career panhandlers and second-handers who expect the rest of us to just carry them indefinitely then set them down in nice new free homes with central air and color TV sets. Well I'm tired of paying out only to be defrauded, ripped off, sneered at and sued. I had no problem helping those in need until they could get back on their feet but the gravy train needs to end for the ones who just want to keep sitting and it needs to end right now.

And for those of you who have high-speed internet and want to see a funny but sadly true video spoof about New Orleans, check this one out:

Click here unless you're easily offended.

You'll have to register to see the video, but it's simple, free and worth it.