Monday, September 3, 2007

Housing advocates take over HUD office in New Orleans


Public housing residents from St. Bernard’s, and several community organizations from New Orleans and around the country took over the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO) office last Friday, demanding they reopen four public housing developments operated under its direction.

The coalition included groups from New Orleans, Miami, Georgia, Texas, Rhode Island, and California along with Public Housing Residents of the Lower East Side (PHROLES) from New York City and the Coalition to Protect Public Housing from Chicago.

Two years after the developments were evacuated in the post-Katrina floods, the public housing developments have remained empty despite having sustained only moderate damage from the storm. Residents and groups have been prevented from rehabilitating and filling the vacant units.

The sit-in set off a three-hour confrontation with police, the National Guard, and SWAT teams after 25 residents and activists were denied a meeting with officials to discuss community demands. Under threat of arrest, the groups decided to cease their occupation of the building and to hold a national press conference before the media covering the anniversary of Katrina.

“What is happening with the public housing in New Orleans is just a preview of what can and will happen to public housing around the country if this story is not told,” said Lisa Burriss, director of organizing for PHROLES, who participated in the sit-in. “We must remain united, fighting for the rights of all low-income people in this country to have decent, safe and affordable places to raise their families. Housing is a human right!”

Street Roots reported this month that in January 2005, homeless outreach workers counted 6,300 people living on the streets in the city and its immediate suburbs. A count in 2007 estimated 12,000 people experiencing homelessness, though only an estimated 60 percent of the city’s general population had returned.

PHOTO BY TED JACKSON –The Times – Picayune

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

_“What is happening with the public housing in New Orleans is just a preview of what can and will happen to public housing around the country if this story is not told,”_

totally agreed, more and more we are looking at a situation where there is less and less low cost public housing, and seemingly less and less interest in the fact that there is. sadly, one day I see a country where there is the Rich, the "educated poor" instead of a middle class and the homeless.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Public Housing is a Human Right? give me a break lady. This "what have you given me lately" idiot has no idea about hard work and sacrifice to better yourself. This welfare and public housing mentality " they owe me!" is a pathetic excuse to lay around and do nothing with there lives. And don't start with the racial thing cause it doesn't fly here. get up off your hind parts and do something...anything the HA's do programs every week to better themselves and the gimmme gimme's don't show. Go cry somewhere else public housing is a privledge NOT a right.

Therresa Kennedy said...

Public and affordable housing is a right of all human beings, that live in 'civilized' countries that is. Not all people who advocate for themselves are lazy, money grubbing, welfare recipients who are not interested in work. What happens to the elderly or to handicapped people?

Should they be denied affordable, low cost housing because they cannot work? Public housing in America is NOT a privilege, its a right, just like freedom of speech and freedom of the press is not a privilege but a right.

If you want to live in a country where every one is perfect, where there are no disabled people or homosexual's, move to IRAN!

LOL!

Therresa Kennedy said...

Public and affordable housing is a right of all human beings. Not all people who advocate for themselves are lazy, welfare, money grubbing no bodies who are not interested in work. What happens to the elderly or to handicapped people? Should they be denied affordable housing because they cannot work? Public housing in America is NOT a privilege, its a right, just like freedom of speech and freedom of the press is not a privilege but a right. If you want to live in a country where every one is perfect, where there are no disabled people or homosexual, move to IRAN.

LOL!