Untitled Document
The U.S. military, in its' desperate attempt to crush the growing armed
Iraqi resistance, is employing what Pentagon strategists call the "Salvador
option". To terrorize the Iraqi people into submission the U.S. is funding,
training, directing, and sometimes staffing, death squads--as was done during
the brutal counter-insurgency campaign in Central America in the 1980s. The
U.S. imperialist state is betting that this strategy of terror will effectively
beat the Iraqis into submission, thus guaranteeing control of the oil and allowing
U.S. forces to be unleashed in new wars of pillage from Damascus, to Tehran,
to Caracas.
This war abroad, as some sections of the U.S. anti-war movement have
argued, cannot be seen in isolation from the war at home. The brutal colonial
war in Iraq is but the flip slide of the war at home against workers, immigrants,
and other oppressed people. Indeed, New Orleans, and the whole Gulf coast, has
become the latest front in this domestic conflict. Grass Roots activists
in the region argue that the Bush-led regime, with support from the Democrats,
are using hurricane Katrina to deepen and expand the racist and anti-working
class neoliberal offensive of privatization, austerity, and attacks on civil
liberties. In short, the U.S. government is coupling its' Salvador option abroad
with a "Chilean option" at home. Just as the U.S. and Latin American
ruling classes used Pinochet's Chile as a template for the rest of Latin America,
the Bush regime wants to "shock and awe" the U.S. working class by
rapidly creating a neoliberal wonderland in New Orleans to be exported across
the country. This article documents the neoliberal offensive in New Orleans,
with a particular emphasis on public housing, both before Katrina and during
its' post-disaster intensification. I conclude by highlighting how grass roots
movements are challenging this agenda and showing that another anti-racist,
pro-working class world, is possible.
The Bi-Partisan Neoliberal Assault on Public Housing
In the early 1980s New Orleans had over 14,000 public housing apartments that
was home to over 60,000 people, almost all African Americans. The response of
the local and national authorities to tenant demands for improved public housing
and services was to destroy it and displace families. Local Democratic Party
elected officials, such as former Mayors Sidney Barthelemy (now director of
governmental affairs for the New Orleans-based real estate outfit HRI) and Marc
Morial (now head of the National Urban League), helped lead the charge. Working
closely with the Republican and Democratic Bush (I), Clinton, and Bush (II),
administrations, and acceding to the demands of white controlled real estate
and tourist interests, these Black Democrats cut the public housing stock by
over half, from 14,000 to approximately 6,000 apartments during the 1990's and
early 00's.
Ethnic and Class Cleansing: The Case of the St. Thomas Housing Development
The location of the pre-hurricane demolished housing developments is important
for understanding the destruction Katrina heaped on poor families. For example,
the now-destroyed St. Thomas development, which at one time had been home to
over 1,500 Black, and some white, working class families, was located along
the riverfront, where flooding did not occur or quickly receded. In the late
1990s, after a decade long effort, local and federal officials demolished the
St. Thomas development. The political leaders, along with bought-off community
activists, dutifully responded to the demands of real estate and tourist interests
who saw this working class Black community as being "in the way" of
"growing" tourism. Due to the gentrification that followed in the
neighborhoods surrounding the St. Thomas, even more working class families were
driven from the area. Many of the displaced residents were pushed out to New
Orleans East or the Lower 9th ward, where flooding was extensive.
In contrast to the misery faced by most of the former Black working class residents
removed from the area, influential white businessmen prospered. For example,
real estate tycoons like Pres Kabacoff and Joe Canizaro--both of whom Mayor
Ray Nagin has appointed to the Rebuild New Orleans Commission--made millions
through the ethnic and class cleansing of the area. In addition, community activist
Barbara Major, a close associate of Joseph Canizaro who helped facilitate and
legitimate St. Thomas's destruction, has been awarded for her services my being
named co-chair of the Commission by Nagin.
In contrast to the "winners," only a handful of residents have been
able to return to the renamed, privatized, "River Gardens" development,
which is being built on the 60-acre site of the old St. Thomas. In fact, the
new development, partly financed through the Clinton administration's so-called
HOPE VI grant designed to "reform" public housing, has now become
a subsidized housing development for, mainly, the upwardly mobile. In addition
to the HOPE VI funding, sales and property tax proceeds from a nearby, newly
constructed Wal-Mart--another beneficiary of the project--are being used to
subsidize the developer and the wealthy residents.
The "public-private partnership" that oversaw the St Thomas "redevelopment"
was clearly a disaster for the poorest segments of New Orleans Black working
class. Nonetheless, federal, state and local governments are using the St. Thomas
as a "role model" for "redoing" the remaining public housing
developments. In fact Housing and Urban Development (HUD) secretary Alphonse
Jackson, who infamously stated, in the wake of the hurricane that New Orleans
is "not going to be as black as it was for a long time, if ever again",
unveiled this plan during a visit in early November to the city. Surrounded
by supportive local elected officials, he exclaimed: "St. Thomas [will]
be the model" for further reconstruction of the remaining development in
New Orleans. The result will be, if Jackson has his way, the further gutting
of the remaining 6,000 to 7,000 public housing apartments in the name of "reinventing"
public housing and "de-concentrating poverty". It seems that Alphonse
Jackson shares the same sentiments expressed by Baton Rouge congressmen Richard
Baker, who crowed following Katrina: "We finally cleaned up public housing
in New Orleans. We couldn't do it, but God did."
What will happen to the residents at these former developments, you might ask?
Well, HUD secretary Jackson reassured people that "We will be involved…If
they want to go back home, we will do everything in our power to make sure they
are comfortable." Yet, he added that most people, after staying away for
over six months, will not want to come back. Adonis Expose, communications director
of the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO) concurred, having concluded earlier
"the reality is, if they're doing better where they are, they're probably
not coming back." HUD and HANO are helping make that "reality",
that is helping guarantee people will stay away, by refusing to provide alternative
housing in the city in the interim while developments are reconstructed, albeit
in vastly reduced numbers. In fact, in a further attempt to keep Black public
housing residents away, HANO awarded a no-bid contract to Vacant Property Security,
Inc. to place steel doors on apartments so residents cannot even return to retrieve
their belongings. The message being sent by government officials to public housing
tenants, as well as the Lower 9th ward homeowners not able to even view their
homes, is clear: you are not welcome in the city of New Orleans.
Iberville Housing Development: Katrina as Pretext for Seizing Prime
Real Estate
The policy of refusing re-entry to homes is particularly criminal in the case
of the Iberville housing development, where floodwaters did not enter apartments.
HANO is not allowing the over 600 Black working class families that resided
at Iberville, which sits next to the French Quarter, from moving back into their
homes. The official explanation is that soil and other environmental tests must
first be undertaken to guarantee safety--yet this "concern" is only
raised with regard to public housing residents. No timetable is given for when
tests will be completed.
Timothy Ryan, a pro-business economist and University of New Orleans chancellor,
in another brief instance of public candidness by local elites, pointed to the
real motives behind blocking re-entry of Black working class families to the
development: "[Iberville] has retarded French Quarter development for 30
years", he bemoaned [NB: Housing authority officials began desegregation
of the-then all white development beginning only in 1965]. The good professor
proffered "taking Iberville and mak[ing] it a retirement community"
as a "solution" to the (Black working class) "problem."
More Neoliberal Air Strikes Launched Against Education, Health, Civil
Liberties
The over 60,000 students that attended New Orleans public schools before Katrina
came primarily from Black working class families. As with public housing, public
education had faced a barrage of attacks from business and government officials.
For example, over the last several years the New Orleans school board have instituted
rules--such as not posting important agenda items until just before meetings
start-- to make it much more difficult for parents and other members of the
public to give input at school board meetings. To further stifle debate, the
local press and school board members, such as James Fahrenholz, have vilified
courageous local activists, such as Assata Olugbala, who consistently speak
out at board meetings. In addition, semi-privatized charter schools, often with
pressure from the state department of education, have been imposed. Finally,
this summer the State legislature and Board of Education, along with local school
board "reformers", hired a private management "turnaround"
firm, Alvarez & Marsal, to manage the district. This outfit was previously
used in St. Louis to carry out draconian cuts and privatize services.
Under cover of the disaster, Alvarez and Marsal, with full support from local
and state officials, are systematically dismantling the school system. First
to go were teachers and support staff, who were all laid-off indefinitely, and
their union contracts ripped up. Next, local and state school officials announced
that schools opened on the non-flooded west bank of New Orleans would re-emerge
as semi-privatized charter schools. The federal department of education helped
the effort by providing $20 million to open 13 west bank New Orleans schools,
but only if they were opened as charters. To speed up the charter conversion,
State officials intervened and "waived" democratic procedures, such
as the requirement that parents and staff must approve a school becoming a charter.
Like Geneva conventions rules in another context, democratic rights get in the
way of "reform" and "progress."
On the east bank of New Orleans most of the schools are not even opening for
the school year--a further way to keep working class families away from the
city. The handful of schools to open on the east bank will also be converted
to charters and these disproportionally serve white and middle class students,
such as Lusher, located next to Tulane University, and Ben Franklin, located
on the University of New Orleans campus. In a final coup de grace to public
schools and local (Black) control over them, Governor Kathleen Blanco is pushing
a plan, which the legislature is expected to support, to allow the State to
take over 104--out of a total of 117-- city schools designated as "failing."
The State will then have the power to turn them over to private foundations
or businesses, or, as may be the case for many schools, refuse to reopen them
at all.
The same pattern of using the hurricane to deepen the neoliberal agenda is
evident in the health care arena. Since taking office two years ago Governor
Blanco has decimated the public Charity hospital system budget, partly by allowing
private nursing homes and hospitals to raid the state's Medicaid allotment.
As a result, the state closed or reduced vital services, such as the walk-in
clinics, over the last several years. Now, State officials plan to permanently
close New Orleans Charity Hospital, built by Huey Long in the 1930s and the
main provider of health care to the uninsured. The pretext is the damage it
received during the hurricane. Just as with schools and public housing, working
class people, with Black workers being the most immediately affected, are rapidly
seeing the neoliberal agenda intensify from simply cutbacks, to privatization
and elimination of vital public services.
To manage the discontent these cuts inevitably generate the government is beefing
up its repressive forces. Wherever working class people go for help in the New
Orleans area--from the offices of FEMA, to unemployment insurance, to food stamps--
they are greeted by intimidating, heavily armed National Guard troops and the
ever-present private, Blackwater security forces. As Mike Howells, a New Orleans
"hold out" and activist explained, "the message to working class
people is clear when you enter these facilities: don't dare challenge authorities
or we will be in your face." In addition, the Blackwater forces have also
joined National Guard troops in patrolling streets and intimidating local residents.
In sum, like the "reforms" instituted in the social service sector,
the Bush regime, with either open support or acquiescence from Democrats, is
using the hurricane to undermine Posse Comitatus, and other controls on the
use of the military domestically.
Join the Working Class Fightback!: New Orleans Convergence, MLK Day
2006
The racist, anti-working class agenda being pursed by the ruling class is not
going unchallenged. Local social justice activists, some of whom have the spent
decades on the front lines in New Orleans fighting for economic justice and
social equality are currently involved in ongoing struggles in the Greater New
Orleans area to stop unfair evictions, reopen public housing, schools, and secure
alternative housing for storm victims. They recognize that it will take a national
movement to stop the post-Katrina offensive against affordable housing, public
healthcare, public education and police repression now besieging the community.
Yet, they also realize that this struggle must incorporate the people of New
Orleans here and currently in exile.
In contrast to the neoliberal agenda, activists in New Orleans-based grassroots
groups, such as the anti-war, pro-public housing group C3/ Hands Off Iberville,
are proposing a pro-working class, anti-racist reconstruction plan that demands:
" No to ethnic and class cleansing-a pro-worker and African-American
friendly environment, affordable public and private housing, universal healthcare,
a mass public works rebuilding program that pays a living wage, an end to police
brutality in our community.
" We call for financing this through, one, taxing the oil companies---$1
tax for every $1 price increase since the run up the Iraq war. Two, immediate
withdrawal from Iraq-money to rebuild the U.S,, no money to destroy Iraq.
These activists, argue that "the utter failure of all levels of government
to look after the most basic needs of the working class and the African-Americans
of the Gulf Coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina demonstrates that we must
organize ourselves in a mass movement to defend our interests." To fight
for this agenda local activists are inviting supporters from across country
and world to converge on New Orleans for the "Martin Luther King Day March
To Rebuild The Gulf Coast And The World! On January 16, 2006."