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Could justice prevail in Jena?

Consider this a coda to the BNO symphony, but I couldn't let this bit of promising news escape the last day of Blogging New Orleans. Today, the Louisiana 3rd Circuit of Appeals vacated the conviction of Mychal Bell, the young black man who stood facing 20 plus years in prison for a school-yard beatdown. This is great news for the friends and families of the Jena 6, the group of young blacks arrested for knocking around a racist white kid at school.

You've probably seen the story on this site before or read about in the in the papers. I won't go into details, but suffice it to say that there are six young men -- and dozens of family members -- in Jena breathing a little easier now.

Ironically, this might be the best news to hit Jena, Louisiana ever. Now, the glaring light and international focus on Jena as the home of southern American racism will ease up. Now, unless the foolish and racist District Attorney Reed Walters (who famously told black students at a school assembly -- at a school assembly -- "I can end your lives with the stroke of a pen" when they organized to protest Jena High School students' racist actions) wants to refile the cases against the six in juvenile court, the young men will hopefully be able to return to their regular lives. Wiser, perhaps, from having faced the gates of a racist hell by lashing out at one sorry jerk who probably inherited race hatred from his prejudiced parents; hopefully the Jena 6 will find a better way to attack racism in their midst than by beating some dumb cracker unconscious.

So Walters will have to decide whether his famous pen is going to stroke against these young men further. He'd better choose wisely. Look what happened to Mike Nifong in Durham, NC, whose prejudices in the famous Duke Lacrosse rape case have cost him his job, and sent him to prison (admittedly for only 24 hours).

Look before you leap, Mr. Walters. The judgement of history is a real bitch when you're on the wrong side.

And you are on the wrong side.

Thanks for listening and reading to my N'awlins rantings

Well, I let you know about the sad news of our site's retirement last week I said I'd tell you more about the future and then... well I dropped off the face of the planet. Before I tell you about the future one last story... Tuesday afternoon(September 11th, ugh) the a rain the dusted the city was the final staw for the roof of the building my apartment is in and water started to pour (and I do me pour) into my bedroom. My poor extremely pregnant better half was home and managed to move the last of our future offspring's future out of the room before the ceiling started to come down around her. So now I'm in a bad situation with an apartment that needs to be emptied and a new one that needs to be found (and now you know why the podcast was late). I have some options and the help of our families is going to help a lot, but I had to cut off my blogging for the week and only just now could get to you... so on to the future... I think my future includes a break for blogging. I loved being able to post my thoughts on the state of the city in this space, but I think I need to take a step back. The tracking of some of the underbelly of the recovery can be really upsetting and I am finding the stress of the country looking at us as the ugly step-sisters of the nation extremely hard. Sometimes you just want to be a techwriter who fauns over the latest websites instead of dealing with hard realities of the recovery.


Maybe I'm just a little tired (as are many in the city). Maybe I'm just a little to angry. Maybe I just need a break.

Wow, that was a little depressing. On a high note, we must end. Thanks for reading my rants. Thanks for commenting on my podcasts. Thanks for sending in your ideas. Thanks for saying hey. Thanks for everything.

I loved covering Jazz Fest for you. I loved getting to know my city again for you. I loved getting politically angry for you. I loved posting for you.

Thank you.

Common Ground Clinic celebrates second year of service

Last Saturday, the Common Ground Health Clinic in Algiers Point celebrated its second year of providing free health services to thousands of New Orleanians since its formation in the week after Katrina struck. Clinic supporters organized a block party at the corner of Teche and Socrates where the Clinic is located, serving up a barbecue and music and offering tours of the recently refurbished clinic (see photo below).

In a city with an international reputation for low-quality health care post-Katrina, the two Common Ground-sponsorerd free clinics -- the first in Algiers, the second on St. Claude St. in the Lower 9th Ward -- are much-needed community institutions that have served thousands of people since opening. Ancillary programs like the Latino Health Outreach Program, a spinoff project that serves the needs of non-English speaking residents and workers, also spread the tattered net of social services in New Orleans a little wider.

A staff member at the Algiers Clinic informed me that the Algiers Clinic sees between 20 and 50 people per day of operation; due to limited resources and red tape, the clinic is open on a limited schedule four days out of the week (Monday through Wednesday at various hours, and Saturday 12 - 3 pm). Despite ongoing shortages of medical services in the area, and despite the tremendous need for basic health care in the city, the Common Ground Clinics have had to fight for everything they have.

Judging by the state of medical services here two years after the traumatic events of 2005, it looks like their struggle to provide free, basic health care to neglected or impoverished populations will remain an uphill battle. But the anniversary party demonstrated that the community still needs and supports the services they offer.

Justice and the Jena 6

Last Saturday night, local supporters of the internationally-known Jena 6 -- six young black men facing dozens of years in prison for a school yard beat-down of a white antagonist in the hamlet of Jena -- held a fundraiser and rally for the young men, whose initial court-appointed defense lawyers have been replaced with higher-caliber legal representation.

Their case is becoming a focus for activists concerned about racial justice in Louisiana. It's now a lightning rod for global criticism of the racial situation in the United States, attracting bogeyman-to-whites Al Sharpton (do any of the whites who believe that Sharpton is only exploiting the situation for personal gain understand that history is on his side?) and perrenial photo-op visitor to New Orleans Jesse Jackson (whose calls for racial unity are falling on the deaf ears of Jena whites in denial, who claim, of course, that they are not racist, therefore there are no racial problems in Jena; a white bus driver who spoke to one reporter said, "No, no no. It's not [racism]" ).

Perceptions, informed by history, are one of the foundations of racism in America. When a white person, particularly a white person in a position of power, does something to offend a black person, whites can't be surprised when that black person questions the white's motives. Racism does exist here, and denying this only makes racial prejudice harder to disembed.

Prosecutors in Jena postponed the sentencing of the convicted Mychal Bell, the first of the 6 to go to trial, in order to avoid publicity. This half-baked strategy has guaranteed that the sentencing, now scheduled for September 20, will be heavily attended. Postponement has only allowed activists to spread the word on the perceived injustice in Jena, and the more the word spreads, the more attention will be paid to the good people of Jena, and their tolerance of injustice in their midst.

The importance of public housing

At last week's "International Tribunal on Katrina and Rita," one of the more striking parts of the event was the presentation of the second witness on the subject of Women's Rights. Ms. Stephanie Mingo, a resident of New Orleans for 40 years, lived in St. Bernard Housing project prior to Katrina. After the storm, she evacuated with four children and one grandchild in tow. Her mother died on the Gentilly bridge, unable to survive the physical and mental anguish of the storm's aftermath. Ms. Mingo's testimony was powerful and informative.

Ms. Mingo and her family evacuated, returned, and are now staying in the Iberville project. She doesn't like it there and wants to move back into her St. Bernard home. She has worked for the Orleans School Board for ten years -- "not that long" Ms. Mingo says -- and is determined to stay in her home town.

Her stubbornness in staying in a project known as much for trouble as for housing might seem odd to those of us who have never stayed in government housing, but it's the home that she wants to come back to. She loves her job as a food services technician at a local school, and isn't afraid of hard work. As Ms. Mingo said from the witness seat while testifying to the court, "When I tie these shoes, I'm not too proud to do anything." Her home and community were humble, but she managed to raise and put through college three of her kids, and the fourth is college-bound.

Public housing may be the upscale-white developer's nightmare, but a lot of hard-working, disciplined people lived there before Katrina, and want to return to their homes and communities which they are trying against all odds to preserve.

Secrecy at City Hall

The second editorial in the Times-Pic today ("Share the excitement") gently took the Mayor and City Council to task for the secrecy surrounding the recently-approved plan for the first stages of redevelopment of 17 targeted zones throughout the city. The editors should have gone much further in their criticism. The secrecy of the elected leaders could be characterized as disingenuous at best, at worst, it is rife with the opportunity for corruption, influence-pedaling, and back-door politics. The kind of things that people living here are pretty sick of already.

If the plans to redevelop New Orleans are agreed upon by elected officials, then the democratic population who voted for these officials are entitled to see these plans, comment upon them, and above all, take hope from these plans.

Citizens like you and me won't be able to do this, though, until next month. This month is reserved for the New Orleans power structure to assure itself a profitable central role in the rebuilding effort. There are properties to be acquired, and little old ladies and blind old men to be unscrupulously evicted or bought out of their homes for a pittance by scheming developers.

There are dummy corporations to set up, in order to apply or bid for contracts (presuming, that is, that there are any contracts left to be claimed on the first $117 million in development funds; it's even money that big time disaster profiteers Halliburton and Bechtel had a seat at the table when these plans were shown to "other stakeholders" by Tsar Blakely. After all, there's federal money being poured around, and while many still suffer, there's no reason that good, highly-connected corporations like Kellogg, Brown, & Root or Fluor can't earn a buck or two million while shutting out local contractors until the cream has been skimmed from federal largesse.).

Admittedly, the bulk of planning was likely done long ago, and the REAL players didn't have to wait for the council's approval. They already have their schemes in order, you can believe that. Incidentally, this may be the reason why Nagin's office has been so insular lately; he and his cronies have probably been busy making calls and setting up deals with friends, family, and high-powered interests. There's a lot of loot on the way.

Which reminds me of the spray painted warnings after Katrina: You loot, we shoot. Only now, the shooting should be metaphoric.

But don't be surprised to find an awful lot of looting when the development money comes to town.

The Lower 9th: International Tribunal marks Katrina's anniversary

I managed to get by the International Tribunal for Katrina and Rita a couple of times last week, and sat in on the proceedings. The five-day event was meant to draw accountability for federal and local failures and abuses of power in the immediate aftermath of the storms, and was hardly an impartial hearing. Tears shed on the witness stand were many, as those testifying before the panel of judges found that, even two years after the tragedy, the emotions from those days of grief, confusion, and all too often death, are still very fresh.

The witness's testimonies related to a range of issues that affected people during and after the storms of 2005. Organized by the People's Hurricane Relief Fund and sponsored by dozens of local and international activist organizations, the Tribunal was kind of a political dog-and-pony show insofar as it had no pretense of being an impartial assessment of the facts. On the panel were respected leftist activists, including the notorious Ward Churchill (whose remarks about 9/11 led to his July dismissal from a professorship at the University of Colorado) and others from Europe, Africa, and South America.

The tribunal was predicated on the assumption that the government was culpable for much of the chaos and loss that happened after the storms, and the testimonials from each witness -- with no oppositional questioning -- were very personal and direct. Each was angry about something that has affected her or his life since Katrina, whether it's a lack of public housing, a crushed teachers' union, armed vigilantism in Algiers, police brutality, or de facto voting disfranchismement of New Orleanians. To hear the witnesses was to be reminded anew of the anguish that people endured after the storm, and the hardships that many citizens bear every day in the effort to rebuild.

In truth, the government at all levels is responsible for many of the tragedies of fall 2005. Poorly built levees, relief supplies tied down with red tape, lethargic federal financial assistance, opportunistic seizures of schools and rebuilding contracts; for these and many more, the federal, state, and city governments need to be held accountable and procedures put in place to avoid the recurrence of any such tragedy.

The Tribunal didn't claim to have answers for the questions the testimonies raised. Many of the "justices" on the judges' panel sympathized -- lengthily -- with many of the witnesses whose testimony had been particularly harrowing. Some related, through translation, their own experiences in addressing the problems revealed in the testimonies.

I don't mean to sound as if I thought the Tribunal a waste of time, or too politically skewed to have any value. It was very slanted, but it gave people a chance to relate their experiences to an international audience (make that an international left audience) and it offered something more than simply commemorating the anniversary of Katrina and getting back to work. I learned a good bit about how voting rights have become something of a joke in the area, as the displaced tens of thousands of evacuees still can't cast their ballot, for a number of reasons from the practical to the ridiculous.

In other places, such tribunals often look into delicate times in the past, such as the South African commissions regarding apartheid. In Greensboro, North Carolina, a recent Truth and Reconciliation Commission was empaneled to collect witness testimony regarding the 1979 killing of five labor organizers by the Ku Klux Klan (caught on tape, and for which no Klansman ever went to prison). The effect these commissions have on larger patterns of justice may remain an open question, but I personally support each of them. It's quite easy for those in positions of power to want to forget the past, but for the victims of yesterday, there can be no forgetting.

The men and women trapped for days on the I-10 overpass, denied entry to Gretna across the bridge and kept under conditions of martial law, won't be able to forget their ordeals anytime soon. It behooves us all to remember their stories, though, and to learn from their experiences.

Whether or not the International Tribunal will contribute to a restored sense of justice in New Orleans has yet to be seen. We can always hope, right?

How to absentee vote in Louisiana

So its very possible I will be unable to make it to the polls on election day this fall (due to a new arrival) and my wife and I have decided to vote absentee. Why not just not vote you ask, well if you don't vote you can't complain. Voting is a right in this country that to few decide to use. To many out there think the system is broken and think not voting with change it. Little do those idiots (yes they are total morons) realize that their voter apathy is what is killing our political system. By not voting you are helping re-elect corrupt politicians and helping pre-picked bad choices make it into office when they have neither the experience nor the good of their state in mind. You are the reason why so many morons get elected and so many bad people control our system. Heck Tom Delay (supposed Bobby Jindal contributer) is a product of voter apathy and the general public's dis-interest in their country.

Full instruction after the jump.

Continue reading How to absentee vote in Louisiana

The rumors are true, an explanation

Well, Matt let the sad news slip a little early and I don't want to leave you hanging (that's really unfair to all of our loyal readers), so let me start to explain and tell you about the next week. Very soon, your beloved Blogging New Orleans will be entering retirement. Each blogger here will be posting a final goodbye on September 14, 2007 (so stick around, we still have lots to say). We will continue to post normally in the coming days. We will continue to discuss with you our thoughts on happenings around the city until then. We will continue to tell you about politics and football and recovery over the next week (you could say this is a site fade of sorts).

Unfortunately AOL and Weblogs, Inc have decided to go in a new direction and are leaving the local blog market (you may remember the retirement a while back of our sister site Blogging Ohio). They will be leaving the site up after the retirement and after we finish posting next week. All of us at Blogging New Orleans would like to thank AOL and Weblogs, Inc for starting the site before the 2006 Jazz Fest and for helping it grow and develop into a full New Orleans site filled with locals who truly love and care for our Crescent City. Many of us will be scattering to other sites around the Weblogs, Inc network (be sure to check back for full details in each member of the Blogging New Orleans team's goodbye post) and will continue to blog about all sorts of stuff. Thanks again to all of you for reading our posts and commenting on our thoughts. You have made this all worth while.

Run, Kimberly! Run!

LOOOOOOVE IT! I cannot tell you how excited I am for the final list of city council at large candidates to be released. We were introduced to some of these crazies during the last mayoral election. But my favorite NOLA looney by far is, you guessed it, Kimberly Williamson Butler! Hooray! I seriously thought that she would have left town by now. In fact, why haven't we RUN her out of town?

In case you haven't been paying attention, here's a nice link trail to follow. Crazy. Crazy. Crazy. This folks is what makes living in New Orleans fun.

More local news in HD, ABC26

ABC26 WGNO recently flipped their news broadcasts to mostly HD and widescreen. I say mostly because some of the pre-recorded stories aren't filmed in HD (I don't think they have enough cameras yet). But the sets are new and the main part of the broadcast take up an entire 16:9 screen. I say more local news in HD, because WGNO isn't the first New Orleans station to take their news high definition. FOX8-WVUE has a widescreen broadcast as well. NBC6-WDSU only recently got their HD antenna up so I guess they aren't their yet and CBS4-WWL hasn't gotten on the HD bandwagon. Either way this is really good for the state of local tv and says a lot about our recovery and how far New Orleans has come into the 21st century or we are just really lucky. Now if only we could get CW38 to upgrade their feed to something above 480i.

Two Years of Coverage

"Are you sick of seeing 'two years later' news stories yet?" my father asked me today.

"No," I replied. "You forget that I didn't see much of the footage as it was happening as I was without power for two weeks." But that's not really true. I think I've seen my fair share of footage. I was glued to CNN for weeks after I did get access to cable. So why am i not sick of today's coverage? Why am I currently watching pretty-boy AC stand in front of a group of Americorps volunteers somewhere in the city? Probably for the same reasons anyone in the country is watching. It's partly voyeuristic and partly the guilt that I have for not feeling connected enough -- for perhaps getting off too easy.

That might sound strange from someone who lives here and lived here before Katrina but being part of the lucky 20% that didn't flood means that I could open the door of my home and pick up relatively back where I started. Also, because I am not a native, I don't have to deal with the loss of roots. Now, that's not to say that Katrina didn't affect me greatly. It doesn't mean that my marriage and psyche have not been pushed to the limit. It just means that I've had it easier than the other 80%.

So, I'll continue to watch the coverage and record features of interest through the evening. It's important for me to see how the city is portrayed and there is an excellent chance that i might learn something.

Times Picayune give the Pres what for too

You read Shelley Midura's open letter to the President this morning and felt the power of a councilmember ripping the 'leader' of the free world a new one. Now you need to read the Times Picayune's Editorial that basically does the same thing. the paper does an accurate job of comparing the aid giving to Louisiana and the aid given to Mississippi. It doesn't say 'hey they got to much' but 'hey why didn't we get treated equally'. The number one quote in the Editorial is:

The people of Louisiana are no less deserving of disaster aid because their representatives are newer to Congress or because some of the people we trusted to lead us turned out to be scoundrels.

Yes, the TP is saying what we have been thinking since the first jeer about Jefferson came out of the mouth of a congressman from anywhere else who wanted to make us pay for his mistakes. We do deserve to be treated like the good citizens we are and not punished for our politicians choices. If you give money with checks and balances and realize that one guy isn't going to get it all (hopefully) then you help the recovery. If you hold back and make a blanket accusation of an entire region of the country you only alienate us and show exactly the type of person you are. Of course empty promises by members of the executive branch don't help either.

via E&P

image of You Go Girl by skeletonkrewe found on Flickr

What's going on here? Why am I posting so much? Today, in honor of Katrina I am attempting another 24 hour 24 post blogathon.

Second anniversary, courthouse style

Today, instead of going down to the former site of the Industrial Canal levee breach in the Lower 9th Ward and joining the march of returned residents to Congo Square, I went to the courthouse to see how the courts of law marked the anniversary. What I found was business as usual. A few violent assault cases were on the docket, the most serious one was for second degree murder, but the majority of cases before the court today, as usual, had to do with drugs, either simple possession or possession with intent to distribute.

A group of people emerged from the courtroom I was about to enter, roughly a half dozen women, a lawyer or two, and a shackled man in an orange OPP jumpsuit. They were all smiles; something favorable just happened with the man in chains, I inferred.

Although most of the cases processed were for drugs, there were other cases. In one non-drug case in Section H, an evidentiary hearing was being held against a defendant accused of shooting into a car on July 29, 2005. One month before Katrina, Herman Johnson was arrested after shots were fired through the glass of a car window. The defense team for the accused seeked to quash the charges due to a lapse in evidentiary processes, which at first glance appeared to mean that the evidence -- photos and the car in question -- had been destroyed in the storm. Without the evidence, the defense argued, it couldn't be proven that Mr. Johnson fired out of the car, or if another man fired into it.

Later the defense explained that the evidence had not been destroyed by the storm, but the defense team had not been able to look at it, nor had the police apparently properly secured it after the storm. Despite this bit of confusion, the judge denied the defense's motion, and the trial was set for September 4.

After the trial was set, another defense attorney brought up a matter of evidence that the prosecution had only that day turned over to the defense, a copy of the 911 tape from when the crime was reported. The judge's patience was wearing thin, but it seems the tape being handed over to the defense so late in the game (the crime being two years and one month old) might justify an appeal, or so said the judge.

In other evidence, the testimony of an eyewitness named Katrina (no lie) was discussed, as well as the two police officers who spoke to Katrina after the crime. The judge made sure that the officers would be subpoenaed, she even had the prosecutors look through a roster of police officers to confirm their employment and which district they work in. With that, the day's business in Section H was closed.

Outside, the storm clouds rolled across the city. On the way back to my car, the sky opened up, and I was lucky to get in before the rain really started to fall.

Refreshing honesty from Gov. Blanco

The good thing about deciding to not run for re-election is Governor Blanco can say whatever she wants and be as direct as she wants about what actually happened before and after Katrina. She doesn't need to pull punches and her testimony at yesterday's trial in St. Bernard Parish of two owners of a nursing home that failed to evacuate showed her resolve. Before taking the stand she rebuffed a defense supena and accepted an invitation to testify for the procecution. Her testimony is one of the few times you will here honesty about Katrina's prep from a politician. She doesn't need to slant anything to get people to see things her way. She can be truly honest and was.

She said, "I wanted people to understand that this is potentially the biggest storm we will ever deal with, and I urged people over and over to protect themselves and their families by evacuating."

And, "We were relying on individual responsibility during Katrina."

Yes that was a mistake, unfortunately a few in positions of authority proved they couldn't be trusted to do the right thing and get those in their care to safety before the storm. And this could have been prevented. The only question now is, are the owners of the home going to be held responsible?

What's going on here? Why am I posting so much? Today, in honor of Katrina I am attempting another 24 hour 24 post blogathon.

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