Obama's New Orleans tour: 3 hrs, 45 min.: The Swamp
The Swamp
Chicago Tribune
Posted October 15, 2009 9:45 AM
The Swamp

by Mark Silva and updated

Former President George W. Bush started his day in California, the morning he made his first, albeit aerial inspection of the damage done by Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.

President Barack Obama will end his day in California, at a fundraiser for the Democratic Party in San Francisco, on this, the first day on which he visits New Orleans as president.

In the years between, New Orleans and the Gulf Coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi have struggled to recover from the hurricane that flooded the Big Easy and ripped apart the coast.

Obama plans to meet today with students at the Dr. Martin Luther King Charter School before holding a "town-hall'' styled meeting at the University of New Orleans "to hear directly from the people on the ground about Gulf Coast rebuilding, what is going well and what their concerns are,'' as the White House puts it.

From there, Obama will head to San Francisco for a Democratic National Committee fundraising dinner and reception at the Westin St. Francis Hotel.

If Bush caught flak for his Air Force One flyover of New Orleans in his first pass over the city, heading home to Washington from events in Southern California that day, Obama is catching some for the brevity of his stay in New Orleans today - he arrives there at 11:25 am Central Daylight Time and departs at 3:10 pm.

Bush arrived days later in the hurricane-stricken region, famously congratulating then- FEMA chief Michael Brown for a "heckuva job.'' Today, Brown is a successful consultant in Colorado, and the job of rebuilding the Gulf Coast, under new FEMA management, continues today, more than four years after the storm.

Obama campaigned in New Orleans, of course, but this trip is different. The president's visit follows those of several of his Cabinet members.

Bill Burton, a White House spokesman, said en route to New Orleans today that the president wants to be judged "not just by the words he said, but by the deeds he has done." The White House has worked to cut red tape for rebuilding, he said. In town, the president will see Mayor Ray Nagin, Sen. Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican who is an outspoken critic of the president.

See The L.A. Times' account of New Orleans today, on the day of Obama's first visit as president, at The Times and here in the Swamp:.

By Richard Fausset

NEW ORLEANS -- Barack Obama's first presidential appearance in New Orleans today is set to be short and tightly scripted, with a visit to a Lower 9th Ward charter school and a town hall meeting at the University of New Orleans.

If the president has a chance to look out the window of his limo, he will probably get a firsthand glimpse of the massive logistical headache he has inherited: More than four years after Hurricane Katrina, 91,000 homes remain blighted in the city and in two nearby parishes, according to August figures compiled by the Brookings Institution.

But it is evident that Obama has also inherited the political headache that post-storm recovery became for the previous administration.

The allegations haven't risen to Kanye West levels -- it was rapper West who famously alleged that former President George W. Bush didn't care about black people. But a handful of Republicans and others here have been grumbling loudly about what they see as scant executive attention to one of the worst disasters to befall a U.S. city.

Much of it focuses on the fact that Obama's only visit to New Orleans since his inauguration nine months ago will last about three hours and 45 minutes.

In an Oct. 8 letter to the president, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) said it would be "deeply disappointing" to Louisianians if Obama did not plan a more thorough tour of the region. In the local Times-Picayune newspaper, Tulane University historian Lawrence N. Powell said Obama "shouldn't come at all if he's coming for a glorified layover."

Even Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, the state's Democratic senator, fretted that the visit was too brief.

On New Orleans talk radio Wednesday, morning host Michael Castner of WRNO-FM (99.5) labeled a caller a "hypocrite" for bashing Bush's lack of a vigorous response to Katrina -- but not Obama's.

"It's OK with Bush, but it's not OK for the Anointed One," Castner said, in a sarcastic reference to Obama.

The Obama administration has pushed back hard against the charge of Katrina malaise, noting that Obama visited the storm-struck area five times before he was president.

Nick Shapiro, a White House spokesman, said that three Cabinet secretaries also would be traveling to New Orleans today for separate events: Janet Napolitano from Homeland Security; Shaun Donovan of Housing and Urban Development; and Arne Duncan from the Department of Education.

Since Obama's inauguration, officials noted, more than 20 senior administration officials have made 35 trips to Louisiana and the Mississippi Gulf Coast, and New Orleans has been awarded more than $1 billion in economic stimulus money, according to White House figures.

"We haven't just made promises," White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said at a Wednesday briefing. "We've delivered."

Those claims are backed up, somewhat predictably, by Democratic officials such as Julie Schwam Harris, director of intergovernmental relations for the city.

Harris particularly praised the Federal Emergency Management Agency under Obama for agreeing to city arguments that a number of public buildings were more than 50% damaged, and thus eligible for demolition and replacement with recovery funds.

But the Obama administration has also won high praise from Paul Rainwater, the state recovery chief appointed by Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal.

Rainwater, a former legislative director for Landrieu, has been head of the Louisiana Recovery Authority since January 2008. In an interview Wednesday, he agreed with Harris that a "new attitude" at Obama's FEMA was responsible for freeing up hundreds of millions of dollars in recovery money that had been stuck in bureaucratic limbo during the Bush years.

Jindal, Rainwater said, would be comfortable with his praise of the Democratic White House. Jindal himself in August praised FEMA's new practical approach.

"My Republican boss is very interested in results, and rebuilding and repairing the lives of people living in the community," Rainwater said.

The state, he said, will continue to lobby hard for a more ambitious recovery program than the Obama team has signed off on thus far.

He said the state could use hundreds of millions more for coastal protection programs, as well as an even sturdier flood protection system: The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' ongoing levee improvement work, when finished, will still not withstand a flood as forceful as Katrina -- though it will be an improvement from the past.

Obama is almost certain to find a welcoming audience on his first stop today, when he visits the Martin Luther King Jr. Charter School. Officials at the school -- like the neighborhood, almost all black -- said the election of the first African American president was one of the few bright spots in the troubled years since the storm.

"The president's never too late," said Lindsey Moore, an administrator.

Inside the bright, refurbished building Wednesday, Principal Doris Hicks talked not so much about Obama's recovery plan as she did about the $200,000 in stimulus money the school had received, and said that Obama had gone against the liberal grain to support the charter school movement.

Hicks had asked the school band to polish its version of "Hail to the Chief"; an earnest honking resounded through halls that bustled with rows of uniformed children. Down Caffin Avenue, the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church has restored its main building and has been holding services in it for more than a year. Fats Domino has restored his house on Caffin to appropriate rock 'n' roll gaudiness.

But on many other lots are battered houses and patches of urban prairie. Robert Wilson, 69, was standing outside of the ruined building he had lived in for years. He said he was still struggling with FEMA over payments for the place.

His nephew Terence Wilson, a 31-year-old carpet and floor cleaner, came by and said Obama hadn't done much for New Orleans. "I don't see anything significant," he said.

But the elder Wilson said Obama needed time to fix a problem like this.

"Four years," he said with a tired smile. "And after that four years, he's gonna need another four."

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Comments

Of course, obama will bash Bush while he spends only 3 hours and 45 minutes in N.O....obama probably has a basket ball game scheduled back in D.C. and can't spend the whole day to help the suffering like Bush did.

Paulo


His nephew Terence Wilson, a 31-year-old carpet and floor cleaner, came by and said Obama hadn't done much for New Orleans. "I don't see anything significant," he said.

Terence dont hold your breath he hasn't done anything for any of us, well none of us that work for a living


They build in a city well below sea level, and they still demand handouts from the American taxpayers. Since I don't live in teh Chocolate City, do I get free stuff too?


WOW! I thought NOLA would have miraculously recovered in these nine months of the Obama presidency. You mean to tell me it takes time and can't be done overnight? We all know that President Bush caused the flooding and left the mess for Obama, RIGHT? LOL.

A disaster happened that was initially compounded by local and state government, then dragged out even further by typical government red tape. Nothing new. Nothing changed regardless of how loud or how many times you want to proclaim HOPE and CHANGE.

Does this mean that President Obama doesn't care about black people since it is a short visit?


Paulo: Maybe you'd prefer if President Obama played a guitar or hosted a birthday party for Sen. McCain, both things Bush did, instead of visiting New Orleans?
'
Your "Obama Derangement Syndrome" is very strong today.


What is the point of this story, contrasting Obama's visit now with the Bush visit in the aftermath? This makes no sense.

What makes more sense is to highlight Obama saying, "well, i visited 5 times as a candidate! How dare people criticize me for not having time in 9 months to set foot in the place?"

Answer -- it's obvious. As a candidate he was promising. As president, he's showing he can't/won't deliver.


He hasn't fixed all of the problems that come from 30 years of neglect in his 9 months.

I guess that's reasonable....


It appears that Obama is still campaigning. Only this time he's doing it at the taxpayer's expense and not the political contributors expense.


One of the many powers that President Obama refused to accept, left behind by the previous administration, was to "part waters" and other hocus-pocus. In other, plainer words, he isn't the god, you Republican-Libertarians accuse him of being !! So, unless Bush&Cheney want to come off some of that Haliburton money, President Obama will do what he can for the disenfranchised citizens of New Orleans, victims of two disasters, Katrina and Bush&Cheney !!
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE AND WHOLE. NOW.


Lighten up on the BO would ya! It takes a lot of smchoozing to fill and refuel the masses with "hope". By extending a sympathetic ear, he allows them to voice their complaint(s), placates them with a lot of rhetorical BS, and then orders take out for some great Creole food. Sounds like a good way to waste an afternoon if you ask me. Where do I get a job like that? Oh yea, run for office!


Regardless of the politically slanted contents of the article. What bothers me most is that the story was posted at 9:45AM even though he wasn't scheduled to arrive @ 11:35AM. When the tribune says Obama Visits New Orleans please be correct. Also Tribune please don't put this blog on your normal reporting site. It really should be hidden away in the opinions section.


Obama should have gone to Mississippi to see how it's done. He needs to witness success, not failure.

Down in the Ninth in NOLA they are still waiting for Bush to show up with a hammer and bucket of nails to do it for them. LOL...what losers.


"Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, a Republican, has credited Obama's team with bringing a more practical and flexible approach to the reconstruction process. "There's a sense of momentum and a desire to get things done," he said in August.

When Obama became president, FEMA said there were more than 120 Louisiana reconstruction projects stalled in federal-state disputes. Since January, 76 of those have been resolved."



How's that hope and change workin' for ya?


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