[StBernard] LRA Board Member's Op-Ed on Road Home Published Today by New Orleans Newpaper

Westley Annis westley at da-parish.com
Sat Aug 11 23:15:17 EDT 2007


A dry cleaners that delivers! Thats what St Bernard Parish needs; on Judge
Perez by the new bank and the future Murphy Administrative Office.

Suzanne

-----Original Message-----
LRA Board Member's Op-Ed on Road Home Published
Today by New Orleans Newpaper



Louisiana Continues Making the Case for Equity


NEW ORLEANS (August 10, 2007)- Today the New Orleans Times Picayune
published an
op-ed submitted by Walter Leger, Chair of the Louisiana Recovery Authority's

Housing and Redevelopment Task Force. The op-ed, which highlights the
state's
efforts to secure equitable funding for Louisiana and address the projected
Road
Home budget shortfall, is attached below in its entirety.


POINT OF VIEW: Asking for help to fill the Road Home gap
Friday, August 10, 2007
New Orleans Times Picayune
Walter Leger

After two long years, I recently filed my Road Home application. While the
process of applying was relatively simple -- compared to finding a dry
cleaner
in St. Bernard these days -- it was a difficult step to take.

In the wake of the projected budget shortfall, there is great anxiety about
the
ability of this program to meet the needs of our homeowners. As Chair of the

Louisiana Recovery Authority's Housing Task Force, I have been an outspoken
critic and advocate for the program, and I've often said that I would like
to be
the very last of an estimated 140,000 eligible homeowners to receive a Road
Home
grant. While some have suggested this day will never come, I can assure you
that
we will continue fighting for Louisiana until it does.

Federal investments in the Gulf Coast's recovery have been generous, yet
appropriations still have not come close to the magnitude of our damages or
to
the commitment President Bush pledged in Jackson Square shortly after
Katrina.
Furthermore, the funds that have been appropriated have been distributed
inequitably among states based on damages.

After Katrina and Rita, the 109th Congress waited until Christmas to fund a
recovery package for the Gulf Coast , and then they capped Louisiana 's
share of
the funding at 54 percent despite the hard fact that we suffered nearly 80
percent of all the housing damage. We had more than four times the damage of

Mississippi , yet we've received less than twice the amount of funding.

If Louisiana had received the $22 billion that is proportional to the amount

Mississippi received more than 18 months ago, the status of our recovery
would
be very different. More affordable rental units would be on-line. More small

businesses re-opened. More homes elevated. More infrastructure projects
underway. And we would not be discussing a shortfall in the Road Home
program.

And while much has been said about the pace of the Road Home program as
compared
to that of our neighboring state, when you compare apples to apples, the
facts
speak for themselves.

As of Aug. 1, Mississippi has closed 13,978 grants. Louisiana has closed
39,628.
They have distributed just over $1 billion. We have paid out $2.8 billion to

Louisiana homeowners.

Taking into account the fact that Louisiana didn't receive sufficient
funding to
get this program off the ground until June 2006 -- while Mississippi
received
full funding in December 2005 -- it is clear that we have strongly and
consistently out-paced our neighbors in the Magnolia State.

Louisiana also chose to assist homeowners regardless of their geographic
location or the cause of uninsured hurricane damage. We are proud of this
decision, as implementing a "phased" program identical to Mississippi's
would
have left many of our homeowners inside the floodplain -- in Lakeview,
Gentilly,
eastern New Orleans, the Lower 9th Ward and St. Bernard -- standing at the
back
of the line. As of Aug. 1, more than 7,400 homeowners inside Mississippi's
flood
plain had applied for aid. Fewer than 400 had received grants.

Despite this progress, we all know the shortcomings of the Road Home, and
that's
why we fight to improve the quality and pace of the program every day.


>From the beginning, our mission has been to rebuild South Louisiana in the

aftermath of two back-to-back storms and the catastrophic flooding that was
caused by the failure of our federal levee systems. And in order to do this
we
must ensure that every homeowner who is eligible receives his or her full
grant
award as quickly as possible.

While current budget projections for the Road Home estimate a shortfall of
roughly $4.3 billion, we remain committed to this goal.

Louisiana has invested $1 billion of our own state funds to address the
shortfall. We're also working with congressional leaders to cut through
significant federal red tape that has kept us from being able to effectively

utilize nearly $1.2 billion in hazard mitigation funds for the Road Home.
And we
are asking for help from Washington to secure the funds necessary to fill
the
remaining gap.

Given the inequitable distribution of funds thus far, we believe this
request is
clearly warranted.

On the same day he announced the administration's support for the $4.2
billion
appropriation for Louisiana, Gulf Coast Recovery Coordinator Don Powell
testified before Congress saying, "if after spending all the allocated
federal
funds there are remaining unmet needs, we will continue to work with
Congress to
help ensure that additional resources are available and needs are met."

This time has come.

Louisiana is asking for nothing more and nothing less than Washington has
provided to our neighbors, just equitable funding that will enable us to
restore
our homes and rebuild our devastated communities.



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