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Muck and slime ...

The flood water in New Orleans has receded revealing all kinds of muck and slime. I'm talking about some members of our esteemed United States Congress who are using Katrina relief and recovery as an opportunity to pass all kinds of legislation that would not see the light of day in ordinary circumstances under the guise of "helping people." The New York Times really got it right in an editorial today when they wrote:
Congress has used Katrina as cover for ideas that could never stand on their own and for a remarkably brazen raid on the public treasury and environmental protections.

Take, for example, Richard Pombo, the chairman of the House Resources Committee, who is proposing to open up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling, allow states to opt out of a longstanding moratorium on offshore drilling, and suspend judicial and administrative reviews of federal decisions to open public lands for oil and gas leasing. This is the same Richard Pombo who proposed last week - joking, he said - to sell off a few lesser-known national parks if money from the Arctic refuge was not forthcoming.

Then there is Joe Barton, the Texas Republican who, ostensibly to increase fuel supplies, rammed a bill through the House energy committee that would ease clean air restrictions on refineries and drive a final nail in the coffin of New Source Review, a useful law the administration has been trying to kill for years. The law requires older industrial facilities to install modern pollution controls, and Mr. Barton's bill would remove not only refineries but hundreds of coal-fired power plants from its reach.

Similar mischief is afoot in the Senate, where James Inhofe, the ferociously anti-regulatory Oklahoma Republican who runs the environment committee, would suspend for up to 18 months any environmental law that in his view stands in the way of post-hurricane reconstruction.

The most egregious example of self-dealing comes from the Louisiana delegation. Not content with the $62.3 billion Congress has already appropriated for emergency relief, the state's representatives have asked for $250 billion more in federal reconstruction funds, equal to more than $50,000 per Louisiana resident.

This seems a bit much, especially since the proposal also calls for suspending important nvironmental reviews and funneling huge sums to the Army Corps of Engineers for projects that seem to have more to do with the delegation's political ambitions than with flood control and the intelligent restoration of the Louisiana Delta."
With our Eye on the Gulf campaign we'll be here to remind certain members of Congress that if they try to exploit this tragedy for their own selfish agenda, we're watching. And they will be exposed. And they will be held accountable - especially in the polls next November.


Tags: Eye on the Gulf (all tags)


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Exploiting Katrina: Help us Stop the Graft and Gre

It seems to me there needs to be a database which records how our representatives and senators vote on legislation.  Each piece of legislation could be rated in different categories of interest.  It would then be a simple matter to rank each member of congress by category.  A "top ten" list of the most irresponsible legislators in each category could be published.  Maybe this already exists?

by Mike911 on Tue Oct 04, 2005 at 02:14:13 PM EST


Exploiting Katrina

I have to agree with many of your statements.

Here in Baton Rouge, we are seeing the problems related to hurricanes Katrina and Rita first-hand, from the botched evacuation for Katrina, to the chaos of search and rescue, to the housing of an estimated 80,000 to 1 million evacuees, relief workers and military in our area alone.

At one point, it was estimated that the population of our area doubled -- and that was before Rita. The numbers in the Red Cross shelters were such a small percentage of the total as rental properties (hotels, motels, apartments, houses, RV parks), homes of family or friends, houses of worship, even dorm rooms, were called into play to provide homes for the evacuees. Not to mention the many parking lots and non RV parks utilized as temporary sites for RVs.

Having attended a number of meetings with pro-active evacuees, I find a consensus of opinion expressing disapproval on several issues, such as the (1) importation of outside firms and labor for relief efforts and rebuilding; (2) suspension of the Davis-Bacon (prevailing wage) Act allowing companies to maximize their profits by paying their employees less than a living wage; (3) by-passing of bid laws in awarding contracts; (4) evacuees being left out of the decision making processes; (5) policies to prevent profiteering;(6) confusion concerning scheduled elections for the areas that have been evacuated; (7) and, perhaps, the most important issue -- placing blame instead of everyone working together toward resolving the problems for now and the future.

On the other hand, they are grateful for everything that has been done. The shelters, even with their problems, are better than sleeping on the street. FEMA and the Red Cross are appreciated for their efforts although the problem was/is of a magnitude for which they were simply not prepared. The outpouring of aid from the US Congress and individual and group efforts across the nation has helped immensely.

The local nonprofits are doing a stellar job but are seeing their donations decline as people are primarily giving money to the better known and more publicized national groups.

Many charitable fundraisers for these local nonprofits have been cancelled due to either the hurricanes themself or the aftermath.

Common Cause, especially Common Cause Louisiana is needed now more than ever to protect the citizens of Louisiana from profiteering, erosion of civil rights and governmental missteps.

by dotwirth on Wed Oct 05, 2005 at 11:45:48 AM EST


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