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View Full Version : FEMA critic's T-shirt gets him a ticket.



piet11111
5th March 2006, 18:34
Ridiculing the
Federal Emergency Management Agency is high art in the Gulf Coast areas where Hurricane Katrina hit last year.

Many parade floats in New Orleans' Mardi Gras were decorated in themes that skewered the relief agency.

George Barisich, president of the United Commercial Fisherman's Association, has been selling anti-FEMA T-shirts since last fall, a reflection of his frustration with the federal government's response to the storm that left him homeless and unemployed.

But on Feb. 1, when he handed a shirt to a fellow Katrina victim as he was picking up canned goods at a charity's relief tent, Barisich found himself in trouble with the government.

He was cited by a group of
Homeland Security officials for selling a T-shirt on federal property - in this case, near a FEMA center in the parking lot of a Wal-Mart in Chalmette, La.

Barisich, 49, says he didn't sell the shirt, which said: "Flooded by Katrina! Forgotten by FEMA! What's Next, Mr. Bush?" He says he gave it away.

The government is sticking to its guns. "If we ignored this violation, you could have potentially 20 to 30 people standing out in front of the (FEMA) center, obstructing things," says Dean Boyd, a Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesman. "We've got a duty and a job under the law."

Boyd says the message on Barisich's shirt isn't the issue. Barisich says he intends to fight the $75 ticket in court.

Word of Barisich's plight is circulating around battered St. Bernard Parish, where 22,000 of the 26,000 homes were destroyed by flooding. Larry Ingargiola, the local emergency operations chief, calls it "totally ridiculous."

"I've tried to work with them," he says of the federal government. "But some of the rules they've got down here are unbelievable. For God's sake, everybody knows George. They're pushing the buttons a little bit too far."

Barisich says he was ticketed after six DHS officers gathered at his truck. Boyd says he can't confirm the number. Barisich says he was told he would be arrested if he did not take the ticket. "I said, 'Do you really want to arrest me? Am I the only one here who thinks this is asinine? You're harassing a person who just lost everything.' "

Barisich's extended family lost 14 of its 17 houses in St. Bernard. Three of his fishing boats vanished. Two other boats survived but can't get to sea because they're in a canal filled with debris and silt. And he doesn't have enough cash to rebuild his oyster beds.

He says he'll fight the ticket because "if you do something wrong, you pay for it. If you didn't, you don't ever say you did."

my personal opinion is that bush indeed left new orleans to die but government officials that are now handing out tickets ?
as if the survivors are not in deep shit already they are now handing out tickets.

also the netherlands have recieved american officials to study our own storm surge defenses.
so i am curious how serious they are with actually preventing another tragedy like katrina from ever happening ?

redstar2000
5th March 2006, 23:28
Originally posted by piet11111
So I am curious how serious they are with actually preventing another tragedy like Katrina from ever happening ?

As far as I can tell, they're not at all serious...at least as far as New Orleans is concerned.

The last story I heard in the local media is that "permanent repairs" to the levees are lost in the midst of bureaucratic infighting at the Federal level...so what's "protecting" New Orleans right now are the patchwork repairs to the levees made during September and October last year by the Army Corps of Engineers.

It's thought likely that such repairs cannot withstand even tropical storm force winds...so, if New Orleans gets hit again or even suffers a near miss by a hurricane this season, everything will pretty much go to shit again.

And this time, quite possibly "for good". :(

It's been publicly claimed that about 200,000 people have returned...but many of those are living in trailers in front of their wrecked homes. Trying to rebuild in most of the city is a nightmare of bureaucratic "red tape"...and the costs of building materials in southern Louisiana have gone up "through the roof".

My guess is that fewer than 100,000 of the actual displaced refugees have returned. Everyone else there is a contracted temporary repair worker (lots of them work for Halliburton :lol:). The remaining 400,000 refugees are scattered all over the U.S. -- many of them in Houston, Texas.

The technology exists to make New Orleans a safe place to live again...and has existed for many decades. The massive levees around the Mississippi River came through Hurricane Katrina unscathed...even when vessels were blown into them and, in one case, nearly over them.

It would cost $5-10 billion to "do it right"...make New Orleans able to withstand any hurricane and might take 5 years or more of construction work.

But it does not appear that there is any significant support for this project at the Federal level (either in congress or in the White House).

It's possible that a different administration might move forward on this issue in 2009...if New Orleans still exists.

But my impression is that "it's over" for the "big easy".

As for your intrepid "ultra-leftist", I'm now hoping to relocate somewhere in the Pacific northwest...close to the Canadian border. :P

Unless you're young and healthy (and resourceful under pressure!), the Gulf Coast is a good place to leave!

This year's hurricane season may be just as bad and possibly even worse than 2005. :o

http://www.websmileys.com/sm/cool/123.gif

which doctor
6th March 2006, 03:19
Originally posted by [email protected] 5 2006, 06:56 PM
As for your intrepid "ultra-leftist", I'm now hoping to relocate somewhere in the Pacific northwest...close to the Canadian border. :P
Ahh, it's nice to see you leaving the reactionary south and heading for the pacific northwest, I hear its a haven for anti-capitalists and all sorts of unordinary people.

Good luck

piet11111
6th March 2006, 13:53
good luck redstar2000 i hope things will be better for you there.

red team
7th March 2006, 07:29
It would cost $5-10 billion to "do it right"...make New Orleans able to withstand any hurricane and might take 5 years or more of construction work.


Just to keep things in perspective corporate annual bonuses, not regular salary, but bonuses amounted to: $21.5 Billion