[Mb-civic] Two Storms,
Ample Warning - William Raspberry - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Tue Sep 6 03:24:18 PDT 2005
Two Storms, Ample Warning
By William Raspberry
Tuesday, September 6, 2005; Page A25
Last week brought us one big story -- and one almost incomprehensibly
huge one. The huge story, of course, is the still-unfolding devastation
of Hurricane Katrina. The merely big one was a report out of the Census
Bureau that the number of Americans falling into poverty has increased
again, for the fourth straight year.
If the two stories have anything in common it is the willingness of
Americans -- the political majority, the politicians and the media -- to
ignore clear portents, right up to the point when disaster strikes.
Back in June 2004, Walter Maestri, chief of emergency management for
Jefferson Parish, La., was lamenting in the New Orleans Times-Picayune
that the president's budget was transferring money meant for reinforcing
the levees that were keeping the waters of Lake Pontchartrain out of
downtown New Orleans to homeland security and the war in Iraq.
The Institute for Public Accuracy found at least nine articles in the
Times-Picayune about the unavailability of federal money for hurricane
and flood control projects -- including a five-part 2002 series on the
threat of a major hurricane. It was titled "Washing Away."
That is to say, while no one could have predicted the ferocity of
Katrina -- a storm of unprecedented fury -- it was known that New
Orleans was in jeopardy from deteriorating levees.
And back in 1998, former senator Fred Harris and Alan Curtis, president
of the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation, the private-sector continuation
of the 1968 Kerner Commission, were warning of resurgent poverty.
"If anything, the numbers out of the Census Bureau underestimate the
problem of poverty in America," Curtis said in an interview last week.
"The bureau's definition of the poverty threshold is $19,300 a year for
a family of four. But a lot depends on where you happen to live. By one
scale I'm familiar with, that family of four -- if they lived in
Baltimore -- would cross the poverty threshold at $44,000 a year.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/05/AR2005090501382.html
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