This blog is a networking tool for congregations partnered with St. John Baptist Church in New Orleans. Through our affiliation with "Churches Supporting Churches," we are part of a national post-Katrina strategy to restart, reopen, rebuild, and renew African American churches in New Orleans in order for them to be agents for community development and to help recreate their community.
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Call to Support S. 1668, the Gulf Coast Housing Recovery Act of 2007
The Gulf Coast Housing Recovery Act of 2007 provides options for affordable housing and homeownership, including:
· Phased re-development of subsidized housing; vouchers for low-income families, the elderly and homeless; and low-income homeownership opportunities.
· Resources to cover most of the Road Home funding gap.
· Federal housing and insurance guidelines to spur the equitable development of blighted properties, and free up local mortgage capital for Gulf Coast residents.
The Senate bill “grants a right of return to previous public housing households” and “authorizes appropriations for the fair housing initiatives program.”
For a summary of the legislation, go to:
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:SN01668:@@@D&summ2=m&
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
NY Times article about red tape in New Orleans
NATIONAL / U.S. | November 6, 2007
Critics Cite Red Tape in Rebuilding of Louisiana
By LESLIE EATON
Local officials say the federal process used to pay for repairs to schools, sewers and police stations seems to value perfect paperwork over speedy resolutions.
Monday, November 5, 2007
Vi Burg (St. Andrews) reflections on the delegation to New Orleans
Rents are double or triple what they were before the storm. Many families are still shut out of their former homes in public housing. Homeowners are struggling with huge insurance costs. They face a gap between the cost of rebuilding and their insurance payouts and the Road Home grants. Several people I spoke with said the grant money they had been promised never materialized. As we toured the areas still affected by Katrina, it was very powerful. We came upon what looked like a field you might see here in Perkasie, only under closer inspection you could see the cement slabs where houses had been and families had lived. One sight that stayed with me was a set of steps behind which was a cement slab with concrete pillars that had supported a house. It looked like steps leading to a cemetery - the death of a family's dream.