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View Full Version : NEW ORLEANS: Violent Protest Over Housing Erupts



Roy McDowell
12-21-2007, 12:18 PM
Do you believe the city's response to protest was justified? Do you think the city should demolish several thousand homes to make way for mix use development without local input? It seems like some of the local residents are very skeptical about the new plan and are outraged in a city that just lost half it's population. I think the damaged homes should be replaced but the city should also bear in mind that these people need something affordable to come back home to. I can't begin to imagine how many homeless people Katrina has produced in the city.

NOLA Source: http://www.nola.com/ (includes video and photos of protest)

CNN Source: http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/12/20/neworleans.protests/index.html

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- Protests against a City Council plan to tear down low-income New Orleans housing turned ugly Thursday, with police using pepper spray and stun guns to clear a crowd angry they weren't allowed into City Hall for the vote.


Protesters scuffle with police Thursday outside City Hall in New Orleans, Louisiana.
1 of 2 The City Council voted unanimously to greenlight the demolition of the city's four largest public housing developments, saying they are too damaged by Hurricane Katrina to allow residents back into them.

But many in New Orleans, including former residents of the developments, say they fear the local and federal governments will not guarantee similarly affordable housing be built in their place -- calling the demolition an effort to move poor people out of the city.

At about 11 a.m., several protesters were dragged out of council chambers after scuffles broke out among people who packed the room, and members of the crowd booed council members and shouted insults at them. Watch protesters grapple with police »

About 30 minutes later, hundreds more protesters angry that they weren't allowed into the meeting began rattling an iron gate outside City Hall.

"They were pulling the gate open, trying to come in," said Superintendent Warren J. Riley of the New Orleans Police Department. "They were allowed to stand there and protest peacefully. Then they began to try and tear the gate down. They punched a couple of civil sheriffs in the face. They broke the gate open. So, some of those officers did use Mace to defend themselves and also to regain control of the gate and close the gate."

Riley said that after the council chamber's maximum capacity of 278 was reached, no one else was allowed inside.

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Video, shot by New Orleans television station WDSU, shows at least one law enforcement officer shooting a liquid spray at the crowd as police struggled with protesters for control of the gate.

Moments later, a woman could be seen crying and screaming on the ground before several other protesters picked her up and carried her away.

Peter O'Connell, who described himself as a student living in New Orleans, told the station he was hit by pepper spray and narrowly avoided being shocked by a police stun gun, which hit his jacket but not his body.

"We were just trying to gain access to the City Council meeting, which we all feel and know that we have a right to attend," he said. "We were denied access and, in the process, brutalized by the police."

Riley said the use of force was justified.

"It was clear that there were people there that had one goal in mind and that was to be disruptive, be disobedient and in some cases to actually start a physical confrontation," he said.

The department said 15 people were arrested. Most were charged with disturbing the peace, and all had been released from jail by Thursday evening, police said. Authorities said there were no serious injuries.

After the vote, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin commended the council for the decision.

"Could the federal government have done better? Sure. Could [federal housing officials] have opened more units quicker? Sure," he said. "But we are where we are today, and today, we had a unified decision to move forward with accountability, honoring our overriding premise that every citizen has a right to return to the city."

The city has promised to replace the developments with mixed-use family housing that will provide plenty of low-income units.

Some at Thursday's meeting said that saving the existing developments would not have been a favor to the city's poor.


Howard Robertson, a retired major with New Orleans police, said the units already were in bad shape before Katrina -- with many of them boarded up and vacant havens for crack dealers.

"Since the storm, they are even in worse condition -- windows are broken, more than a fourth of all the buildings are boarded up where you can't even go in," he said. "All the city's trying to do is actually improve the living conditions." E-mail to a friend

All About New Orleans • U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

ginsan2
12-22-2007, 10:26 PM
For decades, generations, NO has been such a welfare state. And that just cannot continue. The unthinkable happened: the city was nearly destroyed. Now, in order to get back on its feet, New Orleans simply cannot support the generations of poor that have lived in abysmal conditions. To that end, yes, I support the move to get rid of public housing. That isn't to say that they shouldn't have some sort of "now that you're homeless" plan in place.

Reverberation
12-22-2007, 10:58 PM
I agree. Also, I'm not surprised by this behavior. The poor in New Orleans are particularly prone to violence. When they were stuck at the Superdome there were incidences of assault and rape.
Those HANO projects were already crime ridden and teeming with gangs. Now they have a good excuse to fix the problem.

Matty
12-23-2007, 07:02 AM
But you can't so much blame them considering whath happened during, right after, and recently in regards to the flooding. They've been left "hung out to dry" in so many ways it's not even funny. It's enough to drive even the most mild mannered person to the extremes of anger and frustration.

alon504
12-26-2007, 04:02 AM
I'm just glad the projects are being torn down. It will all work out in the end. But, they sure do have loud voices considering that 70% of homes flooded and/or destroyed in Katrina in the New Orleans area were not inhabited by black individuals, but, were inhabited by whites and about 2% was spanish or vietnamese. Another thing that many people don't realize is that the "Lower Ninth Ward," represents 1/90 of the city. It was leveled, and 80% of the city did flood, but, you would think that the lower ninth ward was much larger considering the publicity. But, it was pretty much destroyed. But, it is really not a large area, at all.

Peanut
12-26-2007, 06:26 AM
well most of the violence happened in front of city hall because people wanted to go into the building to protest the demolishion, problem is the building was at max capacity. The police told them they couldnt go into the building, they tried to force them selfs into the building and the cops had to react.

I dont know much about the demolishion of the buildings, it seems like a shitty situation for everyone, although i think its a good idea for a long term solution though.

alon504
12-26-2007, 01:48 PM
well most of the violence happened in front of city hall because people wanted to go into the building to protest the demolishion, problem is the building was at max capacity. The police told them they couldnt go into the building, they tried to force them selfs into the building and the cops had to react.

I dont know much about the demolishion of the buildings, it seems like a shitty situation for everyone, although i think its a good idea for a long term solution though.

They are covered from top to bottom with toxic mold from the flood. It's cheaper to tear them down and build new--literally. Besides, they can protest as much as they want, but, you really don't have much say so over something that isn't yours. It is a privilege for those people to live in the projects--not a right. The government owns public housing, not the residents. The government can do whatever it chooses.

Reverberation
12-27-2007, 09:47 AM
They are covered from top to bottom with toxic mold from the flood. It's cheaper to tear them down and build new--literally. Besides, they can protest as much as they want, but, you really don't have much say so over something that isn't yours. It is a privilege for those people to live in the projects--not a right. The government owns public housing, not the residents. The government can do whatever it chooses.

I agree with that 100%

Roy McDowell
12-27-2007, 09:48 PM
I kind of feel sorry for some of the folks not having a place to go and I can understand their fustration but in the same sense those toxic homes are a hazard and will need to go. Historically, New Orleans has proven to survive other major disasters so it should see a brighter future ahead. I say bring on new development.



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