STATE FARM'S HEAD ON A PLATTER
What Gulf Coast Congressman Gene Taylor wanted the Easter Bunny to bring him.
South Mississippi Living 4/07

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Portrait of a troubled teen

Depression after Katrina led to book about recovery
By MEAGHAN CHAPMAN
mchapman@sunherald.com

DREW TARTER/SUN HERALD

Haley Moon, a Biloxi native and recent graduate of St. John High School, has written a book about her Katrina experiences.

BILOXI -Former homecoming queen and aspiring dancer Haley Moon may not look like the portrait of a troubled teenager, but things aren't always what they seem.

The 18-year-old St. John graduate has used her post-Hurricane Katrina experience to come to terms with a near eating disorder and a severe bout of depression to write a self-published book, "Katrina Tears," and she wants teenagers to know even the darkest of times can't take away their dreams.

Moon's struggle began after Katrina when she returned to her Holly Hills subdivision home in Biloxi to find her life in shambles, her home soaked in 5 feet of flood water, her belongings washed away, and the beloved dance studio, where she spent countless hours perfecting her dance moves, damaged and closed.

It "was one of the worst shocks... I was just crushed, I didn't think I would be able to dance again," she said.

Then the panic attacks began.

On some nights, Moon said, she stayed up and cried until 3 a.m., at her lowest point having suicidal thoughts, and wondering what was wrong with her.

She sought help from a psychologist and learned she suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

"I was so burnt out on trying to be perfect," she said. "I just wanted to be me."

Meanwhile, an English assignment in which seniors were urged to push themselves into fulfilling a personal-growth experience led some students to choose to attain scuba-diving certification or a pilot's license. Moon used a notebook filled with her thoughts during her loneliest moments to write "Katrina Tears."

She said she believes it is important that other teenagers going through difficult times know they are not alone, although they may feel isolated.

Moon worked with medical professionals to gather information on post-Katrina stress and coping strategies to include in her book. One of her advisers was Dr. William Gasparrini, clinical psychologist of the Applied Psychology Center.

"A lot of the ideas (in the book) involve seeking help when it's needed and talking about feelings," said Gasparrini, "and those are always good ideas."

Moon's book is selling well locally, having made the Top 10 Local Bestsellers list last week at Barnes & Noble in the CrossRoads Shopping Center in Gulfport, and she is currently seeking grants to publish more books to distribute to states affected by Hurricane Katrina.

Now she is on her way to fulfilling her lifelong dream of dancing on Broadway. She is headed to New York this fall to attend Barnard College on a full scholarship, and she hopes to major in dance and biochemistry.

"I'm so strong now, and I have such a sense of self," she said. "I feel prepared for almost anything."


Highlights from 'Katrina Tears' Post traumatic stress disorder is an anxiety disorder in which an adolescent has been exposed to a traumatic event. A traumatic event is an experience that is emotionally painful, shocking or distressing, where the adolescent's response involved intense fear, horror or helplessness. Examples of traumatic events among adolescents:
Natural disasters

Date rape

Terrorism

Child abuse

Death of loved one

PTSD symptoms may include:

Poor concentration

Sleep disturbances, nightmares

Difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep

Irritability

Little interest in usual activities

Thoughts of having a short future

Headaches

Stomachaches

Dizziness

Treatment of PTSD: Cognitive behavioral therapy

The adolescent is taught ways to overcome depression or anxiety and cope with reminders of his or her traumatic events.

"I was so burnt out on trying to be perfect.

I just wanted to be me."
- Haley Moon

Sun Herald originally published this article on August 11, 2007.

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FEMA takes back $4.5M Mspi wanted for mental health facilities

Posted on Sat, Aug. 11, 2007
The Associated Press


GULFPORT, Miss. -- The government has taken back $4.5 million in funding left over from an expired counseling program even though Mississippi coast officials sought the funds for local public mental health facilities.

FEMA spokesman Eugene Brezany said government officials interpret a rule in the Stafford Act, which governs FEMA's response to disasters, as meaning that they will not provide or assist with mental health treatment in any way for disaster victims.

Some Mississippi health officials said FEMA had devised a post-disaster response to mental health issues that is less than satisfactory. They said while it reaches out to disaster victims, FEMA does not provide any real help because its refusal to provide treatment.

The government's Project Recovery program operated mainly as a referral service which connected almost 400,000 people with doctors and facilities where they could get help. FEMA has refused to assist the institutions that those people were referred to and it has not explained why.

Ed LeGrand, executive director of the Mississippi Department of Mental Health, which administered Project Recovery and led the effort to keep the leftover $4.5 million in the state, said FEMA's initial response was more like emergency outreach work than actual counseling.

The need, however, for emergency outreach work ran out earlier this year, LeGrand said, so they did not spend the more than $19 million allocated for it in the hope that the funds could be used by MDMH in a way that would have a better impact.

"We could've gone ahead and extended Project Recovery," LeGrand said. "I wanted it to be redirected where it would have a very purposeful and productive use."

Jeff Bennett, director of the Gulf Coast Mental Health Center, a public treatment facility covering all of Harrison and Hancock counties, said he has struggled with a lack of adequate funding to keep staff and provide assistance to the uninsured and underinsured as people with Katrina-related issues continue to flood his office. Many of those people were referred to him by Project Recovery workers, he said.

Kris Jones, director of disaster preparedness and recovery for MDMH, said Project Recovery was a system largely based on a post-Sept. 11 model.

However, unlike Hurricane Katrina, Sept. 11 did not decimate the local mental health system, Jones said, and at the time they were even able to get away with providing cognitive behavioral therapy to victims, unlike the post-Katrina Gulf Coast.

LeGrand said he was concerned FEMA's rigid interpretation would affect future disaster recovery programs

"I did want to set the stage where if there was a significant disaster elsewhere then maybe the feds would be a little more liberal in how they allow the states use those (mental health) funds in the future," LeGrand said.


© 2007 Sun Herald. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.sunherald.com

Sun Herald published original article on August 11, 2007.

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Friday, August 17, 2007

The Best of A.M. in the Morning! August 13-17

by Ana Maria

Katrina-Land: A Lesson in Crossing the Political Divide 8.13.07
Katrina Town Hall Reflected Selflessness of Gulf Coast 8.14.07
FEMA, how would you like your eggs? 8.15.07
Young Mother in FEMA Trailer Yearns for Home 8.16.07
Growing Up After Camille, Reflections on Katrina 8.17.07


Broadening Katrina’s Lens: A Five-Part Series
Part 1: Broadening Katrina's Lens
Part 2: Recovery’s Two Major Impediments: $$$ and the "F" word
Part 3: The "F" Word: FEMA
Part 4: Katrina’s Bigger Picture
Part 5: Katrina’s Karmic Payback: Insurance Reform

Growing Up After Camille, Reflections on Katrina
8.17.07

Thirty-eight years ago today Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I was but a child of ten. Our family home had been built on the highest land in Hancock County. We slept in the hall. One of the families in the neighborhood stayed with us bringing their grandkids with them. Great! More people to play with my younger brother and me.

I remember the eye of Hurricane Camille when the storm got deadly silent, truly the calm before the hurricane kicked up all over again but from the opposite direction. Someone opened the door and one of my older brothers had a rope around his waist as he ventured outside to check on the family dog in the shed. Peering out the door, all I could see were trees that Camille had knocked down making the outside appear as though we were inside Sherwood Forest. Read More......


Young Mother in FEMA Trailer Yearns for Home
8.16.07

Through stinging, burning eyes I listened as WLOX-TV 13 filmed a conversation between a young single mother of two living in a FEMA trailer and John Eaves, Mississippi’s Democratic Gubernatorial Nominee. Rare is the interview with FEMA residents. Read More . . . .


FEMA, how would you like your eggs?
8.15.07

Clearly the first meaning for the initials A.M. in my blog’s name, A.M. in the meaning is my own name—Ana Maria. However, the other meaning of AM is Adult Maturity.

"What being an adult means is knowing what you have to do and doing it, even though you may not feel like doing it."

Robert T. Kiyosaki
Rich Dad’s Cashflow Quadrant

Since publishing my first blog entry on May 1st of this year—Like Walking Through Glue—I have learned that Katrina was a great equalizer bringing out the real character in plenty of folks, bringing out shared core values, and waking up people—myself included—in new ways. Read More . . . .


Katrina Town Hall Reflected Selflessness of Gulf Coast
8.14.07

With standing room only in the large parish hall on top of a massive bluff overlooking the Bay which feeds into the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Coast Congressman Gene Taylor (D-MS) hosted the second town hall meeting with a delegation of plenty of congressional leadership from across the country.

From as far west as California to the northeast of New Hampshire, Democratic Congressional representatives gave up time with their families and their constituents to revisit the Katrina-ravaged area. We were honored to have the high-ranking leadership of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Democratic Majority Whip Jim Clyburn from South Carolina. Read More . . . .


Katrina-Land: A Lesson in Crossing the Political Divide
8.13.07

Today is the day I’ve been looking forward to for quite sometime. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) leads a delegation to New Orleans and over to the Mississippi Gulf Coast to see the state of post-Katrina living. Last year I was living in San Jose, Calif., which is about an hour’s south of San Francisco—the district that Pelosi represents. I wasn’t here for Katrina, though plenty of my family members were. I remember when I read that Pelosi had led a delegation of Democrats to this area last year. I was thrilled! Read More . . . .

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Growing Up After Camille, Reflections on Katrina

by Ana Maria


Thirty-eight years ago today Hurricane Camille hit the Mississippi Gulf Coast. I was but a child of ten. Our family home had been built on the highest land in Hancock County. We slept in the hall. One of the families in the neighborhood stayed with us bringing their grandkids with them. Great! More people to play with my younger brother and me.

I remember the eye of Hurricane Camille when the storm got deadly silent, truly the calm before the hurricane kicked up all over again but from the opposite direction. Someone opened the door and one of my older brothers had a rope around his waist as he ventured outside to check on the family dog in the shed. Peering out the door, all I could see were trees that Camille had knocked down making the outside appear as though we were inside Sherwood Forest.

My family and our neighbors were lucky. No real lasting damage. Just down the road a mile or so, families took in nine feet of water in their homes. We had a bit of roof damage and nearly every tree in our yard, save three, had been knocked down. But we were safe, had a home, and plenty of running water. At the time, my family’s water came from a neighboring well, which the hurricane did not damage. My family opened up our home to others not so fortunate. People lined up to take cold showers.

To this day, 38 years after that historic hurricane, memories of sounds quickly bring me back to that time. Wherever I hear a chainsaw, I immediately recall the buzzing of saws clearing roads after Camille. The National Guard were Johnny on the spot helping folks with all the heavy post-disaster relief efforts. The Red Cross leveraged the organizing and management skills of local leaders like my own mother who coordinated many of the efforts to help families in the wake of Camille’s aftermath.

I remember each of these things with a sort of childlike feeling of being cared for, of community coming together, of an American government and institutions focused on helping its own people with what matters most—family, community, safety.

My younger brother and I were sent to stay with one of many relatives living in New Orleans, which Camille hadn’t hit. As a kid, I wasn’t particularly happy about leaving home, but I adored all of my relatives so the separation became more than tolerable for a kid who had just experienced something quite scary.

Reflections on Katrina’s Children
What will Katrina’s children recall once they grow up into adults? The National Guard that should have been helping with Katrina’s aftermath was not available to help out with the cleanup. George W. Bush had wrongly started a war with a country in which we are now mired in a Vietnam-like war. Bush pushed our weekend warriors into 24/7 military service in Iraq . Guess Bush is grateful that Nixon didn’t put the National Guard in Vietnam. If Nixon had, Bush would have had to find other ways to escape serving his country.

So when the National Guard should have been here in the U.S. helping in Katrina’s aftermath—just as they had been in Camille’s aftermath, they were in Iraq in the only war Bush has ever been remotely interested in some involvement—if only for the photo ops.

Katrina’s kids won’t have the fond memories of the National Guard that I acquired after Camille.

Perhaps today’s children will remember the kind faces of thousands of volunteers and family members across the country that helped. But when destruction remains everywhere some two years after the storm, it may not be enough to heal the sense of abandonment and immense hardship imposed by a White House that has failed miserably to take care of its responsibilities to its people.

Yesterday, I wrote about a young mother and her two children living in an itty, bitty, teeny tin formaldehyde-filled FEMA trailer in my hometown. Her little boy was jumping everywhere as 3-year olds are want to do. He has no playground or yard or park to play in. The trailer is tinier than any one-bedroom apartment I’ve ever lived in. Maybe 300 square feet.

After school had let out, older kids entered the trailer park laughing and giggling making plans to get together after touching base with their families. Many seemed about ten years old or so—the age I had been when Camille hit the town. I wonder what their view of government will be? How will the destruction of all that they had once known, neighborhoods and communities that continue to struggle to come back, how will that impact these kids?

Back on that fateful Sunday of August 17, 1969, my family and I attended Mass as we did every Sunday. Our congregation prayed for protection from the hurricane headed our way. Today, on Camille’s 38th anniversary, I pray for continued strength to envision life full of vibrancy . . . and normalcy.

Yesterday, I drove through Diamondhead, Miss., which is literally on the northern side of I-10, about 15 miles north of my hometown of Bay St. Louis, Miss. It, too, had had much of Katrina’s destruction. One cousin’s home was completely demolished. But not all of the city received Katrina's wrath.

As I wound through the streets,
these neighborhoods looked . . . normal. I kept saying out loud was how lovely it is to remember what life is like with houses that are well-kept, gardens manicured, lawns cut. I drove for quite a while remembering life before I arrived here in March. For me, it was a breath of fresh air. I hadn’t realized how much I had already acclimated to seeing the destruction that is so prevalent but a few miles down the road.

These scenes are how life looked pre-Katrina along the Gulf Coast and to the west of us in the greater New Orleans area then over to the east over to Alabama. Once again, I began to yearn.

I yearn for the ease of the life that I had before coming home. I yearn for it for myself. I yearn for it for my family. I yearn for it for my friends and neighbors. For here on the Mississippi Gulf Coast all the way east to Bayou Le Batre, Alabama, and west throughout the levee flooded areas of New Orleans and its surrounding cities.

And, the children like Keisha’s little boy. I yearn that he, his sister, and his mother will soon be surrounded by the beauty of their own rooms in their own home in a neighborhood where kids go outside to play and get dirty until their mom calls them inside for lunch or supper or to do their chores or whathaveyou. That’s what my mom did when I was a kid growing up here after Camille. Katrina kids deserve the same normalcy.
___________________

Broadening Katrina’s Lens: A Five-Part Series
Part 1: Broadening Katrina's Lens
Part 2: Recovery’s Two Major Impediments: $$$ and the "F" word
Part 3: The "F" Word: FEMA
Part 4: Katrina’s Bigger Picture
Part 5: Katrina’s Karmic Payback: Insurance Reform
___________________________________________

Read, bookmark, subscribe to A.M. in the Morning! . . . . . . dispatches from Katrina's ground zero with Ana Maria,a distinctly progressive political voice.
___________________________________________

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Thursday, August 16, 2007

Young Mother in FEMA Trailer Yearns for Home

by Ana Maria

Through stinging, burning eyes I listened as WLOX-TV 13 filmed a conversation between a young single mother of two living in a FEMA trailer and John Eaves, Mississippi’s Democratic Gubernatorial Nominee. Rare is the interview with FEMA residents.

The Bush Administration had created a FEMA policy that deliberately prevented press and FEMA residents from talking with each other. Bush’s policy violated our First Amendment Freedom of the Press that our nation’s founders put into our U.S. Constitution.

A year ago, FEMA representative James Stark spoke with The Advocate, the Baton Rouge, Louisiana, paper that had published the article on Bush's FEMA tearing up our Constitutional right to a free press. Stark said, “we shouldn't be trying to muzzle the press.” No joke. This isn’t communist Russia. For clarification, this is the United States of America. Got it?! We value freedom even if the occupants of the White House do not.

Keisha is in her late 20s and a single mother of a daughter and son. Katrina destroyed her car and her rental home. Because childcare has been non-existent since the storm, she has been unable to go to work. Her youngest will go to pre-school later this month. On his first day of school, Keisha will start her new job at Popeyes Fried Chicken fast food restaurant. [The best onion rings on the planet, I’m telling ya.] Popeyes is a long way from Keisha's formaldehyde-filled trailer to walk in the scorching heat and humidity that is typical for August and September here in Bay St. Louis, Miss.

When we drove up to the FEMA park, I was absolutely astonished. I had driven by the place a bazillion times since I arrived here in my hometown to visit my family in March. The trailer park sits behind a large white fence, which hides it from view, and hide it well the fence did. I still cannot believe that what must have been at least a hundred FEMA trailers on gravel grounds completely unsuitable for children to play safely or animals to run about or disabled individuals to maneuver around sits behind a fence I’ve seen plenty but never saw through. It’s blocked from view from the street.

We must have been in Keisha’s trailer for a good 20-30 minutes. My eyes burned for hours on end. Keisha said that she has gone to the emergency room in the hospital across the street four times for depression and migraines. All she years for are the same things all of us in the Katrina-ravaged region want: to take care of family, to go home, to return to pre-Katrina life.

John Eaves listened intently to the young woman as she eagerly told her story in hopes that somehow she can obtain relief from the extremely small FEMA trailer. Whether talking with Keisha or the other trailer residents, he mentioned several things that resonated with them and with me.

Referring to them as money changers, Eaves talked of Mississippians being taken advantaged of by Big Insurance, Big Oil, and Big Pharmacy. Clearly a biblical reference which resonates well with many Mississippians, money changers is as good a phrase to use to describe those big industries that revere money over being good corporate citizens and doing right while making a living.

Before the storm, Keisha and her two kids lived with her mother in a two-bedroom home. After Katrina destroyed the house, the owner replaced it with a one-bedroom home. Her mother moved back in, but there is no room for Keisha and her two kids. It’s only a one bedroom place.

How brave this young woman is to talk to total strangers on camera. Fiercely determined to do the best she can for her own children, would that those sitting in the White House shared her sense of valuing children and family.

What will she and her family do come January when Bush’s FEMA kicks them out?

Affordable housing remains unavailable. It’s not that there is an abundance of housing, and it is simply financially unaffordable. There simply isn’t a lot of housing, and what is available is out of financial reach.

One after another story—Keisha’s included—talks of rents doubling since Katrina. Where in these United States can families afford easily to squeeze doubling of their rent or mortgage payments into their household budgets? Whether Manhattan or Montana, the Bay Area of San Francisco or Bay St. Louis, Miss., doubling raw housing costs is no walk in the park. Like big oil at the gas pumps, sure does look like price gouging.

What Keisha and other FEMA trailer residents know as well as every other resident in the Katrina region is that money is the single resource that is scarce around these parts. Making the insurance companies pay up on their wind policies would quickly change the terrain around here.

Houses and apartment complexes would begin to be rebuilt. Businesses and houses of worship would begin construction. Government buildings like jails and schools would break ground.

Jobs would be plentiful. With those jobs would be benefits to help maintain the health of these families.

Forcing the federal government to actually spend the appropriated money here on the ground—Waveland or Pass Christian or Bay St. Louis, Miss., or Slidell or New Orleans, Louisiana—will dramatically alter life in a most positive direction.

And with that, the weariness that is in everyone’s eyes, the heaviness weighing on the collective minds and hearts of those struggling—which includes everyone, and the depression hidden behind our region’s well-known smiling and gracious hospitality will begin to disappear.

As the money changes hands from the federal bureaucrats to the local folks here on the ground and from the insurance companies coffers to the rightful hands of its policy holders, the sunny, cheery, optimistic perspective that life is getting better everyday—a perspective that is as embedded in our American culture as baseball, hot dogs, and apple pie—this perspective will rise and shine as brightly as the beautiful sun shining down upon our humble but beautiful Gulf Coast.


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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

FEMA, how would you like your eggs?

by Ana Maria

Clearly the first meaning for the initials A.M. in my blog’s name, A.M. in the Morning! is my own name—Ana Maria. However, the other meaning of AM is Adult Maturity.

“What being an adult means is knowing what you have to do and doing it, even though you may not feel like doing it.”

Robert T. Kiyosaki
Rich Dad’s Cashflow Quadrant
Since publishing my first blog entry on May 1st of this year—Like Walking Through Glue—I have learned that Katrina was a great equalizer bringing out the real character in plenty of folks, bringing out shared core values, and waking up people—myself included—in new ways.

For those that have heard the cries of the hundreds of thousands and are helping through volunteering time, goods, services and money, I say thank you. For those that have contracted their congressional representatives and U.S. Senators to pass the critical pieces of legislation to bring down insurance rates and to bring that industry in alignment with the same rules by which every other industry must abide, I say thank you.

Doing what needs doing because it needs to be done is the mature, adult thing to do. Again, thanks to everyone.

Plenty of church folks have come here doing a ton of hard, dirty work. No fanfare. No banners. No press releases. Just showing up--even today after almost two years. Lots of other, non-affiliated folks have spent plenty of time down here.

Yesterday, two friends told me about another group: the Rainbow people, the hippie tent as locals called it. One friend is a democrat and the other, a Republican. Both were elated with all the volunteer help, but the hippie group was a high point.

Apparently this group got down here within a few days of Katrina, set up shop, and began serving free hot, delicious food. “How would you like your eggs?” Rainbow hippies would ask the beat-all-to-hell-and-back Katrina survivors. They got here before Bush's FEMA.

Yet, when Bush’s FEMA finally got some boots here at ground zero in Waveland, Miss., Bush’s agency tried to get the group thrown out of town.

“WHAT?! Why?” I asked excitedly, and not in a good way.

My friends told me that the hippies were showing up FEMA, and FEMA didn't like it.

Huh? I didn’t quite get it. In an emergency, all hands on deck. Every volunteer embraced. Each new available resource much appreciated.

Uh, no. Not with FEMA.

My friends told me that Bush’s FEMA officials asked Waveland Mayor Tommy Longo to throw the Rainbow hippies off the public land. Longo apparently said that if he was going to throw anybody off the land it would be FEMA. It wasn't FEMA setting up three hot meals a day asking folks how they wanted their eggs cooked. But, it should have been.

When the Rainbow hippies left area, the folks here honored them with a parade. Given how Bush’s FEMA has treated everyone, it would be hell bent to get such treatment. At times, I'm sure folks would rather have run them out of town.

See down here, particularly on the western part of the Mississippi Gulf Coast, we’ll give you the shirt off of our backs, feed you the best tasting meals you have ever put into your mouths, and dance your feet off under the stars just for the sheer joy of it. It’s in our blood, our collective DNA.

BUT! You mess with us, our baseline survival especially after any kind of disaster like Camille in ’69 or Katrina in ’05, and well, we’re like the best combo of redneck and the Bronx—and our accents often reflect the enormous diversity of those geographical regions.

I believe this story about Mayor Longo, because I recall as a 10 year old girl hearing the story of my own father and a few other men from our neighborhood going to get the rationed gallons of milk after Hurricane Camille devastated the Mississippi Gulf Coast. A couple of truckers were sitting in their cabs when one turned to the other and mentioned something about taking off, that these people didn’t need the milk.

Apparently this was within earshot of my dad and the other men. From what I recall, the men—including my dad—threatened the truckers within an inch of their lives. Commodities were scarce. They had families and neighbors to take care of.

My own family didn’t need the milk. My dad went to get our family’s ration so that we could hand the milk to a neighbor who had toddlers.

We can be a generous lot down here. Just don’t mess with us, particularly when it comes to baseline survival. We will do what needs doing, and if you are in the way, well, at the very least you may experience our own version of verbal jiu jitsu. The skill comes in handy.

Today, we can all use a little practice in the verbal jiu jitsu arena. As I’m writing this, insurance lobbyists are out talking with our congressional representative and two U.S. Senators whispering their corporate propaganda. Fine, let them. This is America. That is their right.

As is often the case, the outcome doesn’t rely on watching them, getting aggravated at what they are doing, examining them under a microscope to talk expertly about their every move. The outcome doesn’t rely on that.

The outcome relies on us. What we do. How well we perform our collective role in this grand experiment in American democracy. Think of it as being one of many thousands of ants at a picnic.

Everyone of those often too numerable to count at a picnic can ruin the most festive of occasions. Well, the insurance industry has picnicked off of us for far too long. This may not be the most appetizing of analogies, but we all get the point.

We have a role to play in the political arena, and playing it faithfully is our right, our responsibility, and, quite frankly, our duty.

We all know what that means. It’s political hell raising time! Yoohooo! What fun! Look for some, exercising our 1st Amendment rights may be the only real exercising we get today. So, let’s do it with gusto!

Today’s fun-filled political hell raising activities
First, we’ll contact our own congressional representatives and tell them that we need one policy for both wind and water. Call and email using these phone scripts and email letters as is a way to easily look up the phone numbers and email addresses for congressional representatives. Or course, edit as you desire. Yes, all of this is provided courtesy of yours truly. The eloquence of our call or email is unimportant to achieving the goal. We need only be certain to make contact.

Secondly we’re going to build the big MO—political momentum. It’s like those tiny ants at the picnic. To ruin a picnic, they seem to automatically multiply all over the place, don’t they? That’s us. We’re going to multiply our efforts through the second of today’s political hell raising activities.

How? We’re going to contact friends, family members, and colleagues to ask them to join us in these at-our-fingertips political hell-raising activities. One way to encourage them is by clicking on the tiny envelop at the end of the full article (online). Type in the email address of a friend, relative, or colleague. Type in a message and click “send email.” A link to this post will be delivered with the charming, encouraging, magnetic email note you’ve written.

With everyone doing just a little bit, we can make this political load light as a feather! A few phone calls here and emails there from all of us around the country will help create the big Mo! We may feel like tiny ants in the big world of politics. However, all we have to remember is how many picnics we’ve attended where ants ruined it for us while having a field day. There’s a picnic before us, and it has our name on it. Eggs anyone?
________________


Broadening Katrina’s Lens: A five Part Series
Part 1: Broadening Katrina's Lens
Part 2: Recovery’s Two Major Impediments: $$$ and the "F" word
Part 3: The "F" Word: FEMA
Part 4: Katrina’s Bigger Picture
Part 5: Katrina’s Karmic Payback: Insurance Reform

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'Mr. Insurance' takes colleagues from Congress on a tour of the crime scene

Sun Herald Editorial
August 15, 2007

If what has been done to homeowners after Hurricane Katrina is criminal, then Pass Christian and Bay St. Louis would easily qualify as crime scenes.

It was into those communities that Coast Congressman Gene Taylor led more than a dozen of his congressional colleagues this week, including the most powerful of them all - Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.

Pelosi, who calls Taylor "Mr. Insurance," said that next month the House of Representatives will consider Taylor's legislation expanding the National Flood Insurance Program into a multi-peril insurance plan for property owners who cannot obtain coverage in the private market.

That is heartening.

As was this comment from one of Pelosi's key political lieutenants, House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn: "I want you all to know that our commitment to you is as genuine as anything we've ever undertaken. And we will never relent."

It will require a relentless effort in Congress to overcome the objections of some insurance companies to expanding federal coverage.

Fortunately, Pelosi understands that.

"We're up against a mighty force," she said of the lobbying efforts of the insurance industry. "But we have something on our side - we are right."

Monday's visit by such an influential congressional delegation to Hancock and Harrison counties was much appreciated.

Also to be appreciated was the response by local residents, hundreds of whom went out of their way to inform representatives of distant legislative districts of the challenges that remain so long after Katrina.

Original editorial published here.


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Democrats tour New Orleans


Residents tell of housing woes

By BECKY BOHRER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Posted on Wed, Aug. 15, 2007

NEW ORLEANS --
Greeted by tearful victims of Hurricane Katrina still struggling to rebuild almost two years after the storm, a delegation of congressional Democrats on Tuesday outlined a list of priorities for Gulf Coast recovery.

It was the second and final day of a tour led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Whip Jim Clyburn, D-S.C.

After visiting Mississippi on Monday, the group spent Tuesday in the New Orleans area, visiting a storm-battered school on opening day, examining the levee system and hearing from residents in suburban St. Bernard Parish and in the city's Lower 9th Ward, two areas all but wiped out when Katrina hit on Aug. 29, 2005.

"This was not my fault. I'm 60 years old. I can't go through much more stress," a teary-eyed Valeria Schexnayder told reporters after telling Pelosi about her struggles to replace a Lower 9th Ward house washed away by the storm.

Later, in St. Bernard Parish, Karen Vinsanau broke down in tears as she told the delegation of 10 House members that she has struggled to rebuild a gutted house since her husband's death after the storm.

"I've just been praying since the storm someone would come to the parish," she said.

Vinsanau and Schexnayder both have had to deal with the federally funded, state-run Road Home program, designed to provide rebuilding or relocation aid to storm victims. It has been lambasted for being agonizingly slow, and it has a projected deficit as high as $5 billion that state officials hope Congress will help replenish.

At a news conference Tuesday afternoon, the touring House members said they would work with the state to help fund Road Home. Other priorities listed include improving mental health services that have diminished since the storm, more small business disaster relief and an overhaul of the Stafford Act, the federal law that governs disaster recovery and has been blamed for roadblocks to recovery.

"You're not done grieving and neither are we. You're not done cleaning up and neither are we. You're not done building and neither are we," Clyburn said. About a dozen members of the House arrived in New Orleans on Sunday and embarked on the tour Monday. Aids said Republican members were invited as well but chose not to attend.

During a morning trip to a New Orleans school, Pelosi spoke briefly with a group of fifth-graders about the Constitution as she thumbed through a social studies book. "We're in your book. We're in Washington. Come see us," she told the students at Mary McLeod Bethune Accelerated School.

Higher post-hurricane construction costs, federal aid bureaucracy and continued uncertainty about how many students will eventually return to the city are among the problems outlined by New Orleans schools superintendent Darryl Kilbert as House members toured the school.

The pre-K through sixth-grade school was considered neglected even before the storm flooded it with more than four feet of water. Now, with enrollment expected to reach 350, the school still lacks playground equipment.

Original Sun Herald article posted on August 15, 2007.


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Insurance: Coastal customers need a solution

Clarion-Ledger Opinion
August 15, 2007
File photo/The Associated Press
U.S. Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Bay St. Louis,
speaks at a town meeting Monday.


Residential and commercial property owners on the Mississippi Gulf Coast continue to struggle with one of Hurricane Katrina's most enduring legacies - the insurance crisis.

The question of a national disaster insurance reform brought U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats to the Coast on Monday to tour the still recovering region and to tout insurance reform legislation authored by 4th District U.S. Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Bay St. Louis.

Taylor and his Gulf Coast neighbors were left homeless by the 2005 storm and are continuing to battle insurance companies over so-called "wind versus water" claims - in which the companies contend that Katrina's flood waters were to blame for the damage and that many impacted homeowners simply did not have coverage for water damage.

Taylor's proposal is part of an effort by House members to reauthorize and reform the National Flood Insurance Program, which provides homeowners with flood coverage. Taylor wants to add wind coverage to the federal flood insurance program - which was created in 1968 to help homeowners living in flood-prone areas get flood insurance to complement private policies.

Insurance companies have stopped writing new policies on the Gulf Coast, and homeowners who do have insurance are paying premiums that have skyrocketed since Katrina.

Pelosi said passage would not be easy, but the House is expected to vote on the bill in September.

The American Insurance Association and other opponents in the business community have argued that if the government displaces the private insurance market by providing wind coverage, taxpayers may have to bail out the plan at an estimated cost of $100 billion to $200 billion.

Taylor said he did not know the cost of providing wind coverage.

For residential and commercial property owners on all American shores that are subject to major storms, the lack of available and reasonably affordable private insurance brought the federal government into the equation almost 40 years ago.

The question now is just how deep the federal government should get into the reinsurance business. Hurricane victims on the Gulf Coast cannot begin their lives anew in the existing insurance market climate.

And the suggestion that market forces will decide the matter is short-sighted in the extreme. Even with billions in new development under way on the Mississippi coastline from condos to casinos, small businesses and affordable residential property is a necessity. The market isn't working on the Mississippi Gulf Coast right now.

Congress and the White House know the stakes and they also know that the solutions found for Mississippi and Louisiana this year will impact Florida and the Carolinas the next time they are in the path of a major storm.

As Taylor said, disaster insurance is a national problem that demands a reasonable national solution.


Original Clarion-Ledger piece published on August 15, 2007.

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Katrina Town Hall Reflected Selflessness of Gulf Coast

by Ana Maria

With standing room only in the large parish hall on top of a massive bluff overlooking the Bay which feeds into the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Coast Congressman Gene Taylor (D-MS) hosted the second town hall meeting with a delegation of plenty of congressional leadership from across the country. From as far west as California to the northeast of New Hampshire, Democratic Congressional representatives gave up time with their families and their constituents to revisit the Katrina-ravaged area. We were honored to have the high-ranking leadership of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Democratic Majority Whip Jim Clyburn from South Carolina.

Taylor told the overflowing crowd of Katrina-worn constituents that the multiple peril insurance bill almost didn’t make it out of its first subcommittee hearing, but that she personally talked with the Democratic members of the committee. Speaker Pelosi told her fellow Democrats that she had come to Katrina Land last year and promised to pass this important legislation. She kept her word as good leaders do. Taylor said that Congressman Mel Watt (D-SC) worked diligently on wavering Democrats to impress upon them the horrors of an insurance apparatus that is serving Americans quite badly.

Every Democratic member voted for the bill, and it passed without a single Republican vote.

When the bill was heard before the full Finance Committee, again the bill passed with every Democratic member voting for it and a few Republicans joining the Democratic leadership. In September, the bill will be up for a full vote in the entire House of Representatives when Congress returns in September. While we can pass this with only Democratic support in the House, the truth of the matter is that this is a non-partisan bill that will protect ALL Americans subject to the wind and water ravages that Mother Nature occasionally blows our way.

She—Mother Nature, that is—never asks us whether we are Republican or Democrat before she blows off our roof. Mother Nature never asks us which religious affiliation we may be before toppling trees onto our homes and businesses. Mother Nature never asks whether we are progressive or conservative, rich or poor, of this or the other ethnic background. No ma’am and no sir. All she does is do her thing leaving the rest of it up to us.

Five panelists regaled the congressional delegation and audience with one after another nightmare of dealing with Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath. David Treutel, a third generation independent insurance agent and president of the family business and member of the Mississippi Wind Pool board of directors, spoke of the need for one policy for both wind and water. Treutel told of the despondency he saw in his clients who were exhausted from Katrina only to find themselves barraged with a claims adjuster for their cars, one for wind, one for homeowners, one for flood. Treutel recommended the bottom line for One policy. One adjuster.

Tish Haas Williams, Executive Director for the Hancock County Chamber of Commerce, spoke to the horror stories of how insurance has devastated the Coast’s (of Mississippi) ability to economically recover. She spoke of companies still paying on lost inventory that their insurance companies failed to cover even though businesses had paid insurance premiums for that purpose.

She spoke of insurance rates going up 600% and more, and how businesses cannot absorb these costs for less coverage with an ever-shrinking customer base. Of course, she reminded everyone that small business is the economic engine of the nation as well as for Hancock County.

Boy is she ever right about that.

Under President Bill Clinton, his administration expanded the number of jobs in our economy by over 20 million, primarily in the small business sector. The current guy occupying the White House is great at exporting our jobs to other countries. Maybe that’s what Bush did with his leadership responsibilities on our economic recovery here in Katrina Land. He must have outsourced them, because he and his administration have certainly turned a blind eye to the Katrina-Rita recovery needs.

Hancock Bank Chairman George Schloegel heads the largest bank in Mississippi. Joining the rest of the panelists, he also extolled the virtues of ONE policy for both wind and water. That’s right. A banker. Of course! No bank can lend money to customers to build without the accompanying insurance, which is a must. No loans, no business income. No business income, well, what’s the point?

Banks are not charities any more than grocery stores or car dealerships or the local pharmacy. Money is a prerequisite to keeping the doors open. Insurance is the prerequisite to opening the doors in the first place. That makes sense now, doesn’t it?

Mr. Schloegel brought the house down when he remarked that the insurance companies didn’t have to hire lawyers and haul us to court to get us to pay our premiums. Why should we have to hire lawyers and haul them to court to get them to pay on our wind policy claims?! Yes, as I said, this is a banker. He said that his own bank just up the road a few blocks has now been rebuilt. The insurance was astronomical and so they are going without it. However, it is but one building, and they have banks over four states or so which allows them to spread the risk throughout the company. A family has but one main asset—it’s home. They can’t afford to spread the risk. He, too, supported H.R. 3121—one policy for both wind and water and having the federal flood insurance policy expanded to cover windstorms.

Clearly the man who stole the evening’s show was Dr. McFarland. The elderly retired doctor told us that he lost his home to Katrina. Soon thereafter, he lost his job with NASA—I believe, and then the following June lost his wife. He said that he believes there is a message in everything and told God “I got the message.” We all laughed with him, perhaps, mostly because in spite of his tragedies, his sense of humor remained. Then again, so has that of the rest of the Gulf Coast area.

What I have heard, though, is that when his insurance company continued to deny payment on the wind policy, his wife ended up with a stroke and passed away. You see, the McFarland family like so many others here on the coast believe in the goodness and honesty of the people in their lives with whom they do business.

He said that the state insurance commissioner’s mediation program was a joke. Don’t do it. Hold on and hold out for everything owed. The sad irony is that Dr. McFarland was not one to go to court. In fact, he was not fond at all of folks suing. He supported what is known formally as tort
You know, curbing the ability for small potato type people like you and me to punish corporations, hospitals, doctors and the like for their negligent wrong doing.

So hiring one of the biggest lawyers around was not something uppermost in his mind. Here on the coast, just like in plenty of places across the country, most folks believe that if they themselves do right in their lives, others will do the same. Everything will work out just fine.

With this in mind, the good doctor always believed that his own insurance would, of course, pay what was owed. Nothing but a simple financial transaction. The doc paid his insurance premiums, and the insurance company would now pay on the insurance policy.

That isn’t what happened. He said that someone showed the insurance folks a picture of Parchment. For those outside of the area, Parchman is local lingo for the state prison that houses death row inmates. Here on the coast it is hot as hell in August and September. In Parchman, it’s simply hell.

Anyway, the doc said that after the folks at this insurance company, which I believe was State Farm, saw a picture of Parchman, he and the 600 other plaintiffs that were suing, got 100% settlement on their claims. Now, what I believe the doctor was referring to is the fact that his attorney, Dickey Scruggs of the Scruggs Katrina Group had filed a racketeering lawsuit against State Farm and the two engineering firms for allegedly

conspir[ing] to cheat policyholders out of rightful payments worth millions of dollars. They willfully caused victims of Hurricane Katrina extreme emotional and financial distress in their calculated strategy to falsify and conceal evidence, intimidate anyone who got in their way, and use their privileged position to pressure policyholders into accepting pitiful payments both before and during the mediation process."
The doctor’s prescription? Stay away from Mississippi Insurance Commissioner George Dale’s mediation. Hold out for what is due. File a lawsuit if need be.

Not bad for a man previously adamantly opposed to lawsuits and lawyers protecting the little guy. As one businessman told me during the evening, he never thought he’d see the day when he’d be in a FEMA line with a bunch of rich folks. Just to be clear, however, the doctor also ended his insightful remarks with a message that all of us down here in this neck of the woods would like everyone to know. We’re not looking for a hand out. We’re just needing a hand to help us get back on our feet.

By the way, the McFarland case inspired the Rigsby sisters to blow the whistle on the insurance industry.

One last thing for today. As you may remember from my bio, I came here five months ago to surprise my family with a visit. I was the one who was surprised by the enormous devastation that remained everywhere I looked. So much needs doing right this very second. But what are the residents here pushing for most now? A single insurance policy for both wind and water that is available across the nation literally from sea to shining sea.

I have wondered of late, how this proposal will assist folks to get on their feet right now? When passed, the policy would not even be available until next June. The needs today are immense right now! What’s in it for them to be pushing a policy to help the rest of the country as well?

Last night as I was talking with my new friend Gary Anderson, the Democratic nominee for the state’s insurance commissioner, I posed the question. He said it will help in the future and help the entire country, not just here.

I thought to myself, “Are the humble, modest people that I grew up with in the place of my birth, the town where I was raised, are they really that selfless? Had my own sense of right and wrong, of social justice, of doing the right thing regardless of its difficulty come not only from my own family upbringing but also from the teeny tiny town as well?”

As if reading my mind, Gary looked down at me with that knowing smile of his and said, “Welcome home.” Isn’t that all any of us are looking for in life? A place where we feel at home?

That is the reason the H.R. 3121 is so important. When disaster strikes our homes and businesses, what we depend on for our financial security must be reliable so that we can get back to the business of our lives returning home at the end of the day to be with our families and friends.


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