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

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Four Letter Words: Bush, FEMA

Four Letter Words: Bush, FEMA

On my daily walks along my beloved Gulf Coast beach, I meet lots of folks of varying ages and backgrounds. Some smile as they pass. Others say hi then stop and chat. Still others honk their horns and wave as they pass in their cars or trucks. Though we are strangers to each other, the mutual friendliness is delightfully familiar. Good people who smile at strangers. People who say what they mean and mean what they say. It reminds me of life growing up here in the 60’s and 70’s.

The generous outpouring from those near and far remains as big hearted as ever. When it comes to federal leadership in a time of crisis, however, so much has changed since the days of Walter Cronkite.

Everywhere I go in this Katrina-ravaged locale, I hear stories from folks revealing a humbled gratitude for whatever life and home they have been able to put together since the storm. Theirs is a unassuming desire to return to a life filled with family, friends, and familiar community. In the aftermath of Katrina, surely many recalled memories of the federal government’s leadership in handling the emergency needs, clean up and rebuilding after Hurricane Camille in August 1969.

Though I was a girl of ten when Hurricane Camille ripped through the Gulf Coast, certain memories are seared into my heart and mind. I remember how quickly the National Guard, Red Cross, and the federal government came to our immediate aid. We were grateful. The goodwill engendered from their help remains even decades after the catastrophe.

In the aftermath of Katrina, we believed that the federal government would, naturally, light the path to the road home, just as it had with Camille. Again, as a young girl I recall seeing National Guardsmen all over our using chainsaws to cut through the trees that had fallen across the roads. To this day, whenever I hear a chainsaw, this is what comes to mind immediately.

Katrina involved the same communities, same towns, and often, the same families as with Camille. Katrina’s destruction was far worse than Camille’s. Surely the leaders in our federal government would step up to the plate. They would soothe our fears and demonstrate in both word and deed that our families and communities mattered.

Two days after Katrina, Bush finally cut short one of his infamous month long vacations. He flew to the White House for what we now know ended up as another of his PR stunts. This time he used an exclusive interview with Diane Sawyer at the White House to deliver the empty words. On Good Morning America, Bush stated "I hope people don't play politics at this time of a natural disaster the likes of which this country has never seen."

He trotted out Birmingham native Condi Rice who assured her fellow Southerners that our families would be taken care of. FOX News, that bastion of White House propaganda, published this headline. RICE: All Foreign Aid Offers Will Be Accepted. Yet, within days, a German plane carrying Katrina aid was turned back.

The international community generously offered over $850 million in aid to ease the burden on America’s Katrina impacted families. Recently, the Washington Post reported “But only $40 million has been used so far for disaster victims or reconstruction, according to U.S. officials and contractors.” That is not even five percent! Here we are some 20 months later, and now we learn that it was Bush and his Administration that had played politics with the lives of those who went through—what was that Bush said? Oh, yeah, “a natural disaster the likes of which this country has never seen."

Recent headlines read Most Katrina Aid From Overseas Went Unclaimed. NPR reported Millions Worth of Katrina Aid Forfeited by U.S. Around here FEMA is a four letter word. In many neighborhoods, so is Bush.

Bush, the man sitting behind the desk in the Oval Office, is great at playing politics with the lives of those struggling to recover from and rebuild in the aftermath of Katrina. He wanted to occupy the Oval Office bad enough to steal it—twice. That took planning and execution. How’s about using some of those skills to execute an efficient and wildly successful clean up and rebuilding plan?!

Bush's actions indicate the depth to which he disdains the responsibilities of the Office of the President. This became apparent when we saw the infamous FEMA video briefing on Katrina’s impending destruction. Bush asked not a single question during the briefing. His callous disregard for every family that Katrina personally impacted remains inexcusable. Within days of Katrina’s devastation, Bush uttered the following words.

"I want to assure the folks at the state level that we are fully prepared to not only help you during the storm, but we will move in whatever resources and assets we have at our disposal after the storm to help you deal with the loss of property.” George W. Bush CNN transcript 3/1/06.

You gotta hand it to his speechwriters! As predictable, the false hope of Bush’s words eventually gave way to the reality of the betrayal on his watch.

FEMA epitomizes that betrayal. Around here, FEMA is a definite four letter word beginning with “F”. A close family friend whom I’ve known since I was a little girl, told me that FEMA stands for “Fix Everything, My Ass!” The lady is in her late 70’s and a staunch Republican. She, her two grown children and a great grandchild remain living in one of FEMA’s camper-sized trailers. Just this morning I drove behind a truck sporting a sticker in the back window that said the same thing. What a hoot!

Last year’s congressional hearings on FEMA’s abysmal performance provided Democratic Congressman Gene Taylor with an opportunity to publicly let FEMA Director Michael Brown how he rated Brown’s performance. ''You get an F-minus in my book.”

Calling it like he sees it. A trait I associate with New Orleanian culture. The Gulf Coast is filled with New Orleanian transplants like my own family. Taylor’s a straight shooter, which is far more than anyone can say about the Bush Administration’s mouthpieces and minions.

Taylor and his wife lost everything in Katrina, have not received a single penny of insurance money, and are personally building their new home. Margaret Taylor told me that they had gone to a relative’s home for shelter during Katrina . . . and remain there to this day. [See Sidebar: Gulf Coast Congressman Gene Taylor—Sticks and Stones: Rebuilding Our Future]

In the middle of tremendously harsh conditions here in post-Katrina country, I find remarkable the eternal flame that exists in the residents’ sense of optimism and faith that these decent, hard-working folks exude. These are the very people surviving the two worst disasters in our nation’s history. The first is Hurricane Katrina, the worst natural disaster in our nation’s history. The second is the Bush White House.

As I read that Bush and his compassionless, corrupt, and crony administration turned away millions of dollars in foreign aid intended to relieve the suffering of the Katrina survivors—my family and friends and communities, I got livid. Where was all that compassion he bantered about during election time? He sure didn’t care about conserving the families and communities along the Gulf Coast and around New Orleans.

Compassionate conservative, my you-know-what!
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Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Like Walking Through Glue

Like Walking Through Glue

Before leaving San Jose, CA, to drive four days to go home to the Katrina-ravaged region of my birth, one brother told me that there was no way he could prepare me for what I would experience once I arrived in my hometown of Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. Located on the Mississippi Gulf Coast, “the Bay” as we locals call it, is a tiny beach town.

As I drove from the Bay area of California to “The Bay” of my birth, I thought of all the HBO and CNN documentaries I had watched. I replayed the innumerable conversations I had had with my family over the last 20 months. As I crossed the state line of Mississippi. I took a deep breath.

No words can completely describe, no news videos can completely reveal, and no documentaries can reflect the totality of the devastation remaining in post-Katrina land.

Boy, was my brother ever right.

For over two decades, my verbal and written communication skills have been one of my greatest assets. Yet, I find myself at a loss for articulating accurately the difficulty of life’s daily activities. The best I’ve come up with is that many of life’s routine activities is like walking through glue . . . for miles on end.

Tiny Mississippi Gulf Coast towns comprised Katrina’s ground zero: Pearlington, Waveland, Pass Christian, and Bay St. Louis, my hometown among them. For just over two months, I’ve been back in “The Bay”.

After graduating from high school 30 years ago, I haven’t spent this kind of time in my home town. I went to college and through the years acquired a broad, deep, and expansive experience—a pleasurable luxury for someone from a small town, particularly Mississippi.

I’ve lived in Nashville, Tenn., Northern Virginia, and San Jose, CA. I’ve worked on both coasts from the nation’s capitol in Washington, DC, to the capitol of Silicon Valley. I've worked as a management auditor for the Tennessee legislature and the city of San Francisco. I've worked in high tech Corporate America.

Lastly, but most prominently since leaving the Bay, I've been politically active professionally and as a volunteer on the local, state, and national levels with a number of progressive issues and organizations.

With all of this, you might think I was prepared for the world I was about to re-enter. But I wasn’t.

Soon after having arrived in the Bay, I drove from one side of the Gulf Coast to the other along the 40-mile beach stretching from Waveland to Biloxi, Mississippi.

The next day I drove 60 miles west to New Orleans and went through the many devastated neighborhoods such as the 9th Ward and Lakeview, two ends of the economic spectrum in New Orleans.

We do LOVE to eat, LOVE to dance, and LOVE to have a good time! Seafood gumbo, shrimp po-boys, fried fish. We’re known for our great cooking, fantastic music, and our ability to enjoy life. Our spirits are lively and energetic accompanied by a heaping dose of sunny optimism. Enjoying life is our gift to the world, kind of a cultural specialty.

Indeed, whether New Orleans or the 40 miles of beach towns that dotted Mississippi’s Gulf Coast, Katrina’s devastation was decisive physically, financially, and emotionally. The huricane’s merciless destruction brutalized everything in its path. What is barely known to those living outside of here is that life’s simplest tasks remain unbelievably cumbersome.

To illustrate the point, let’s take going to the grocery store as an example.

Before the storm, my mom and the rest of the seniors living in our neighborhood could frequent four or five grocery stores within a matter of minutes from home.

Today, the only big grocery available is Wal-Mart. That’s right. Wal-Mart. Heck, a few years back, I protested with the South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council in front of Wal-Mart in Gilroy, California, a town just south of San Jose where I have been living for about five years! Wal-Mart has a terrible reputation for coming into an area and putting out of business all the local mom and pop stores, providing low-wage, no benefit jobs to its employees whose incomes are so low that they turn to the government to pick up the tab on health care costs.

The AFL-CIO calls this the Wal-Mart Tax.

So I look for an alternative to handing money over to a corporation that fails to honor the well-being of the family members in its employ. The nearest alternative is in Long Beach, Miss. Great! We can go a few miles down Highway 90 where the Bay Bridge crosses over 2 miles of water and . . . oh.

The bridge is out. I don’t mean as in needing a bit of repair and is unavailable for a few hours or maybe a day or two. I mean that Katrina blew away the Bay bridge.

On May 17, 2007, some 20 months after Katrina crumbled it into the Gulf of Mexico, two of the bridge’s four lanes are scheduled to open. Click here to peek at the work in progress via camera. To say there will be dancing in the streets is an understatement.

Back to grocery shopping. The point is to get to the other side of the water because that is where the alternative to Wal-Mart is. In December 2006, several federal and state agencies began to provide ferry service across the bay to alleviate some of the transportation challenges caused by the bridge’s destruction. The ferry was just a mile or so from the bridge along Beach Boulevard.

The ferry was somewhere on the other side of the water. Lots of cars waiting to get on it. I remembered what happened the first time I came down for the sheer adventure of experiencing the ferry. An adventure was what I got.

I waited about 30 minutes for the ferry. Once it arrived, most politely and delightfully, the ferry employees directed the cars onto the ferry. As soon as we were settled, the captain announced that something was wrong with the motor, it would be one to one-and-a-half hours to repair, and we would have to get off the ferry. Those delightfully polite ferry employees directed our vehicles off the boat. Wow, an hour and a half to repair it.


The Bay St. Louis Ferry.
Ana Maria's sweet little red Miata!

As I look at the line of cars remembering the last time I tried to cross the water via the ferry, I changed my mind. I decided to go the only other route available to get to the other side of the two miles of water. It was another kind of adventure.

I drove west 3 miles, 8 miles north, 10 miles east then south 7 miles to get to a point that was simply a few miles on the other side of that 2 mile bridge that would have taken two shakes to drive over.

This adventure took a total of 30 minutes. That means that at least a total 60 minutes in travel time would be added to my shopping.

With this amount of time in pre-Katrina days, I’d have already been to the store, checked out, loaded up my car, and home unloading what I’d bought. But in post-Katrina life, we’ve not yet made it to the store. And folks, that’s just to get to a full service grocery store that isn't Wal-Mart.

Geeze, Louise! As committed as I am to economic justice, I cannot in good conscience say a word to anyone about shopping elsewhere. A number of the people that I'm visiting range in age from late 70's to mid-80's. And those that are far younger are too exhausted from trying to put their lives back together to expend another hour just to avoid handing their money to Wal-Mart.

Before Katrina hit, Winn-Dixie was only 3 blocks away from our neighborhood.

So guess who's making groceries* at Wal-Mart? Heaven help us all!
* “Making groceries” is a New Orleanian phrase meaning to go to the grocery, to go grocery shopping. ;)


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Ana Maria Photo



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Welcome to A.M. in the Morning!

Glad you stopped by to take a peak around A.M. in the Morning! You'll find several more-than-a-coffee-cup's worth of material. For a quick introduction into why the rebuilding efforts are soooo s-l-o-w, click on the three YouTube videos.

In two videos, Congressman Gene Taylor and Mississippi State Attorney General Jim Hood are testifying before a Congressional Committee on the way in which the insurance giants like State Farm and Allstate are ravaging the Gulf Coast residents through their deceptive claims adjustment practices.

A third video is of Taylor giving Georgia Republican Congressman Tom Price, a schill and mouthpiece for the Bush Administration, a blistering response to Price's indecent proposal to require the devastated area to come up with matching funds before the White House will provide assistance. Guess Price thought pouring salt in those Katrina wounds was charitable. Watch this video for an amazing education on Bush's compassionless congressional cronies.

Both Taylor and Hood are great Democrats doing what good Democrats do well: fighting for the dignity of their constituents and fairness of public policies. So grab something drink and a bite to eat. Sit down in a comfortable chair. Enjoy yourself as you peruse the reading, visual, and audio material. If you care to comment on the blog entries, be my guest. The same hospitality goes for emailing me.

Rather often, I'll be cookin' up something divinely decadent, so sign up for an email subscription. I want you to enjoy the delicacies at their best while they are piping hot!

See ya laytah!

Ana Maria
A.M. in the Morning


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About A.M. in the Morning!

“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


Not for the faint of heart, A.M. in the Morning! provides first-hand accounts of life in the Katrina ravaged region, particularly focusing on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Written from a distinctly progressive political point of view and a scathing style redolent of the region's famous cuisine -- hot, strong and spicy, nobody escapes Ana Maria’s wrath whether they are the callous insurance industry, the bumbling leadership of FEMA, do-nothing politicians, or incompetent government contractors.

Rosato, a native of Bay St. Louis—ground zero for Katrina’s devastation, launched her blog in May 2007 to express her dismay and provide detailed, poignant, on-the-ground accounts of what the people of the Gulf Coast are still experiencing nearly two years after Katrina’s devastation. She is committed to using her blog to reinvigorate the discussion and generate a renewed national sense of purpose to efficiently and effectively rebuild the area.

While the “A.M” of A.M. in the Morning! stands for its author, Ana Maria, “A.M.” also stand for “adult maturity.” In Ana Maria’s words, “What is so invigorating in today’s political climate is that the progressive political community understands full well that being informed AND taking appropriate, effective action—even when we don’t feel like it—is what makes things move inside the legislative and electoral arenas in directions that we desire. We understand that we have to participate in the political arena. We have to focus on what we desire, invest our time, energy, and resources into what we desire, and we are doing just that. This is about civic participation which is one of the highest means of displaying our patriotism, political maturity, and communal sophistication.”

The goal of A.M. in the Morning! is simple. Provide deeply caring Americans with information on what life is really like here in Katrina Land. Then A.M. in the Morning! strategically directs the outpouring of disgust and outrage, energy and attention on what will make a political difference to the people and small businesses that want to return to living life fully and vibrantly.

A.M. in the Morning! provides phone scripts and email letters as well as the names, email addresses and phone numbers of those she targets be they elected officials, bureaucrats, corporate leaders, or the media. By shining a spotlight on the ongoing plight of the Gulf Coast, A.M. in the Morning! hopes to be a cog in the wheel that spurs action.


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Ana Maria Bio

Ana Maria Rosato was born and raised in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. “The Bay” as locals call it, is one of three tiny Gulf Coast beach towns comprising Hurricane Katrina’s ground zero on August 29, 2005. The Bay is a bedroom community located an hour east of New Orleans, the city where her parents were born and raised and where many relatives went through Katrina. From the coast of Mississippi to the heartland of Nashville, Tennessee, from the nation’s capital to Silicon Valley, California, Ana Maria has been politically active on the local, state, and national levels. Ana Maria embodies the blending of a Gulf Coast upbringing with strong influences from New Orleans' culture. Her grandparents emigrated from Italy to New Orleans at the turn of the 20th Century. In the early 1950's, Ana Maria's parents moved from the Crescent City to the Bay, a New Orleans bedroom community along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. At the tender age of 18, Ana Maria had already experienced the pain that outright sex discrimination inflicts on its prey, but also demonstrated the first signs of her willingness to forthrightly challenge the status quo, much as she is doing now. Coming from a long line of musicians in her family, Ana Maria attended the University of Southern Mississippi to major in music. Having been the drum major and student conductor of her high school band, Ana Maria set her sights on becoming the drum major of the 400 plus Southern Pride Marching Band, which she had long admired. When she asked about try outs, she was told that the music department was perfectly happy with the drum major it had—a male, of course. In lieu of trying out for drum major, the department offered her a try out for flag girl. After 18 months of going up and down the bureaucratic chain of command inside of the College of Fine Arts, Ana Maria finally went to the Dean of Academic Affairs, Dr. Charlie Mormon, a gruff speaking man from Boston. Dr. Mormon peered across his desk at the diminutive firebrand of a student requesting the university's compliance with Title IX of the Education Amendments which prohibited sex discrimination in an academic institution. Dr. Mormon barked at her. "Do you have an attorney?!" Ana Maria replied. “‘What does it matter if I have an attorney?" Dr. Mormon then barked louder, "Do you have an attorney?!" to which Ana Maria replied, "Of course I have an attorney.” Dr. Mormon got on his intercom and shouted an order at some administrator to get in his office that second. When the man showed up, Dr. Mormon ordered the music department to hold tryouts. Inside a matter of weeks, three students tried out for drum major in March 1979. In 1979, Title IX still had legal teeth. Fear of losing federal monies throughout the university—not just in the specific program of a department—along with a great deal of bad publicity was what forced the university to open up its drum major tryouts. Though she “came in fourth out of the three” as Ana Maria likes to say, she opened up doors which a number of young women have since been able to walk though. “The one who busts down the doors of injustice may not always be the one who gets to walk through it,” she explains. “Everyday, I walk through doors that women and men of all backgrounds had previously busted down so that I have opportunities that I have today: education, money, property, credit, birth control, abortion, freedom of religion to name but a few. I felt like a trailblazer in my small little way, but it taught me to never take injustice lying down, because it can be defeated and justice can prevail creating a more just society for everyone.” Over the last several decades, USM has had a number of female drum majors. These young women have gotten the scholarship, professional recognition, and the networking opportunities attendant with the position. “By far, this experience shaped me as no other in my life has.” Ana Maria said. “My passion for music gave way to my passion for justice. That passion still flows through my veins to this very day.” While still in college Ana Maria cut her political teeth organizing around the Equal Rights Amendment for the National Organization for Women (NOW) in Mississippi. The founding president of the NOW chapter in Hattiesburg, Miss., she organized a statewide rally, walk-a-thon, and media campaign to push for passage of the constitutional amendment which would have guaranteed equality under the law without regard to sex. Although unsuccessful, the battle for women's equality still continues to this day with Democrats having introduced similar legislation in 2007. With her change in direction away from music firmly in place, Ana Maria received her bachelor and master degrees in political science from the University of Southern Mississippi. Since earning her master’s degree in 1985, Ana Maria has worked in government, political, and corporate high tech arenas from Washington, DC, to San Francisco, California. Her focus has always been on issues of justice, which is why she gravitated towards working for progressive organizations. Ana Maria’s professional background has included Tennessee Planned Parenthood, Tennessee National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, the Democratic National Committee, and the South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council. She has also worked as a management auditor for the State of Tennessee and the city of San Francisco. Additionally, she spent six years in high tech. In the Spring of 2007, Ana Maria left San Jose, California—the capitol of Silicon Valley where she has lived for five years—to travel to her hometown of Bay St. Louis. She helped her family renovate her mother’s home, which after decades of dodging any damage during major weather events, had some wind and flooding issues as a result of Hurricane Katrina. Leveraging her insider/outsider perspective to the place she calls home, Ana Maria decided to blog, A.M. in the Morning!, to help others understand how difficult daily life remains in the Katrina-ravaged Gulf Coast region. Angered at politicians who've abandoned her hometown and the media which has obviously chosen to ignore the plight of those living in the Katrina-ravaged region, A.M. in the Morning! became a passionate and well-thought out effort to pull the media’s coat, even embarrass them if she had to. “I want the Anderson Coopers and Brian Williams’ of the world to show the same passion now as they did when Katrina first hit,” she said. The first-hand accounts were written in a scathing style redolent of the region's famous cuisine -- hot, strong and spicy. Nobody escapes my wrath whether they are the callous insurance industry, the bumbling leadership of FEMA, do-nothing politicians, or incompetent government contractors. By shining a spotlight on the ongoing plight of the Gulf Coast Ana Maria hoped to be a cog in the wheel that spurs action. Through her progressive political blog and podcast, Ana Maria often provided pragmatic, easy, effective, and targeted political action readers could take to bring political pressure to bear so that her beloved hometown region can once again thrive. You can email Ana Maria at AMintheMorning@gmail.com. Return to A.M. in the Morning! Home

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