Dear Friend,

During the worst housing crisis in New Orleans history, the Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is pushing a deeply flawed plan
to demolish thousands of units of affordable housing, with plans to
rebuild only a fraction. If HUD gets its way, the majority of
affordable public housing in the city will be eliminated--essentially
shutting out thousands of low-income Katrina survivors who have been
fighting for over 2 years to return home.

Tomorrow, the New Orleans City Council will vote on whether or not to
permit HUD to carry out its demolitions, and several council members
are on the fence. We need to show the city council that people across
the country want our federal government to do better than HUD's plan,
and that we want the council to vote against it.

I joined ColorOfChange.org in calling on the city council to vote
against these reckless and premature demolitions and insist on a fair
redevelopment plan. I also sent a message to President Bush, calling
on him to stop HUD from beginning its demolitions. Will you join me?

http://www.colorofchange.org/hudhousing/?id=2224-512869

New Orleans Housing Crisis

With New Orleans in the middle of a serious housing emergency, it just
doesn't make sense to destroy housing that's in good condition. Rents
have gone up 45% since Katrina, the city has already lost 9,000 units
of affordable housing, and half of families that want to return home
make less than $20,000 a year. In the last two years, New Orleans'
homeless population has more than doubled. Many of the units HUD plans
on destroying are in very well-constructed buildings that were barely
damaged by Katrina, and would require a minimum of renovation to
provide quality housing, even if only temporarily.

HUD's flawed redevelopment plan

Whatever your views are on public housing, HUD's redevelopment plan is
ill-conceived and irresponsible. HUD refuses to rebuild the same
number of affordable public housing units as it destroys. HUD's plan
would destroy 4,600 affordable public housing units, while the new
mixed-income housing would only include 744 units of affordable
housing--and building those units will take several years. The
inevitable result will be thousands of low-income residents--most of
whom are Black--pushed out of the city.

Questions have also been raised about the motivations behind HUD's
plan. The head of HUD, Alphonso Jackson, and his staff are under
criminal investigation for corruption in HUD/HANO's process for
handing out contracts related to the redevelopment plan. The contract
for demolishing and rebuilding the St. Bernard housing project was
given to a firm that owes Jackson at least $250,000 (and as much as
$500,000).

No Demolition without a solution that makes sense

At best, HUD has a goal that many think is good (moving towards
mixed-income housing), but a deeply flawed plan that will be
disastrous to New Orleans residents who need the most help. At worst,
HUD is pushing a plan that will help enrich its secretary and his
cronies, while leaving working-class people out in the cold and
dramatically reshaping the class makeup of New Orleans. Either way, it
would be a huge mistake to let HUD push forward with demolitions until
these issues are addressed and resolved.

Will you join me in calling on the city council to reject the plan,
and on President Bush to stop HUD from proceeding?

http://www.colorofchange.org/hudhousing/?id=2224-512869


Thanks.

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