Quantcast The Ranger
College Media Network

Front Page PDF

Download Print Edition PDF
  • Home

Recovery spirit pervades Gulf Coast

By Amber Whittaker

Issue date: 5/18/06 Section: J School Travels
Originally published: 6/1/06 at 2:38 PM CST
Last update: 6/2/06 at 8:22 AM CST
  • Print
  • Email
Signs warn potential looters to stay away from this home in New Orlean's Lower 9th Ward.
Media Credit: Mandy Derfler
Signs warn potential looters to stay away from this home in New Orlean's Lower 9th Ward.

GULF COAST - Driving east from the Gulf Coast of Texas to Louisiana and Mississippi, motorists see blue-caped roofs zip by, the first signs of hurricane damage.

Exiting Interstate 10 and venturing further into the devastated towns of these coastal regions reveals gutted homes with a lifetime's possessions shoveled curbside.

In some areas affected by Hurricane's Katrina and Rita, a nightly curfew remains in effect.

In Gulfport, Miss., two Army National Reservists are posted along Highway 90 to look for looters, though steps are all that remain of many homes.

At night along this stretch of Highway 90, beached casino boats draw onlookers, who residents see as the vanguard of the "new tourism."

Three months after Katrina and Rita's one two punch, communities in Louisiana, Mississippi and the Texas coast have shown a resiliency and a desire to rebuild even on unstable ground.

New Orleans, a hopeless and violent place in the first days after Katrina, remains an uneasy city for residents.

A long queue of cars evacuates the 9th Ward moments before the last shades of pink in the evening sky evaporate into blackness.

And everywhere in the city, messages of distress are tagged on homes, overpasses and businesses: "Harsh," "no mo Nagin," "Jesus, Jesus, Jesus." And then there are the bright orange pleas for "Help,"

Homes in devastated areas bear the date they were searched for survivors, most are eerily marked "9-11," but many others are marked "9-23," a reminder of the magnitude of the disaster.

One house in the Lower 9th Ward has several handwritten signs on the front gate. "Are Katrina trinkets worth the price of your soul?" one sign asks potential looters, while another warns, "I sleep sometimes God never sleeps."

David Beasley, a retired police officer working as the head of security at a New Orleans East Home Depot, said he still hears gunshots behind the store at night.

On Dec. 26, a man holding a knife was surrounded by eight police officers and fatally shot when he resisted arrest. It was later determined the man was mentally ill.

Abandoned refrigerators in and around the French Quarter bear the spray painted accusation, "NOPD beat me down."
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

This is an open forum for the readers of TheRanger.org. Abusive, inflammatory, slanderous, obscene, pornographic and libelous language will not be tolerated. Please be considerate of other readers when posting comments. This is not the place for personal attacks. The staff of The Ranger.org reserves the right to deny publication of any posts. The comments posted here do not reflect the opinions of The Ranger staff, San Antonio College or the Alamo Community College District.

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Do you plan to graduate from one of the ACCD colleges?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement