recovery
Post-Katrina Mississippi: Victims versus Insurance Companies
Bush and the current Mississippi Insurance Commissioner are trying to tell America that all is well with the victims of hurricane Katrina...our wonderful insurance companies have taken care of all that, right?
Wrong. Most victims of Katrina have still received little help and Insurance Companies are doing their best to keep from paying. Their lives can't get back to normal because many still don't have homes. They are losing what little they have left while hotels and casinos are buying land that used to be homes.
Change may be on the way, but we need to help. Last week was the Democratic Party primary for Mississippi Insurance Commissioner. In this primary there were two candidates. One was heavily funded by the insurance companies while the other, Gary Anderson, is pro-consumer and was funded by people like you and me with the help of Democracy for America.
Gary Anderson won the primary. He now goes on to the general election in November. If he wins, he will try to help Katrina victims recover rather than protecting insurance companies.
Here is a statement from Gary Anderson:
Jackson, Mississippi - Democratic Insurance Commissioner Candidate Gary Anderson responded to George Dale's lies today at the State's Capitol Building. Anderson referenced Dale's latest TV ad in which he claims that 99% of all insurance claims have been settled.
"George Dale is either lying or in denial about the percent of Katrina claims settled. Ask Mississippians in the south if 99% of lives are back to normal, ask Mississippians across the state if they feel they have been treated fairly - they will tell you they have not. Dale is making a desperate attempt to link me to different groups but the truth is he knows Gary Anderson is on the side of Mississippi's insurance ratepayers", said Anderson at the press conference.
Hurricane Katrina | insurance | Mississippi Insurance Commissioner | recovery | Democratic Party | Gary Anderson | Mississippi
On the bumpy road to recovery on the Gulf Coast
Many months after Katrina hit America's Gulf Coast, exposing the racist incompetence of the Bush Administration as they left thousands of poor, black American citizens to die, I talked to a former co-worker of mine from Mississippi whose parents lost a great deal in Katrina. She talked of her mother's post-traumatic syndrome and the way inadequate insurance payments were made and inadequate help came from the government and many people simply couldn't afford recovery and so had to sell cheap to real estate developers who were aiming to build luxury hotels. Her story, which I cannot do justice, was a pretty damned good summary of much of what is wrong with America under Bush and the extreme right wing branch of the Republican Party...the one that promised to reduce government until it could be drowned in a bathtub. Seemingly they didn't care that thousands of Americans would drown in the process.
Even as Katrina refugees are being faced with eviction from their trailers by a government that STILL doesn't give a shit about them, one tiny hopeful milestone has been reached...and we can help expand that tiny glimmer of hope. From Habitat for Humanity:
Habitat for Humanity reaches a milestone in the hurricane-recovery effort with the construction of its 500th hurricane-recovery home along the Gulf Coast.
Just months ago, Habitat for Humanity and the Operation Home Delivery program marked the anniversaries of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, a commemoration that acknowledged the historic storms’ destruction and looked ahead with hope to continued progress along the Gulf Coast. Now, Habitat has reached a significant construction milestone in that recovery effort: This week, the walls were raised on Habitat’s 500th hurricane-recovery home, just outside Mobile, Ala.
Charity | Gulf Coast | Hurricane Katrina | recovery | wetlands | Alabama | Ducks Unlimited | Gulf Coast | Habitat for Humanity | Mississippi






















