Monday, March 15, 2010

The Loss of New Orleans Wasn't Just a Tragedy. It Was a Plan. (?)
~Jonathan Rauch, TheAtlantic

~Editilla's Brain in a Chinese Finger Trap~
We are still working on this one. If this were a fly-by-UFO outfit like Alex*Jones we'd just leave it under da'rug if you know what I mean. But we are just one of bazillions who take The Atlantic seriously for the most part. Thoughts? "Bazillion" is the number of times/sec one can say Oh Shit! while running from Godzilla.

Ivor van Heerden on Youtube! Please show our support by viewing his video up the tubes!
~Make sure to Rate the Video and Leave Comments! The more Views, then the higher the video moves on the Youtubes and the more exposure it will grow.

Rebuilding coast requires hard choices~Tulane Institute on Water Resources Law & Policy
~Any shot this city has at reclaiming that greatness will also have to be rooted in the realities of re-establishing a sustainable landscape for New Orleans and the surrounding communities. The key element in achieving this is the Mississippi River, or more precisely using the waters, nutrients and sediments of that river to maintain and enhance our rapidly disappearing coastal wetlands. Everyone knows this and everyone knows this is urgent. The state knows it, the Army Corps of Engineers knows it and Congress and the White House know it. They have all said so in many ways (you can look it up). We have all said it many times and in many ways. But it isn't happening. Not even close.

Cruising in MS on the Capt Pete
~Gulf Restoration Network


Climate Change Isn't Just About Energy; It's About National Priorities~Christine Shearer
~Many disaster management programs and policies began with the requirement of post-disaster mitigation efforts in exchange for federal aid. That is, a community would receive federal government assistance if it adopted measures to prepare for and thus lessen damage from similar future events.
As local boards moved toward mitigation, however, such as requiring more wetlands in coastal regions to buffer hurricanes and limiting development in flood-prone areas, private developers began decrying such regulations as an unconstitutional taking of their property value. This eventually led to 1992's Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, a Supreme Court case that found mitigation requirements lessening a property's value are unconstitutional, unless not instituting such requirements would create a public nuisance.
In other words, providing for the public interest is not enough, and local planning boards began backing off mitigation measures.
{Editilla calls this Shit In One Hand, Half-A-Dozen In The Other.}
Hurricane Katrina took this cashing in on disaster funds to whole new levels, as still-habitable low-cost and public housing units were torn down for post-disaster gentrification projects, leaving hundreds of thousands of former Gulf Coast residents permanently displaced. This looting of the federal treasury during an emergency event by private developers and contractors, while the poor and working classes are left in a truly laissez-faire nightmare, is what author Naomi Klein refers to as disaster capitalism.

Saving U.S. Water and Sewer Systems Would Be Costly
~Charles Duhig


Important Historical Paper from 1927 on the Mississippi Valley ecosystems ~Watershed NOLA
~Editilla Ho'tellas~For fun reading, please click our Flag.

Flood preparations continue as Iowa warily watches weather
~Des Moines Register


Flood threat increasing on Missouri River

The Louisiana Health Care Quality Forum awarded over $10 M dollars from Stimulus ~BBuzz

New Orleans RTA and Veolia Transportation Receive Grant of $45 M for Streetcar Expansion

Developers Pouring Money into Washington to Influence Transportation Spending ~Planetizen

Developer Stewart Juneau requests “temporary suspension” of Municipal Auditorium deal
~Kevin Allman, Gambit


Divergent views on N.O. schools ~Kevin McGill

Additional public meetings scheduled to discuss New Orleans' Master Plan

Natural-gas development brings mixed impacts
~Katherine Schmidt


Slabbed by Monday

MEMA Says Funds Were Not Misspent

N-Map in Mississippi
~New Media Advocacy Project


Three and Half Days Until New Orleans!!!~The Thomas Society
~"Hey Thomasites, So, thirteen atheists and tweleve Christians drive down to New Orleans..."

New Orleans spring garden show

AT&T conducting Network Disaster Recovery drill in N.O.

SmartSynch Conference 2010

Louisiana Public Health Association 2010 Conference

Association of Dental Implant Auxiliaries (ADIA), New Orleans April 22-24~"Implants by day and good times on Bourbon Street by night – what are you waiting for?"
Editilla jus'gone let Y'all chew on that one for a moment.

7th Annual N.O. Int'l Human Rights Film Festival opens
~Louisiana Weekly


Pics of recent Lens Launch ~Humid Beings
~Editilla Crowtellas'n'Congratulatas~Thanks Youz!
We are very proud of our New Heroleros at The Lens on their formal Launching. Our city has already began to come together, due in no small measure to the hard work of the people behind The Lens. Adding to the dogged excellent coverage by Gambit, The Focus of The Lens' real investigative reporting steps in to fill other breaches. Extra! Extra! Readallaboutit!

How Norman Mailer Shaped John Buffalo Mailer (Part II)
~Mark Corker


Hank III and Assjack Spread Hell's Evil in New Orleans
~Metal Underground


Loyola hosts symposium on songwriting

Foburg wraps up a successful, exhausting and enjoyable indie music weekend
~NewOrleans.com

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