Wow, this is a topic I'm not sure on...so I'm going to sponge off of DS&T for some reasoning...
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22344261/
Turns out that some housing projects in New Orleans are set for demolition. For those not in the know, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD") provides housing in the form of low income housing..what most simply call 'projects." In most big cities and metro areas, these projects are typical US ghettos. Since Katrina devastated most of the neighborhoods and communities of New Orleans, the city (and HUD) have decided to demolish the government housing 'projects.'
This demolition is an obviously hostile decision for the previous occupants of the projects slated for demolition and is being met bitterly from the pre-Katrina project occupants and others in the area who think it's unfair. There were riots recently and attempts to sway the city council to not support the demolition.
HUD and the city are hoping to implement some mixed housing supportive of mixed income dwellers.
My opinion is hard to make because:
1) I think the project dwellers need a home..preferably something similar to what they had at the least.
2) I also am ok with the mixed income developments, but they won't accomodate the masses that lived in the project housing, and the income limits will not stretch as low as they did previously.
3) I'm also not supportive of subsidizing housing when 99% of those receiving do nothing to improve their plight, therefore sitting on their asses taking free hand outs.
4) But where will they go? Will they just be homeless in NOLA, will they be refugees in neighboring cities and states?
Who is to say what it should be? I believe since it's government owned, they do have the right to do what they wish. I also think the government has the responsibility to house people.
Very tough call. Rebuild the ghetto? or Rebuild as a mixed income community running the lowest income people out of town or to homelessness.
**notice I don't use race in this situation because I don't give credit to the races that traditionally don't make high incomes because there's no reason they can't do better; ie., I believe it's those low income races that have a "culture" to persist in low income environments**
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22344261/
Turns out that some housing projects in New Orleans are set for demolition. For those not in the know, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD") provides housing in the form of low income housing..what most simply call 'projects." In most big cities and metro areas, these projects are typical US ghettos. Since Katrina devastated most of the neighborhoods and communities of New Orleans, the city (and HUD) have decided to demolish the government housing 'projects.'
This demolition is an obviously hostile decision for the previous occupants of the projects slated for demolition and is being met bitterly from the pre-Katrina project occupants and others in the area who think it's unfair. There were riots recently and attempts to sway the city council to not support the demolition.
HUD and the city are hoping to implement some mixed housing supportive of mixed income dwellers.
My opinion is hard to make because:
1) I think the project dwellers need a home..preferably something similar to what they had at the least.
2) I also am ok with the mixed income developments, but they won't accomodate the masses that lived in the project housing, and the income limits will not stretch as low as they did previously.
3) I'm also not supportive of subsidizing housing when 99% of those receiving do nothing to improve their plight, therefore sitting on their asses taking free hand outs.
4) But where will they go? Will they just be homeless in NOLA, will they be refugees in neighboring cities and states?
Who is to say what it should be? I believe since it's government owned, they do have the right to do what they wish. I also think the government has the responsibility to house people.
Very tough call. Rebuild the ghetto? or Rebuild as a mixed income community running the lowest income people out of town or to homelessness.
**notice I don't use race in this situation because I don't give credit to the races that traditionally don't make high incomes because there's no reason they can't do better; ie., I believe it's those low income races that have a "culture" to persist in low income environments**
Last edited by IRONCHEF (2007-12-20 14:08:44)