Sierra Club Home Page   Environmental Update   My Backyard
chapter button
Explore, enjoy and protect the planet
Click here to visit the Member Center.         
Search
Take Action
Get Outdoors
Join or Give
Inside Sierra Club
Press Room
Politics & Issues
Sierra Magazine
Sierra Club Books
Apparel and Other Merchandise
Contact Us

Join the Sierra ClubWhy become a member? Explore, Enjoy and Protect

Backtrack
Pressroom Main
In This Section
News Releases
News Releases: Subscribe
Currents: Bringing You the Environmental Buzz
RAW: Uncooked Truth, Beyond Belief
Multimedia
Contact the Media Team
Sierra Club Leader Bios
Sierra Club Radio

Get The Sierra Club Insider
Environmental news, green living tips, and ways to take action: Subscribe to the Sierra Club Insider!

Subscribe!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
15 , 2005
CONTACT:
Eric Antebi 415-977-5747
David Willett 202-675-6698

SEVEN PRINCIPLES FOR REBUILDING THE GULF COAST

Statement by Carl Pope, Sierra Club Executive Director

Tonight President Bush will be addressing the nation to share his administration's vision for rebuilding New Orleans and the other Gulf Coast communities that have suffered in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. It is the first of many opportunities for our government to rebuild trust with people who feel that this emergency was mismanaged. Given the enormity of the task ahead, it is vital that the rebuilding process adhere to some common principles to ensure that the effort is not only efficient but also safe, just, and fair.

I. PUT PEOPLE FIRST

The people who were hurt, suffered and were displaced must come first. The region should be rebuilt to meet their needs, and provide them with secure, prosperous and dignified lives. All must be welcomed back if they choose to return.

II. INVEST IN THE LOCAL WORKFORCE AND ECONOMY

Local workers and local businesses must be partners in the rebuilding. The disaster should not be used to drive down wages or salaries. Arguments of "efficiency" should not be used to channel the benefits of rebuilding to outside mega-firms. Existing prevailing wage, equal opportunity and small business safety nets should be respected, not shredded. In addition, workers involved in the clean up, rebuilding and restart of industry must be adequately protected.

III. DON'T SACRIFICE HEALTH AND SAFETY FOR SPEED

The community must be safe and healthy for those who are going to live and work there. While speed is of the essence for the immediate draining and restoration of basic infrastructure, scientists -- not politicians or bureaucrats -- must be allowed to determine what it will take to make the cleanup and rebuilding safe for residents, including children, the elderly, and those at particular risk from toxins. In addition, workers must be involved in the clean up, rebuilding and restart must adequately protected.

IV. REBUILD SMARTER AND BETTER

The disaster revealed the many mistakes made in the development of New Orleans and other Gulf Coast communities over the last half century and more. In rebuilding, the lessons of these failures must be learned. Adequate transit must be provided; homes, buildings, and sewage systems designed to withstand future storms; and the latest building and energy conservation technologies adopted. There's also a need to disarm time bombs that were not triggered by Katrina but still pose a threat in the future, including inadequate levees, substandard buildings, and uncleaned toxic waste dumps.

V. PROMOTE RESPONSIBILITY TO THE COMMON GOOD

Those whose practices put others at risk must not be allowed to repeat them. Oil and gas operations that destroyed protective barrier wetlands; floating casinos that threatened shoreline communities when the storm surge hit; the storage and disposal of toxic materials in flood-plains and wetlands; shoddy construction practices; inadequate drainage requirements -- all of these must be firmly and resolutely ended.

VI. REPAIR THE INEQUITIES OF THE PAST

This disaster made it clear that nature is the great equalizer and knows no race or class and that our emergency response mechanisms are often discriminatory, with dire consequences for minority and low-income communities. Our government needs to ensure that future emergency plans protect everyone, regardless of race and class. It must also ensure that the rebuilding lifts up everyone equally and does not simply restore past injustices.

VII. UPHOLD A MODEL OF DEMOCRACY

The people of the Gulf Coast must be allowed to oversee and control the reconstruction and ensure that these principles are respected. Communities and workers that are not involved in decisions will be more exposed and vulnerable to future risks. Transparency, accountability and public control are the most important key to success.

***

For a list of Sierra Club experts on environmental implications of Hurricane Katrina, visit: http:

//www.sierraclub.org/pressroom/releases/pr2005-09-02.asp

In addition, the following other organizations are excellent resources for social, labor, housing, and civil rights issues addressed in the statement above. (Note: All of these organizations has a strong presence in the impacted region and are involved in the recovery effort.)

Worker safety and prevailing wages-

AFL-CIO, Contact Lane Windham, 202-637-5018

United Steelworkers, Contact Mike Wright 412-562-2580

Housing, civil rights and other issues affecting low-income and minority populations-

ACORN, Contact Tanya Harris, 225-773-6802

Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, Contact Mistique Cano, 202-263-2882

 

###

Printer-friendly version of this page