Housing for Storm’s Evacuees Lagging Far Behind U.S. Goals

WASHINGTON, Sept. 29 – After Hurricane Katrina left hundreds of thousands of people homeless, the Federal Emergency Management Agency signed contracts for more than $2 billion in temporary housing, including more than 120,000 trailers and mobile homes. But the agency has placed just 109 Louisiana families in those homes.

A month after the disaster, the federal government’s temporary housing effort is stumbling.

The inspector general for the Department of Homeland Security said Wednesday that FEMA was freezing many orders for trailers, although the agency disputes that. Members of Congress, complaining that a $236 million deal to lease three ships to house evacuees was far too expensive, are calling for an investigation. And under an alternative FEMA program to give victims cash to find their own housing, 332,000 households have been approved in just a week.
nytimes.com

Come on, this is not incompetence, it’s deliberate. Keep people in a desperate situation with NOTHING waiting long enough, and they’ll settle for $2000. Sick.

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