After the Deluge: Labor and Community Seek to Rebuild and Renew
by Larry Dorman, Council 4 AFSCME, NewOrleansLaborMedia Project Shawn Smith: “The union is a blessing to me.” The moods of post-Katrina New Orleans are many and oft-changing: Anger. Despair. Defiance . And, yes, optimism.Shawn Smith has experienced this dizzying array of mood shifts. Right now, standing outside the Ironworkers Union Training Facility in New Orleans , he feels blessed. You see, Shawn Smith is about to become a union man. Smith and 12 fellow city residents are minutes away from graduating the Gulf Coast Construction Career Center Pre-Apprenticeship Program. And he cannot hide his excitement. “I feel so overjoyed. I’m happy to be part of something,” he reflected. “All my life I’ve been in and out of jail. I didn’t think there was any opportunity out there.” The Gulf Coast Construction Career Center provides fast-track training to men and women like Smith so they can join the building and construction trades. In the aftermath of Katrina, labor unions are eager to work with responsible contractors to rebuild the Gulf Coast using trained workers and paying them a decent wage. Smith will soon be employed as an apprentice boilermaker and eventually will move up the ladder to journeyman status. All of which translates into a living wage with health care and retirement security, along with continuous skill training. Smith could not have envisioned such possibilities in August 2005, when Katrina forced him to retreat with thousands of displaced New Orleaneans to the Louisiana Superdome, where the air conditioning failed and the bathroom facilities were backed up. But the future looks infinitely brighter for Smith and his fellow union apprentices. “The union has been a blessing to me,” Smith says. “I’m just so overwhelmed. I have a real positive outlook on life right now. Nothing can deter me.”
The 58-year-old Jasper’s voice rises and falls with a biblical fervor as she stands outside a 75-year-old public housing project called the St. Bernard Housing Development. “I am a former resident of St. Bernard. My mother and father moved here in 1949, when I was 6 months old,” she says, pointing to a row of solidly constructed brick homes and neatly manicured lawns.When Katrina struck and the levees broke, Jasper and thousands of public housing dwellers were herded like cattle throughout Louisiana and neighboring states. Now they want their homes back. But the politicians, the government agencies and the developers have other ideas. They want to demolish St. Bernard as part of a vast redevelopment vision that includes a PGA golf course – but no affordable housing. So the politicians, the government agencies and the developers have surrounded St. Bernard with a chain link fence topped by barbed-wire. And they’ve told hard-working, God-fearing people like Sharon Jasper to stay the hell out. “Our families have been displaced all over the United States. Bring them back, then let’s talk about redevelopment,” Jasper argues. Jasper is fighting back. She spearheads a tenant association that is working with the AFL-CIO’s Gulf Coast Revitalization Program to convince local authorities to rehabilitate rather than annihilate public housing stock. “We, the poor working class, are the people who helped build this city,” Jasper says, jabbing her finger into the air, as if she were about to pull down the menacing barbed wire barrier. “We have a right to return. This is our home.”
With his ruddy looks and thick Boston accent, Tom O'Malley is always prepared for the inevitable question.
Read more about the GCCCC at the New Orleans Media Project: Rebuilding New Orleans--One House at a Time, One Construction Worker at a Time
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