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Written by CAIN BURDEAU, Associated Press Writer CAIN BURDEAU, Associated Press Writer
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Category: News News
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Published: 20 December 2007 20 December 2007
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Last Updated: 20 December 2007 20 December 2007
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Created: 20 December 2007 20 December 2007
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THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A raucous debate over the shortage of cheap housing
and the demolition of 4,500 public units is sweeping the city and
likely to become more intense.
Protesters planned to disrupt a meeting Thursday of the City Council,
where members were expected to approve demolishing dozens of buildings
- a move that would open racial and class divisions. People entering
the council chamber had to pass through metal detectors and handbags
were being searched.
The City Council vote is a critical moment in a protracted fight
between the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and
residents, activists and preservationists.
HUD wants to demolish the buildings, most of them damaged by Hurricane
Katrina, so developers can take advantage of tax credits and build new
mixed-income neighborhoods.
The council's approval of the demolition is required under the city's charter.
HUD says the redevelopment, in the works before Katrina hit, will mark
an end to the city's failed public housing experiment that lumped the
poor into crime-ridden complexes and marooned them outside the life of
the rest of the city.
But critics say the plan will shrink the stock of cheap housing at a
time when housing is scarce and drive poor blacks out of the city. They
also say the buildings are, contrary to popular opinion, mostly
handsome brick structures that will outlast anything HUD builds in
their place.
By Wednesday, opponents of demolition appeared resigned to a council
vote that would go against their wishes, and were accusing council
members of discriminating against blacks.
A news release from the Coalition to Stop the Demolition, one of
several groups organizing protesters, characterized the pending action
as a ``rubber stamp'' at a ``sham meeting.''
``It is beyond callous, and can only be seen as malicious
discrimination. It is an unabashed attempt to eliminate the black
population of New Orleans,'' said Kali Akuno, an organizer with the
group.
A recent shake-up on the seven-member City Council turned it into a
majority white chamber for the first time since the 1980s, a shift that
will certainly make the vote even more racially charged.
Three of the council's white members were quick to say they supported
the tear-down plan, while the council's three black members were
hesitant about expressing their intentions.
One black member, Cynthia Hedge Morrell, issued a statement late
Wednesday in favor of demolitions. The fourth white member, Council
President Arnie Fielkow, has been careful to tread the middle ground,
but a spokeswoman said Thursday he supports demolition.
``It's not racist and it's truly not a done deal behind the scenes,''
said Jacquelyn Brechtel Clarkson, a newly elected
councilmember-at-large, about the council's pending vote.
Besides opening fissures between whites and blacks, the clash has divided along political party lines.
Many Democrats, including presidential hopefuls Barack Obama and John
Edwards, have said they would like the Bush administration to stop the
demolitions. Louisiana's Democratic senator, Mary Landrieu, has also
supported overhauling the redevelopment plan.
By contrast, Republicans have come out in favor of demolition. On
Wednesday, Sen. David Vitter and three Republican congressman wrote a
letter to a Senate committee considering the redevelopment plan, saying
it needs to be left alone because overhauling it would delay and even
derail redevelopment.
``Public housing in New Orleans has for many decades served almost no
other purpose than to warehouse the city's poor and disenfranchised,''
the letter said. ``That generations of our fellow citizens were allowed
to live in government-operated and sanctioned slums is offensive and
intolerable.''
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On the Net:
http://www.nocitycouncil.com
http://www.defendneworleanspublichousing.org