Organizational idea: RECEDE
Not to toss the $42 million question and idea out with the bathwater (just putting it aside in the face of a more immediate disaster), here's an idea. I do want to bounce it off of people, and see what kind of support I get.
WHEREAS Hurricane Katrina displaced over half a million people, and
WHEREAS 20,000 of them are to stay at the Astrodome until the floodwaters recede, and
WHEREAS New Orleans may not be inhabitable for a long time, and
WHEREAS the majority of the people at the Astrodome are people who weren't necessarily on their feet before the hurricane, and
WHEREAS we, fortunately, are on our feet, educated, and know how to operate in America such that we can stay on our feet,
we have a unique opportunity. To offer a clean slate to those affected by Hurricane Katrina--those who either weren't on their feet or were barely on their feet before. How? By taking families or individuals into our homes, sharing our knowledge and money, and helping them get going again. This is, of course, just the hurricane survivors who want to do this.
And knowledge is the key to this. It's knowledge that keeps us on our feet (along with a lot of luck). And it's knowledge--knowledge about financial planning, saving, continuous sources of income (as opposed to quick fixes)--that we can share with an individual we stay with.
Yes, money is important here, as well. And the willingness to have someone from a completely different socioeconomic stratus, live with you.
It's something I'd like to do, I think. And I bet others across the country would be willing to, as well. So here's what the nonprofit organization (Recede--e.g. having the floodwaters, as well as poverty and lack of education recede) would do.
1) Encourage people willing to take in a hurricane survivor (people on their feet, or "feet") to fly to Houston and visit the Astrodome, at their own expense. Have them hang out there for a couple of days and talk to people--see who they identify with and wouldn't mind having in their homes. This is all at the personal expense of the "feet."
2) If they do decide to invite a hurricane survivor ("roommate") to stay with them, they register with Recede, and Recede arranges for the roommate's flight back to the feet's hometown (donation by Continental?).
3) The feet and the roommates go home. Recede provides the feet with a startup checklist (ideas to start with).
4) Most important part: Recede has an evaluation process whereby the roommates and feet report on their progress weekly.
5) At some point, the roommates move out and the feet close the Recede process.
I know there would have to be some process that would address the scenario where the roommates and feet don't get along, and another one that would decide if it's time to quit on the Recede plan--this is just a rough initial stab.
And how is this different from other organizations like HurricaneHousing.org? This is designed to get people on their feet--not just provide housing. And the Recede plan would be designed to ensure that.
Whaddaya think? Would any of you be interested in being "feet" if this option were available?
4 Comments:
I can't swing the "feet" role right now, but I'd be interested in supporting in any other way.
One thing: is it somewhat insulting to assume that evacuees need life skills training? While the majority of America's impressive 0% savings rate is from those who could but don't, it doesn't mean the others lack knowledge. I like the idea, but just consider how it's presented - accepting charity can be a humbling experience (some would call it humiliating).
Well, I'm not so sure about taking people into my house, although I think integration into the community is a good idea. With that said, the courts already tried to create narrowly tailored programs of integration (read: desegregation) beginning in 1955; however, that spawned the phenomenon of "white flight" which mimicked and exacerbated the problem anyway, only to be chipped away at by "regentrification" over which some serious and unaddressed due process problems still hover.
Better than just helping the victims of Katrina, we need to help everyone. We need to divorce ourselves from lauded and visible exceptionalism for victims of disaster (e.g.: 9/11 survivors, Katrina survivors)and simply address problems that plague all of society (e.g.: indifference to terrorist threats since 1972, indifference to failing education system and dwindling tax base). If we address these problems as they form, or as they loom over the distant horizon, we save money, save livelihoods, and save lives. The medical analogue for squeamish male readers - colonoscopy now, or painful, irreversible course of terminal cancer in the not too distant future? We've got to make the hard choices that we'd like to forgo some dividends now, if we want to have a larger taxable capital gain when we cash in later. The tax analogue - immediate dividends are taxable at the higher ordinary income rate; capital gains when you cash in are taxed at a much lower rate. Which would you prefer?
http://www.thewbalchannel.com/health/4941254/detail.html
"He also encouraged residents to adopt evacuee families."
this "roomate" thing is going on already... though no scheduled weekly checkups or anything like that.
and i agree with charles... somewhat insulting to do that.
See this article....
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/08/opinion/08brooks.html?ex=1126843200&en=486733bc947cee83&ei=5070&emc=eta1
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