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Shaun Donovan

Shaun Donovan

Posted: August 25, 2010 05:21 PM

This piece originally appeared in The White House Blog.

Five years ago, one of the most destructive natural disasters in our nation's history hit the Gulf Coast. When they hit the coasts of Louisiana and Mississippi, Hurricanes Katrina and Rita took thousands of lives, displaced millions of residents, wiped out hundreds of square miles of coastal land, and inflicted major damage to nearly 300,000 homes.

A half-decade later, Gulf Coast residents are still trying to pick up the pieces. Since taking office in January 2009, the Obama Administration has been working hard to ensure residents are given the tools they need to recover from the hurricanes and rebuild their lives and communities. As a result, $2.43 billion in public assistance funds for recovery that had been stalled for years has been obligated since the beginning of the Administration, with President Obama's Recovery Act providing billions more.

But the Obama Administration is committed to doing things differently in the Gulf - in two fundamental ways. First, we believe that government should stand with the residents of the Gulf Coast, not in their way. That means cutting through the red tape.

Secondly, we are not only helping the Gulf Coast recover from disaster - but working to revitalize the region and build it back better and stronger.

Since becoming HUD Secretary, I have had the privilege and experience of visiting the Gulf Coast region five times to see the challenges and progress for myself. From my first visit with Secretary Napolitano where we announced millions of dollars in funding to stimulate long term recovery, to volunteering with the St. Bernard Project to help rebuild the homes of two elderly families, it has been extremely important to see the progress we are making and the work that still lies ahead firsthand.

As I prepare to make my sixth trip this week on the 5th Anniversary of the storm, I wanted to share with you some of HUD's accomplishments so far:

  • HUD's work in the Obama Administration began with the Disaster Housing Assistance Program (DHAP). Shortly after President Obama's inauguration, I discovered that thousands of families who received assistance through DHAP would see that assistance come to an end without having found permanent housing. Together with our partners in the Administration, we extended this assistance for an additional six months -- allowing displaced families more time to transition to self-sufficiency. By partnering with nearly 350 public housing agencies across the country, we were able to provide temporary housing to over 30,000 families displaced from their homes by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Today every DHAP family is accounted for - having already made the transition to permanent housing or well on their way to doing so.
  • HUD has also been able to assist displaced Gulf Coast residents through the Homelessness Prevention and Rapid Re-Housing Program (HPRP) under President Obama's Recovery Act. Under this program, states and communities received grants to help prevent homelessness and provide rapid re-housing assistance to those who are already homeless. Louisiana has received13.5 billion in funding under HPRP, and Mississippi has received13.3 billion.
  • We have also helped stabilize Gulf Coast communities suffering from foreclosures and abandonment. As part of the 2008 Housing and Economic Recovery Act, Mississippi received nearly46.3 million under the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP), while Louisiana received39 million, with an additional29.7 million competitively awarded to the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority consortium. Indeed, with HUD strongly encouraging local non-profit organizations to help the city target their funds more effectively through technical assistance, Mayor Landrieu has made tremendous progress helping New Orleans cut through the red tape and ensure these funds are helping the neighborhoods that need it most.
  • We are also working to rebuild a stronger and more ethical housing authority in New Orleans. I recently appointed a new leadership team to the Housing Authority of New Orleans (HANO), led by David Gilmore. Bringing 40 years of public housing experience, Mr. Gilmore and his team are working to develop new affordable housing in New Orleans, fostering closer relationships with social service providers and expediting assistance to lower income families. At the same time, he is working to ensure that public housing is not only a place for families to find safe, affordable housing but also provides opportunities for those who live there - helping more than 800 New Orleans residents find work.

These accomplishments are just the beginning for a Gulf Coast region still struggling to regain its footing. But as long as we continue to cut through the red tape, listen to the voices of people on the ground and get help to families and neighborhoods that need it most, I have no doubt we will continue to produce results and help the families of the Gulf Coast move from recovery to revitalization.

Shaun Donovan is Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

 
 
 
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05:32 PM on 08/26/2010
uh huh.
11:38 AM on 08/26/2010
Sounds like more PR spin. I don't hear Louisianan's praising the progress you say this administration has made. On the heels of the BP "spill," it was clear that this administration was aiding and abetting BP in covering up the actual damage with "happy talk." For instance, NOAA releasing a "study" saying 3/4 of the oil was recovered. That was a load of crap, and demonstrates this administrations penchant for PR spinning rather than facing reality. Sort of like Republicans, who embrace ignorance and fantasy. Not very hopey changey.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jcaunter
Profile: schizoid, INTJ
07:36 AM on 08/26/2010
Committed to doing things differently eh? You mean that Obama is committed to blacking out the media and covering up as much damage from the spill as possible to protect BP and Larry Fink's Blackstone fund, right?

Too bad that there a lot of the "professional left" "who need to be drug tested" out here who are watching the Administration like a hawk and writing down every sell out in our notes.
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Spin Sniper
02:18 AM on 08/26/2010
America appreciates your recovery efforts and will express that appreciation in November, Mr. Donovan.

Housing and Urban Development has never been is such a fine state as it finds itself now and we have you and your party bosses to thank for it. The comfort of a nation's grateful embrace is but a small token of the eternal gratitude for a job well done which will be your legacy for generations to come.
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01:10 AM on 08/26/2010
using natural wetlands to abate waves? housing on stilts with boat docks for those that insist on building in same place? improving and fortifying barriers?
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MelanieMatthias
I am President Obama's biggest fan!
10:30 PM on 08/25/2010
I have no doubt that you and President Obama are doing all you can to help the area, I just wish with all my heart that the MSM would report the good stories and the truth. Very few will ever know the good you are doing. It is sad.
Thank you for helping, keep up the good work!
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rtx47
08:37 PM on 08/25/2010
America needs to invest in itself ... in the right way.

Like an individual in debt, the person can either borrow more to buy a car to go to work (which is a wise thing) OR the individual can borrow and spend to drown his sorrow and mis-fortune on alcohol to tide him over his depression (a stupid thing).

We as a nation have been doing a lot of stupid things with borrowed money since President Ronald Reagan started borrowing and building-up our federal debt.

We all have been doing somethings very similar as our govt. at a personal level.