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Houston, Almost a Full Year Later, You’ve Still Got a Problem

July 11th, 2006 at 8:28 am by Preston Taylor Holmes

(via The Interdictor)

Houston officials getting tired of their newly-imported layabout classes.

HOUSTON – In the middle of a Tuesday afternoon, Katrina evacuee Samuel Smith sits on a donated futon and watches a borrowed television in a subsidized apartment the Federal Emergency Management Agency has provided for six months. The unemployed truck driver just started looking for work.

Okay. Let’s set aside the fact that this lazy ass has just started looking for work and point out that there is a massive driver shortage in the trucking industry. Drivers are in the drivers’ seat when it comes to labor supply and demand these days. But, this is the same mentality that had people wading through waist-deep water asking “why isn’t my government saving me?” Just sit on your futon and watch your stories, Samuel, and maybe they’ll let you take it with you when you’re finally evicted.

“Time has long since passed for the able-bodied people from Louisiana to either find a job, return to somewhere in Louisiana or become Houstonians,” said Culberson, whose district neighbors the city’s southwest pocket where many of 150,000 Hurricane Katrina evacuees settled in Houston.

“You have to make an effort not to have a job in Houston,” he said.

Labor analysts tend to agree.

But jobless evacuees, keenly aware that Houston is feeling far less compassionate than it was 10 months ago, insist that finding work in the nation’s fourth-largest city isn’t as simple as Houston’s 5 percent unemployment rate might suggest.

They didn’t have jobs in New Orleans, why would they have them in Houston? And for those evacuees who don’t wind up in jail, perhaps they could just move from municipality to municipality, playing the Katrina card, which should still be good at least until the end of hurricane season.

The spotlight on unemployed evacuees intensified in May. Houston Mayor Bill White, standing beside newly re-elected New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, said evacuees could answer Nagin’s plea to return home, or they were welcome to stay in Houston — if they got jobs.

White said he wanted refugees “looking for work wherever they can find work,” which city officials say shouldn’t be a problem given a healthy local economy and about 64,000 new jobs added in the past year.

Job counselor Ayodele Ogunye of WorkSource, the city’s employment assistance program, said jobless evacuees complain about the overwhelming bus and rail systems that make navigation difficult, or the bureaucratic holdups like professional licenses that are invalid in Texas.

But some of it, Ogunye said, is in their heads.

The fear of a new hurricane season worried one of her clients so much that “it was like it set her back 10 months.” Others don’t know how to market themselves or lack confidence, which Ogunye thinks is traced to feelings of isolation in the “evacuee” corner of their apartment complexes, where no one socializes like their lifelong neighbors in New Orleans.

“I cannot help to wonder if (the unemployment) has anything to do with the uniqueness of the community,” Ogunye said. “It seems like some have never had to make choices or decide for themselves.”

Uniqueness. Now there’s a politically correct word for it. Nicely done, Ogunye, nicely done.


One Response to “Houston, Almost a Full Year Later, You’ve Still Got a Problem”

  1. Shocked! Says:

    I recall being dumbstruck when I heard they were giving these walking-drains-on-the-system debit cards to do with as they wished. I mean, who in their right mind thought that $2,000 would go to first, last and security? Booze, bling and PS2 was more like it. Sickening.

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