Almost a year after Hurricane Katrina caused the countrys largest mass
migration since the Dust Bowl, as many as 150,000 evacuees still live in
this city, and increasingly many are indicating that they no longer plan
to go home.
To many Houstonians, that s overstaying the welcome.
Houstons homicide rate has shot up 18% since the storm, and police
statistics show that one in every five homicides in the city involves a
Katrina evacuee as suspect, victim or both.
More than 30,000 evacuee families in Houston still live in
government-subsidized housing, and a Zogby International survey
sponsored by the city found that three-fourths of the adults receiving
housing help were not working, raising questions about how they will
survive when federal aid runs out.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry and Houston Mayor Bill White opened their doors to
neighbors needing shelter in the nightmarish aftermath of the storm that
devastated New Orleans and much of the Gulf Coast.
But privately, Texas leaders quickly began to fret that the bedraggled
masses that accepted their invitation were overwhelming the state. In
December, White declared that "Houston is full" after more than 250,000
evacuees, including hundreds of families rescued from the fetid
Louisiana Superdome, filled the city s housing to the brim.
White and other civic leaders remain committed to helping hurricane
victims rebuild their lives, and become Texans if they choose. But in
the crowded, apartment-lined neighborhoods here where most evacuees
wound up, the famous Texas hospitality is wearing thin. Many residents
are fed up with rising crime, and some are upset that evacuees could end
up being a financial drain on the city.
"It s time for them to go home," said Victoria Palacios, the manager of
an EZ Loan store in southwest Houston that has been held up four times
in the last year, crimes she is convinced evacuees committed because of
the distinct accents of the robbers. "Ever since they came here, weve
been getting robbed."
The challenges facing Houston as Katrinas Aug. 29 anniversary draws
near illustrate the lasting imprint that the storm left throughout the
South. Estimates vary, but as many as half a million people remain
scattered far from their former homes in Mississippi and Louisiana.
A Gallup Organization survey sponsored by the Texas Health and Human
Services Commission, due to be released soon, found that 251,000
evacuees still live in the state. Of adults, 59% were unemployed, and
54% were still receiving housing subsidies. Eighty-one percent were
African American, and 61% of the households had earned less than $20,000
a year before Katrina.
Texas officials estimated that the state had housed as many as 400,000
evacuees from hurricanes Katrina and Rita, which lashed the Gulf Coast
on Sept. 24.
The federal government is reimbursing much of the cost Texas is
incurring, and last week, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development announced that it would provide an additional $429 million
in emergency funding.
But Texas officials are concerned that the lingering presence of so many
needy people will strain services such as mental health programs, which
are in high demand among still-traumatized evacuees.
In Houston, two-thirds of evacuees receiving housing assistance planned
to stay, the Zogby Poll found. City leaders are planning for a future
that assumes many of them will.
"People were waiting and hoping the situation would change in New
Orleans, but many are realizing they may be here for a while," said
Cindy Gabriel, a spokeswoman for Houstons Joint Hurricane Housing Task
Force. "Were looking at them as Houstonians at this point."
Houston is considering adding two seats to the City Council to better
represent the augmented population, which has surpassed 2.1 million
people, according to some estimates.
Houston Police Chief Harold L. Hurtt is pushing to hire 400 additional
officers to deal with the citys evacuee-fueled crime wave.
In the meantime, police officers are routinely working overtime shifts
to increase patrols on the citys most dangerous streets.
"Weve had some out-and-out criminals coming over here" from New
Orleans, said Capt. Dale Brown, who heads the Houston Police
Departments homicide division. "Most evacuees are clearly law abiding.
But there is no getting around the fact that some of these people were
committing violent crimes in Louisiana, and they are committing them here."
Homicides involving Katrina evacuees continue to be common. Earlier this
month, for example, Rolando Rivas, 64, was plunking quarters into a
self-service car wash early in the morning when four young men pulled a
pistol on him and demanded his money. He resisted, and was fatally shot.
Police later found the murder weapon on a 16-year-old near the same car
wash. The gun had been stolen in New Orleans. Three teenage evacuees
from New Orleans have been arrested.
(Por Miguel Bustillo,
Los Angeles Times, 21/08/2006)