Text Only
Search

 
Louisiana Communities Offer Help to New Orleans Refugees


01 September 2005
Flakus report - Download 511k - Download (Real) audio clip
Flakus report - Download 511k - Listen (Real) audio clip

Thousands of people from New Orleans and other areas of southern Louisiana devastated by Hurricane Katrina continue to stream out of the area seeking shelter. Hotels are completely booked from Houston, Texas to western Alabama and many of the displaced are checking into shelters established by charitable groups and government agencies.

Shelter entrance in Lafayette, Louisiana
Shelter entrance in Lafayette, Louisiana
Buses full of refugees from New Orleans pull up continually at the Cajun Dome stadium in Lafayette, about 200 kilometers northwest of New Orleans. Many of the people look tired and disoriented. Local police, medical personnel and area volunteers greet them and assign them a place to rest inside.

"As they appear here, we have several personnel that are set up to handle different aspects of the operation," said Gregory Davis, director of the Cajun Dome, who is overseeing the operation. "We have a medical clinic and medical triage. We have entertainment for the kids. We have public schools, our system that is here now registering kids to bring them to and from classes, we have a food operation here. So it is like a miniature city inside the Cajun Dome."

Refugees entering the Cajun Dome in Lafayette
Refugees entering the Cajun Dome in Lafayette
The Cajun Dome is located on the campus of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and is normally used for athletic events and concerts. Cajun refers to the predominant ethnic group here, who are descendants of French Acadians who came here from Canada in the 18th century.

Gregory Davis says this facility will probably be used as a shelter for at least several weeks to come. He says many of the people coming here have nowhere else to go and little to sustain them.

The Cajun Dome in Lafayette
The Cajun Dome in Lafayette
"Just about all the people here have no other alternative, because they either have no family members they can go to who live outside of New Orleans or they have no money to draw on to go get a hotel," he said.

One such person is 70-year-old Doris David, who, until last week, worked as a cashier in a French Quarter shop and lived on a tree-lined lane in New Orleans. Her house was crushed when one of those trees fell on it, but she has nothing but praise for her new, temporary home here at the Lafayette shelter.

Doris David: "They are wonderful. Everything is so accommodating, three meals a day. Everybody is so nice. No problem. "

Greg Flakus: How long do you expect to be here?

Doris David
Doris David
Doris David:
"Probably a week or two, you cannot go back, you know."

Greg Flakus: What if it turns out to be longer? What if it turns out to be months?

Doris David: "We'll have to stay here."

Not everyone who comes here is seeking shelter. Jerome White is staying with nearby relatives, but he lost contact with his mother before he left New Orleans and is looking for her among the thousands of people milling about here.

"We just came here to see if we could get some information on some help and to see if they brought my mom on one of those buses here," he said. "They say they are bringing a lot of people from New Orleans here, too."

There are people from New Orleans in shelters all across the region. The city of Houston is sheltering several thousand and the federal government plans to move some 25,000 refugees to the Houston Astrodome stadium in the coming days.

For emergency medical technician Nancy Dodson of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the situation is emotionally overwhelming.

Nancy Dodson
Nancy Dodson
"When I see the total destruction that has gone on in New Orleans and these people have lost absolutely everything," she said. "They have medical problems and they are coming into Baton Rouge and there are no more beds for them and we have to take them to Lafayette or Jackson, Mississippi or anywhere. There are people who have no money and they are sleeping in their cars, they have medical problems, they are dehydrated, they are weak. It is very emotional for me. I just want to give them everything I have, you know, extra blankets in my truck, I just want to wrap them up and give them a pillow and a place to keep warm."

But, Nancy Dodson does not pause long to shed a tear. She fills up the gas tank of her ambulance and heads back to help more of the people whose lives have been forever altered by this disaster.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Hurricane Survivors Evacuate New Orleans Stadium
Bush Promises Hurricane Aid, Says Recovery Could Take Years
Lawmakers Plan Legislative Response to Hurricane Disaster
Pentagon Launches Massive Relief Operation to Help Hurricane Victims
 
  Top Story
Envoys Continue Negotiations at UN on Cessation of Gaza Fighting  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
US Says it Supports Egyptian-French Gaza Cease-Fire Plan
Israel Warns Residents Along Gaza-Egypt Border of Air Strikes
Ukraine, Russia Pricing Dispute Halts Russian Gas Exports to Europe  Audio Clip Available
Past, Present and Future US Presidents Meet at White House  Audio Clip Available
Obama Says He Cannot Take Stand on Gaza Until He Takes Office  Audio Clip Available
Pakistan's National Security Advisor Fired After Mumbai Disclosure
AU Denies Somali Militant Group's Abuse Claims  Audio Clip Available
Darfur Women Warn of Reaction if ICC Indicts Bashir  Audio Clip Available
National Security Advisor Says Iran a Top Challenge for Obama
Zimbabwe's Mugabe Appoints Temporary Ministers  Audio Clip Available
Dispute Over Obama's Senate Seat May Come to an End
Press Groups Condemn Attack on Mexican TV Studio
Jewish Americans, Arab Americans Discuss Gaza Conflict in 'Peace Cafe'  Video clip available
Rains Bring Drought Relief to Parched Australia  Audio Clip Available
Rajasthan's Camel Trade Faces Changing Times  Audio Clip Available