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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, September 16, 2005

Bush opens door for social, physical healing

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President Bush's address to the nation last night on the terrible devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina was precisely what a pained nation needed to hear.

Vast amounts of rebuilding assistance will come forward, investigations will be launched into failures in the initial response of officials at all levels, and the region will be rebuilt stronger and better than ever.

One wishes these reassurances had come earlier.

Still, the right things were said.

If the promises we heard last night are kept — and Bush must have the cooperation of Congress and state and local officials — then the region might indeed emerge from this stronger and better.

While the president's talk touched on many areas, he was particularly impressive — and frank — in recognizing the pervasive poverty in the region that contributed to much of the immediate suffering, and that will make the task of rebuilding that much harder.

The "deep persistent poverty" of the region "has its roots in a history of racial discrimination," Bush said.

He's right. And if the rebuilding plan includes a sincere effort to root out those patterns of poverty and discrimination, it will be remembered as far more than one of the biggest physical rebuilding efforts in the history of our nation. It has the potential to be remembered as a defining moment in repairing a serious flaw in our country's social fabric.

Bush mentioned three specifics in his plan to rebuild not just physical damage, but the wounds of poverty:

  • Creation of a "Gulf Opportunity Zone," which would provide tax incentives for companies that create jobs in the region and offer loan guarantees for small businesses.

  • Establishment of "worker recovery accounts" of up to $5,000 to pay for job training and childcare for those in search of work.

  • Launch of an "urban homesteading act" in which qualified applicants could compete via lottery for free federal land to rebuild homes and businesses.

    There are already fears that the massive rebuilding effort — expected to cost in the hundreds of billions — will primarily benefit the haves while leaving the have-nots even further marginalized.

    This must not happen.

    If the ideas sketched out by Bush last night are followed through with sincerity and a true sense of purpose, targeting the people most in need, then this region has a shot at rebuilding "higher and better" — stronger, not just physically, but in its soul as well.