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Dispatches from San Antonio
Meg is a Bay Area nurse who went to San Antonio
as part of a contingent of nurses from SEIU to help with hurricane
victims. Her accounts give us a glimpse into the chaos and deliberate
denial of the humanity of the evacues from the "official"
caregivers. The dispatches below run from the most current to the
first ones.
Mon. Oct. 10, 2005
I just HAVE to do this, whether anyone's interested or not-I'm narcissistic
enough not to care!
Was In Chicago for my 50th-by FAR the best birthday I've ever had.
Stayed at the Hotel Allegro on Randolph, which is a nice place by
the way, only 179.00 a night. Great food, cute room service waiters
(yes, I was dressed when I opened the door!).
I was there to give a presentation to the union who sent me to San
Antonio for disaster relief. Kind of a post hash of their relief
efforts; spoke to a group of the union leadership, telling my "story"
about my experience in S.A. at Kelly Air Force Base.
Got an award, a beautiful framed poster (a copy of a painting I
guess) with a picture of a Mardi Gras character pulling someone
out of the floodwaters-"Katrina 2005" with a few words
under the picture: "If Living Were A Thing That Money Could
Buy, The Rich Would Live and The Poor Would Die". Beautiful,
albeit a bit depressing!
I played hooky from the conference after that since it was a "pat
yourself on the back" type "preaching to the choir"
which I long ago decided was a waste of time after having been to
a million of these over the years.
Had a WONDERFUL dinner with my favorite "godparents" at
Buona Terra restauraunt. a really homey, small, brick interior neighborhood
restuarant favored by M&M. Obvious to me why.
GREAT food. Lovely company. Had a good laugh about Mac's malapropistic
version of Studs Terkel's name: "Turds Stuckell". STILL
can't stop laughin' about that.
Amy came to the Hotel the next day and we had a relaxed dinner in
the hotel restaurant and a really lovely time. She spent the night
there, took me to the airport in the morning after almost getting
trapped by the Chicago marathoners huffing and puffing their way
down La Salle, blocking the streets. I was tempted to ask them if
they wanted a ride to the finish line.
When I got home there was an email for me from a woman from a church
in Baton Rouge LA who was looking for the father of a Katrina evacuee
named Edwina Coleman who was staying at a shelter there. She saw
my blog on NewOrleansIndymedia.org about my having been there and
contacted me. Edwina had been seperated from her father in the flood,
and thought he might have been evacuated to San Antonio and did
I know him, since I had been there.
Damned if it isn't the only daughter of "Rock", Edwin
Coleman, the 80 year old guy I told you about who was one of the
"regulars" in the smoking tent at Kelly at night!
Edwina didn't know until this morning if her father was dead or
alive; now she knows he's alive but no one knows if he's still at
Kelly-the Red Cross has no record of him despite his living in their
shelter there, despite the numerous paper bracelets put on him.
I still can't understand this. Edwina got herself a job at a local
grocery store in Baton Rouge and an apt.! On her own, without help
from the RC or anybody!
I also got a call this morning from a reporter from the Washington
Post who had also seen my blog and called to ask me what I thought
of the Red Cross and FEMA.
I told him allright, he is down in San Antonio at Kelly right now.
Before I told him what I thought of these organizations, I told
him that FIRST he must promise me that he will look for Rock Coleman
at Kelly or find out where he is if no longer there. He agreed and
was happy to do it because they treat the media like shit there
and this will give him something tangible to say is his purpose
for being there.
Name is Jim Pomfret. Nice guy. Let's see if he'll deliver and what
he writes about Kelly. Also told him to please find out where Olymphia
Delfine Otis is, the woman whose story about getting out of New
Orleans was so compelling, the one I wrote about while there.
Maybe there really is a god, or at least he or she exists in people
who give a shit about something more than the Dow Jones and "Survivor:Phillipines".
Am waiting by the phone all day to hear if any of these people are
located.
Thank you to everybody who made my trip south possible, my bday
exquisite, and my life to be thankful for!
Nutmeg
Sat. Sept. 24, 2005
Went to building 171 today without the intent of working
because I wasn't scheduled but to find out what the nursing coverage
was for the next few days. Krista, the charge nurse (who replaced
Carmen whom I did not talk to much since she was on during the day
and I was there at night) said she had nobody from 6pm to 11pm and
could I stay.
Of course I can stay.
Half an hour later I meet Juan Carlos, a doctor from Mexico who
was volunteering. An endocrinologist. Fabulous, I said, lots od
diabetics here. Another few minutes later and in walk a retired
ER physician, another doctor from India and another RN.
No one knew they were coming-obviously what started out as a shortage
of staff turned into a glut.
I'm irritable and trying despreately not to show it. Krista asks
me to fax some prescriptions to a private pharmacy which will be
reimbursed by FEMA for meds needed by both Katrina and now Rita
evacuees.
No one knows how to use the state of the art printer/scanner/photocopier/drycleaning/cloning/whatever
machine. NO ONE KNOWS ANYTHING here. No one knows where the "special
needs" unit is or where to get a blanket for a patient, yet
there are throngs of Red Cross volunteers, all of whom appear to
be Junior League dillitantes or disaster gadflies, or just plain
ne'r do wells who volunteer with the Red Cross.
They all love talking into their walkie talkies and use their lingo
into cell phones in conversations of the utmost importance but I
can't find a single person to help take old ladies to the bathroom.
A man has a blood pressure of 210/110. He doesn't feel well and
thank God Juan Carlos is there and we decide to send him to the
hospital for a workup. The ambulance drivers show up but don't know
what hospital they will be taking him to. I want to give them the
unit's phone number but can't count on anyone answering the phone
if in fact they remember to call us.
Maybe they can walkie talkie the location of the hospital this man
ends up in.
Someone said "take him to Baptist" which I guess is the
local hospital. I write it down on the "chart" I made
up for the man (who didn't have one).
One of the other SF nurses had a hissy fit about something I know
not what and left to go back home to SF. I'm just as frustrated
as she is with the Red Cross but I still feel there are things I
can do.
Rock asked me to smuggle him in some rum and I'm damn tempted to
do it. They sit on their cots all day, mill about, have nothing
to do until a permanent place is found for them but of course all
that is on the back burner with the influx of Rita refugees.
Houston is unscathed by Rita so now everyone who came to San Antonio
wants to go home but canh't because gas is sold out everywhere.
The freeway going to Houston is one big parking lot.
Gina told me (she's the nurse who went home) that a Red Cross volunteer
told her to be careful about distributing supplies because "some
of these people are hoarding". She points to piles of stuff
under various people's cots.
Gina had the presence of mind to tell her that these people have
lost EVERYTHING they own. So what they take some supplies not immediately
needed; most of it sits in a storage room undistributed anyway.
Like Beefaroni in microwaveable cups. I heat up several of these
little cups and pass them out to the people who couldn't tolerate
the cold hamburgers served for dinner. And canned peaches.
I can't help but think this place is a tinderbox for a race riot;
ALL the Katrina victims are black, the Rita evacuees are mostly
white and Hispanic but the vast majority of the residents here at
Kelly are black and you can feel the tension.
Though I'm still amazed at how courteous and pleasant the New Orleanians
are. Anyplace else I think would've erupted a long time ago.
Think about it: thousands of black people in a huge Air Force airplane
hangar turned into a shelter. TONS of cops. Volunteers to a person
white.
I finally leave around 10 pm, since they were far better staffed
than they expected to be . Now we actually have doctors. One from
Mexico. I still can't believe it.
I took Caroline, a large Katrina evacuee to the store earlier. She's
schizophrenic I think, is on lots of psych meds. She buys RAID because
of the flies. Though truly, the place is clean and I didn't see
any flies. She bought a new bathrobe at the dollar store and wanted
to buy me one.
Took me awhile to talkk her out of it.
This place is like another planet.
Oh and I feel really bad about saying that the LPN on the night
shift last night was on methadone. Truth is he has cancer. He probably
SHOULD be on methadone. Has that pasty white skin pallor so common
to methadonians.
Krista, the charge nurse never did get to leave, though she was
supposed to leave at 8pm.
New volunteers kept coming whom were not expected and she had to
give them the whole orientation.
Including how to spend all their time on the walkie talkies while
old ladies need to be taken to the bathroom. Hopefully tomorrow
I will ask that no volunteer be assigned to our unit unless they
are willing to take people to the bathroom, help them onto the commode,
wait til they're done and bring them back.
If they're not willing to do that we don't need 'em.
Went to downtown San Antonio last night to explore. Sweet town!
Cobblestone streets with large islands with palm trees in the middle
of the streets with benches to sit on. Lots of families. Enjoyed
myself.
More later
Fri. Sept. 23, 2005
Yes, they indeed moved all the "special needs"
people from Bldg. 1536 where they (and we) were. But they didn't
move any of the supplies or records.
I can't believe how chaotic this is. I went in to Bldg 171 at Kelly
last night to report for a night shift and saw a slew of Red Cross
nurses who FINALLY realized that coverage for the night shift was
needed.
One of the SEIU nurses brought the records (which they had made,
no records or ability to MAKE records there when we got there) to
bldg 171 and installed them there.
But most of the people I knew from the last few nights at bldg.
1536 were gone, placed in hotels or HUD apts around San Antonio
earlier in the day.
That includes Del and David Otis, whom I hear was in tears on the
way out. Why I don't know-I don't think it was tears of gratitude
or joy though I could be wrong.
I don't think he was wearing well, last I saw him he was getting
irritable so I left him alone.
The Red Cross nurses at 171 ignored me, started fussing over the
medical records WE developed where there had been none and acted
like she's been in control the entire time.
She left-and left me with an LPN who looked to be on heavy doses
of methadone. Over the next few hours several Red Cross people had
come by and asked if we needed anything.
I resented this because they were nowhere to be found all week and
now acted like they were here to save the day.
One of the patients, a sweet old man who is 80 years old named Rock
who had been one of the group of smokers outside during the wee
hours of the morning at 1536 the last few nights was there.
He was overjoyed to see me and I was to see him. I tried to introduce
him to the Red Cross staff but they were not at all interested.
They huddled together talking amongst themselves, ignoring both
me and the patients, and I found myself becoming angrier and angrier.
Rock knows how to get ahold of me as I equipped him with my cell
phone number. Wish to God I could bring him a bottle of Crown Royal,
which is what he drinks at home. He's sharp as a tack, but I noticed
he's now in a wheelchair which he wasn't before.
It's unbelieveable to me that these people are as friendly, courteous
and good spirited as they are considering what theyve been through
and the reason they are here.
I hope they can last and this doesn't degenerate into more chaos,
anger and difficulties that a group of people this size can potentially
generate.
Whenever you go in or out of the front entrance to any of these
football field- or -2 sized buildings you must be searched, wanded,
etc, just like on the airlines. Yet you can walk halfway through
the buildings and go out a side door and come and go as you please
with no one batting an eye.
Must be how this 20 year old blind kid managed to get crack cocaine
and come back high as a kite and almost delerious. He had done it
before but Don and I were afraid they'd put him in jail so we pulled
his cot up to the front near us to keep an eye on him until the
crack wore off. Now I hear he's done it again and I don't know where
he is.
2 am last night I'm feeling really sick and the RC nurses are ignoring
me anyway, the patients asleep so I decide to leave. I walk out
to the parking lot and see throngs of teenagers outside listening
to rap music on a boom box. One of them chatted me up, calling me
by name since it was on my name tag. I called him by name too since
it was tatooed on his arm. Kurtis.
Kurtis says he's a member of the Sacramento Crips. This he tells
me when I tell him I'm from the Bay Area. I acted impressed, even
scared of him but he was too sweet for me to keep the act up for
long. We high fived each other as I tried to find my car in the
huge parking lot.
I don't exaggerate or glorify at all when I say these people are
polite and kind, apologetic even for needing anything, almost without
exception.
If you were from Mars and had just been beamed down here you would
NEVER guess what these people had been through. We try to figure
out why-glad to be alive, southern manners, probably a combination.
I feel deprived without my memory foam mattress and Whole Foods
down the street!
I asked David Otis what he thought about the huge number of cops
in each building-he says it's "for our protection". I
looked for a hint of irony, thinking he was kidding but no. He wasn't-he'd
been at the Convention Center in New Orleans, several others in
our group were at the Superdome and they are GRATEFUL for police
presence.
Rita again has flooded the 9th Ward in New Orleans, East of downtown.
EVERY SINGLE HOME has been destroyed by Katrina-no one left to be
impacted by Rita.
Here in San Antonio the sun is out, it's beautiful, I have the day
off. There's nothing here I want to do really but GWBush is coming!
Now THAT will give me something to do!
Wed. Sept. 21, 2005
Don and I just figured out why there's so much upheaval here-why
they're moving people all over the place, cancelling the move, then
reinstating it.
Rita is now a category 4 and they want to save hotel rooms and apartments
for the residents of TEXAS that may be affected by Rita.
Don't want to waste them on any of these dark people from New Orleans!
There can be no other reason since there's been so much resentment
about giving housing to New Orleanians when people from here need
it. You hear that time and time again.
I helped a very LARGE woman onto the toilet who is unable to move
herself at all. 86 years old, in a wheelchair.
She "went to ground" in the stall and I couldn't get her
up. I ran out to the main area where a large number of San Antonio
cops were milling about, doing nothing, just like they've done every
night I've been here.
I asked them to please help me, NOW. Described the situation. Old
lady stuck in the stall, can't get up.
They stood there, talking amongst themselves, debating whether it
was in their job description, or whatever and I just said "fuck
it" and walked away, grabbed one of the Navajo.
After me and Santee, the Navajo "crew leader" got her
out and back to her cot against the east wall, a cop sauntered over
with gloves on, ready to help.
I glared at him as hatefully as I could but decided I didn't want
to end up at Gitmo as an enemy combatant so I said "can I help
you officer?".
Bastards.
Tues. Sept. 20, 2005
Don and I come to Kelly AFB tonight anxious about Hurricane Rita
and what it's going to mean for the folks here in the shelter and
for Texas and the gulf region. Mainly Don wants to know if he's
going to be able to get the hell out of here on Friday to go home.
He's exhausted, he's been here longer than any of us. We can't figure
out whether everyone is overreacting because of Katrina. Rita is
so far only a category1.
But we come in at 11 pm and it's chaos. They want to move everyone
here at Kelly to another shelter to make room for possible evacuees
from Texas because of Rita.
We are outraged because these people were already moved from an
old Levi Strauss factory TO Kelly and there seems to be no reason
for this-why not move Texas evacuees to the Levi Strauss factory
which is now empty? Nobody can answer that question.
FEMA came by today and ordered everyone to fill out these ridiculous
forms, yet another of many many forms these people have had to fill
out. Some of these people are illiterate but are too embarrassed
to admit that so they just say "yes, ma'am" when I ask
if their form is filled out. it's taken us several hours to figure
out that these forms, whic evidently are vital to their getting
services, are in fact not filled out so Don and i do it for them.
FEMA asshole just came by and barked at us about whether we got
everyone signed up, forms filled out.
Don lit into him saying "We're nurses. We take care of medical
needs. You want forms filled out? Get one of your beancounters over
here and help these people". He walked away.
We don't know if we're going to be coming back here tomorrow night
or not.
The evacuees here don't know either and it breaks my heart.
On a lighter note, I was outside smoking last night with a group
of the "usuals", among whom is david Otis, Del's husband
. When he found out that I live in San Quentin California, he asked
me if I knew Scott Peterson or Charles Manson.
Without waiting for an answer he said "Now, I'm against the
death penalty, you understand. But they shoulda fried that muthafucka's
ass right off!". When I started laughing he looked at me perplexedly,
not seeing any irony or contradiction in what he had just said and
said "Imagine! Killing ya own flesh and blood!"
Right now there's no other place on this earth I would rather be.
Mon, Sept. 19, 2005
They held the plate glass window in their living room for
hours so it wouldn't break from the winds from the hurricane.
Olymphia Otis, her son, her husband, daughter and "grandbaby"
along with 2 "Iranians" who lived next door in the townhouses
in East New Orleans Parish. They kept the window from breaking and
letting wind and rain in, though the cieling in the bedroom had
been blown off. The townhouse of the 2 Iranians had been destroyed
and they had come over to the Otis' to see if they were okay and
stayed, holding up the plate glass window across from the "man
made lake" across the street.
The sun came up and everyone breathed a sigh of relief though they
were standing in water up to their chests. "The water will
go down now. We're gonna be okay".
Then the water rose and rose. They went to the second floor, then
the third. 3 days had gone by and they had eaten all the food in
the house.
The water got higher. They had to take 2 tables, one from the dining
room, then the kitchen table and stack one on top of the other.
They then broke a hole through the ceiling and helped each other
up onto the roof. Olymphia is obese as is her diabetic husband and
she teared up when describing how hard it was for the Iranians to
get both her and her husband through the hole onto the roof.
Olymphia and her family, the 2 Iranians and their wives and children
(2 babies, totalling 3) were up on the roof for 5 days.
The Iranian finally said "We're gonna die here and I'm not
dyin' on no roof".
They decided to swim, somewhere. They got a mattress from the bed
on the third floor and put the babies on them. Then they started
swimming.
Olymphia can't swim. They grabbed a board that was floating and
pulled her along with her hanging on to the mattress and the board.
One of the babies fell off the mattress into the water. Olymphia
grabbed his little shirt while she could still see him under the
water and pulled him up and back onto the mattress.
They swam for an unknown period of time until a New Orleans police
boat came by and plucked them all out of the water.
They took "women and children first" and Olymphia's daughter
and the grandbaby went with the NO police in another boat.
They then took the rest to the Convention Center in New Orleans
that was so filthy, no lights, no water-they stayed outside since
the stench was too horrendous to go inside and there wasn't any
room anyway.
Olymphia didn't know where her daughter and grandbaby were taken
until she got here in San Antonio at Kelly's AFB and the Red Cross
did a search for her daughter.
Found her in Shreveport and she is coming here to be reunited with
Olymphia and her husband on Friday.
I will be here on Friday but not until after 11pm! Damn! I'd give
anything to see this reunion.
Meanwhile I am the only nurse from SF who will do the night shift
here at Kelly AFB "Special Needs" area. My partner is
Don Miller from Seattle and what a doll he is. Funny as hell and
compassionate, shaming the FEMA people into helping us with a young
man who had a seizure for a LONG time on the floor here at 2 am.
I smoke outside in the smoking area and have spoken to Rachel and
her daughter Rachel. Mother and daughter with the same name. Both
beautiful with classic features. Both were in the Superdome. "Everything
they done said is true, Miss".
Navajo Scouts have helped me twice now get an elderly woman from
the cot to the wheelchair so I could take her to the bathroom. They
wait around til she's done to help get her back in again. They speak
Navajo.
Oh and the Mexican Army shouldn't be cooking Jambalaya. Or home
fries either. The rice and beans are good though!
More later, Meg
additional to this dispatch...Olymphia Delfine
Otis. But no one call me that, they call me Dell. Not Olymphia,
understand, Miss?
Sitting outside smoking with her and Rock, an 80 year old man who
swears that they "opened the Spillway to flood everybody but
the rich Lakefront people, just like they did with Bessie".
He's referring to the Hurricane Bessie in the 60's, and Lake Pontchartrain.
Dell agrees with him and is also convinced that the spillway was
opened so that the floodwaters in the upper class lake front district
of Orleans Parish could go down and people there could get out.
The pumping station on Broadway St was done with cheap materials
due to corruption on the part of City Officials they say.
Veracity of this unkown, time will tell.
800 people went to Abrahamson Middle School which had been turned
into a shelter and every one of them drowned according to Dell.
Later I read in truthout.org's Mayday Mississippi delta section
that this didn't happen, no one who took shelter there died.
Dell is out there every night smoking because whenever she closes
her eyes and tries to sleep she feels like sh'e drowning inside
a "concentration camp".
Oh, and she's the executive chef at the Marriott New Orleans. "I'm
one hell of a damn chef Miss, if I may say so my own self"
One Red Cross volunteer, a white guy from here in San Antonio said
"If these folks think they're gonna get a free ride here in
Texas, they got another thing comin'. We oughtta lasso up every
one of 'em and drag 'em behind a truck".
I didn't hear this directly, Don told me about it.
Executive Chef at the Marriott. Damn welfare cheat. I'm blessed
by having met her.
Sun, Sept. 18, 2005
Hey everybody;
Got here last night with another nurse from San Francisco General
and my head has been spinning ever since.
San Antonio is a typical American town, strip malls, big box WalMarts,
etc., with everyone going about their usual business, seemingly
unaware of the fact that just a few miles down the freeway at a
converted Air Force Base is a huge airplane hangar housing around
2,000 evacuees from new Orleans! That was the first thing that shocked
me, the "Two San Antonio's" similiar probably to the "Two
Americas".
We came to the AFB and met 6 other nurses, all volunteers, all from
various places around the country, mainly Seattle at this point.
We were given the "orientation": SEIU is essentially running
the medical service in this facility.
FEMA is here but they do absolutely nothing; this is not an exaggeration.
They will not help us though they have the only MD in the facility.
They say they are "disaster" oriented and are mandated
to do "disaster" medical service, so why they are here
now, after the disaster is over is a question we dare not ask them
because they look at us with such disdain as it is, we don't want
to make it worse.
When the facility first opened, the FEMA medical satff had their
own section but decided to wall it off behing moveable panels so
no one can see them basically doing nothing but playing cards and
basketball. Like I said they are unwilling to help us in any way
and I have been told not to ask them for anything.
I'm also told that the City of San Antonio called the local SEIU
offices here to request nurses when they first realized they were
going to have between 1 and 3,000 evacuees! NOT FEMA, not the Red
Cross, SEIU. Why I'm not entirely sure but will be learning more
in the coming days.
This is the hugest building I've ever seen. It's wall to wall cots,
during the day neatly made beds with stuffed animals and meager
posessions piled on top while the occupants mill around during the
day.
Meals are served by the Mexican Army! I couldn't believe it. Mexican
troops are ladling beans, rice and meat onto styrofoam plates for
the residents. I was so moved by this sight, especially when I think
of how we treat them up norte! The Navajo "scouts" come
around asking us if we need anything. Don't really know what their
function is but if i 'need anything" I'll ask
There's so many stories to hear from the people here and I've only
heard a few.
I just walked by an elderly woman who said to me when I asked her
how she was, "I'm blessed! Know what I'm sayin'? People her
are so nice, They gonna help me start a new life. I'm blessed! Do
you hear me?"
God almighty, I just started.
More later
Meg
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