---BREAKAWAY CIVILIZATION ---ALTERNATIVE HISTORY---NEW BUSINESS MODELS--- ROCK & ROLL 'S STRANGE BEGINNINGS---SERIAL KILLERS---YEA AND THAT BAD WORD "CONSPIRACY"--- AMERICANS DON'T EXPLORE ANYTHING ANYMORE.WE JUST CONSUME AND DIE.---
The lights are still out for a
quarter of a million people in Lower Manhattan, and things are getting
dangerous. But cell phones and social media are enabling an entirely
self-organized recovery effort that is showing up where FEMA, the Red
Cross, and the city are not.
The darkened stairwell of the tower on Broome Street on the
Lower East Side is like a dripping, foul-smelling cave lit only by a few
headlamps and flashlights. A group of eight 20- and 30-somethings are
climbing to the top floor of the 23-story building to check on public
housing residents who have been stuck without power or water since
Monday night.
"Hello? Hello? We’re volunteers! Do you need help? Water? Agua? Ayuda?"
The women do the talking in hopes that people won’t be intimidated.
Theo, a resident on the 18th floor who escorts us up, says that this is a
dangerous building in the best of times. He also says to his knowledge,
no one has been door to door to help yet: not FEMA, not the Red Cross.
Just the NYC Housing Authority Police on Monday to tell people to get
out. This is Thursday.
Click to enlarge.
On each floor above the fourth we find elderly and sick people who
have been unable or afraid to venture out since the start of the storm.
"I’ve fallen down twice--that was enough for me," says Estelle
Kleinhaus, a white-haired woman on the 12th floor who lives alone. They
need food, drinking water, and medication. More able-bodied residents
have been filling buckets at a hydrant outside in order to flush
toilets.
Nadia Televiak, 68, in 22C is out of candles. Antonia Rivera, 72, her
next-door neighbor in 22B, is sick with a fever and is in need of food.
In 20G there is an elderly man with a broken foot who only speaks
Cantonese--luckily one of our group can translate. In 18H, one of the
Wongs has a heart problem and they haven’t been able to climb
downstairs. In 8A there are two young girls by themselves. They say
their mom is at work.
Somewhere there is a cat who is alone and very unhappy about it.
Our group doesn’t have much to offer beyond a couple of bottles of
drinking water and some flyers directing people to a donation center
nearby. We’re not from the Red Cross, FEMA, New York Cares, the public
housing police or any other city agency. We’ve never met before and we
aren’t affiliated with any one organization, school, or group.
We come from all corners of the city: Elmhurst, Crown Heights, Cobble
Hill, and even downtown neighborhoods like Chelsea and the West
Village, where the power’s still out.
Each of us showed up this morning for the first time, after we saw a notice on a website,
got an email, or saw a Tweet that volunteers were needed at 46 Hester
Street on the Lower East Side, where a local Asian community
organization called CAAAV has become the hub for an almost completely self-organized aid effort.
I realize just how self-organized it is when I ask several people
who’s in charge of all this and am pointed to Brian Palmer. He is
standing behind a table, processing, organizing, and coordinating
volunteers and giving out orders, but, he says, "I’m just someone who
showed up early this morning and got a cool vest," indicating his
safety-orange vest. (He points out a woman named Helena Wong who is
actually affiliated with CAAAV.)
Despite the ad-hoc nature of the distribution, things are fairly
peaceful at 46 Hester. Lines of men, women, and children stretch down
the block in both directions. One side is for picking up a ticket that
allows you to charge a cell phone on the center’s generator. The other
side is for picking up donations of peanut butter sandwiches, cookies,
water, leftover Halloween candy, batteries, and flashlights, all of
which keep arriving by trucks and vans and people on foot every few
minutes. The volunteers themselves, who range from local Chinese,
Spanish-speaking, and African-American residents to college students
from CUNY, are spending hundreds of dollars of their own money for new
supplies. They’re keeping the line orderly and fair, sweeping up trash
at the curb, and welcoming and thanking everyone who shows up.
On Hester Street, a policewoman named Lim asks what’s going on. I
explain it’s a donation center and ask if she knows where else in the
area people can go to get help--a Red Cross center, a police precinct, a
church, something. She shakes her head.
The lack of an official, coordinated door-to-door response here in
downtown, close to some of the most affluent neighborhoods in the
country, is a bit chilling. Currently across the five boroughs almost half a million people
are still without power. If you were going to target people most likely
to need help when the power and water is out, it would be the elderly
residents of high-rise towers like the ones that surround us. According
to a 2011 NYU report,
the East Village, Lower East Side, and Chinatown have a population of
169,000. Over 34% of the housing is low-income, 60% more than in the
rest of Manhattan, comprising tens of thousands of people. And the
lights are out for all of them.
The New York City Housing Authority’s website
says that they are only concentrating on critical repairs at this time.
It mentions there are distribution centers set up for the first time
for a few hours on Thursday and that the National Guard is helping
distribute food and water to homebound residents. On site, however,
there are no staff members and no one giving out information.
Many people are finding out about Hester Street from the website Recovers.org, and some outreach and behind-the-scenes coordination of all types is coming from the remnants of the Occupy movement, which is also helping with disaster centers
in Red Hook, Astoria, and Staten Island. But none of the volunteers I
speak to identify with Occupy. They just want to do something and they
can see that something desperately needs to be done. -happening-in-blacked-out-manhattan#1
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