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Lawyers'
Committee for Civil
Rights Under Law
1401 New York Avenue, NW
Suite 400
Washington, DC 20005
For
Immediate Release
Contacts:
Kim Alton
202-662-8600
November
10 ,2005
Katrina Survivors Sue FEMA to Produce Timely Aid
Class Action Charges FEMA With Failure to Provide
Legally Obligated Services
(Washington, D.C.) The Lawyers Committee
for Civil Rights Under Law (Lawyers Committee)
along with the New York law firm of Schulte Roth &
Zabel LLP; John Pierre, Attorney and Professor at
Southern University Law Center; the Public Interest
Law Project; and the Equal Justice Society, today
filed a class-action suit in the United States District
Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana to force
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to
provide timely aid to the survivors of Hurricane Katrina.
The lawsuit states that FEMA has violated and continues
to violate Federal law by failing to discharge its
obligations as the federal agency charged to care
for survivors of natural disasters.
It is our hope that this lawsuit will compel
FEMA to assist the disaster survivors still waiting
for aid, said Barbara R. Arnwine, Executive
Director of the Lawyers Committee.
There is no excuse for this failure by FEMA
or for its refusal to fulfill its mandate, said
John C. Brittain of the Lawyers Committee. Without
judicial oversight along the lines we have asked the
court to provide, there is little chance that the
victimization will cease or that FEMA will come through
with the services it is legally obligated to provide,
added Brittain.
The suit seeks a court order to require FEMA to make
it easier for survivors to apply for temporary housing
assistance, to improve the agencys outreach
and accessibility, and to immediately provide trailers
or other alternatives to replace shelters, tents and
other makeshift arrangements.
More than two months after Katrina, thousands
of Americans are still being victimized, this time
by bureaucratic inaction, indifference and incompetence,
said Howard O. Godnick of Schulte Roth & Zabel
LLP. The New York law firm is providing its services
on a pro bono basis. The poor and vulnerable
including children, the elderly and the disabled
are suffering the most. It is an outrage that
these survivors must sue a Federal agency to secure
services they are so clearly entitled to, added
Godnick.
The suit also asks the court to force FEMA to establish
application guidelines under which survivors can obtain
continued financial assistance beyond a three-month
period and receive adjustments based on family size
and other factors. The plaintiffs also request that
the court order FEMA to eliminate certain rules regarding
the use of funds that survivors have already received
and to cease a policy whereby FEMA makes room for
its housing by evicting and destroying the homes of
trailer park residents.
The legal action has been brought by 13 named plaintiffs
on their own behalf and on the behalf of a class of
people who lived in Louisiana, Mississippi or Alabama
on August 29, 2005 in areas that were subsequently
declared Federal Disaster Areas, were displaced by
Hurricane Katrina and have or will apply for disaster
housing assistance under the Stafford Act.
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