when she gets here there is no food and water. this is no medical attention. there is no shade. no shelter. at least for now like the rest of the people coming from the water. there is nowhere to go. we need water. we need help. we really need help. there are six people in the projects, people can t walk, people can t talk, people can t see. they got old people on the bridge. can t get no water or nothing. the city of new orleans recovered. the coast of mississippi did recover. and new orleans has regained 90 percent of the population and 85 percent of the jobs. but in new orleans there is no doubt that there is still a long way to go. you can learn more of katrina and the aftermath of progress that has been made and that which hasn t at our website at fox fuzz.com with a link on the spotlight section. police have a new person of
one of the things people need is gasoline. if you want the trucks to run, we got to get gasoline in, my suggest is to give everybody a tank of gas. you want the stores to open, you want the people to drive in from the rural areas and outside of san juan, you ve got to get gas so they can go to work. when people can go to work, this thing will fix themselves, but until we get gasoline to everybody and get communications up to everybody, people can t talk. that s what i think two big priorities and a lot of things are sorting themselves out. once people can go back to work. you can bring a million soldiers here, but if people can t move and talk, it won t work. it takes the businesses to be open to get things working and to get the stores back stocked and get the walgreens open, and get the at&t cell towers up and the verizon so people can talk. one of the key enablers right now to change things here in 24