Saturday, August 25, 2007

Katrina Anniversary

As the two-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches, Time examines why New Orleans still is not safe and why another disaster could sink the city. The article turns fault to the shoddy planning US Army Corps of Engineers and coastal erosion. Louisiana is losing its' precious wetlands, which absorb hurricane storm surges, at the rate of a football field every 8 minutes. In addition the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MrGo) channel, which was built by the Army Corps to provide a direct, deep shipping route from the Gulf to New Orleans, allowed flood waters to speed towards the city. Finally, the mass media understands what New Orleans citizens have known for years.

"The most important thing to remember about the drowning of New Orleans is that it wasn't a natural disaster. It was a man-made disaster, created by lousy engineering, misplaced priorities and pork-barrel politics. Katrina was not the Category 5 killer the Big Easy had always feared; it was a Category 3 storm that missed New Orleans, where it was at worst a weak 2. The city's defenses should have withstood its surges, and if they had we never would have seen the squalor in the Superdome, the desperation on the rooftops, the shocking tableau of the Mardi Gras city underwater for weeks. We never would have heard the comment "Heckuva job, Brownie." The Federal Emergency Management Agency (fema) was the scapegoat, but the real culprit was the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which bungled the levees that formed the city's man-made defenses and ravaged the wetlands that once formed its natural defenses. Americans were outraged by the government's response, but they still haven't come to grips with the government's responsibility for the catastrophe."

More here:

http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1646611_1646683_1648904,00.html

Sunday, August 19, 2007

T-minus 8-days to staging

The post-Peace Corps invitation paperwork is in; it's now time to pack. With only 8 days left to departure, it is crunch time. There is a growing pile of "must-pack" items in the corner of my room; each day it grows larger with new additions. A few of the more interesting items: 10 passport photos, silica gel packs (to ward off moisture), rechargeable AA and AAA batteries, an inflatable globe, duct tape, a few favorite spices and a box of Oolong tea. There are still a dozen items to pick up, such as Nalgene water bottles, headlamp, a 4MB flash drive and a pocket knife. Only 8 more shopping days left!!


Staging
Peace Corps Nicaragua's Staging begins on August 27th in Washington, DC. Staging is a two-day event in which all Nica 45 volunteers must attend in order to be familiarized with Peace Corps policies and regulations. In addition, volunteers receive their first round of shots and malaria vaccinations during staging. There should be about 35 members of Nica 45, all Agricultural or Environmental Education volunteers.

(By the way, the name "Nica 45" is the moniker given to my fellow trainees because we are the 45th class in Nicaragua. Clever, no?)

What's Up Next?
On August 29th, the Nica 45 volunteers fly to Managua, where they will be greeted by the Peace Corps in-country staff. After another two days of orientation, volunteers are placed with local families in Jinotepe and three months of language and occupational training begins. When training is complete PCVs (Peace Corps Volunteers) are placed then placed at the sites where they will volunteer for 24 months. My Internet access should be fairly regular so expect updates every one to two weeks for the next few months.

Visiting
I welcome all of you to visit! Peace Corps volunteers get a month of vacation time each year, so any time you wish to travel you will have a free place to stay and a free tour guide in Nicaragua!

Thursday, August 16, 2007

"How I Spent My Summer Vacation"

8 interesting things I did this summer:
1. Met the Iraqi UN Ambassador outside of UN Conference Room 4.
2. Learned to drive like a Bostonian
3. Found Nemo in the Great Barrier Reef.
4. Killed a kangaroo with a tour bus.
5. Had my luggage lost three times by three different airlines (Delta, JetBlue and USAirways).
6. Got 300 students sitting inside the World Bank to admit the institution was corrupt.
7. Won the GYLC National Delegations Rally! Go South Africa!!!
8. Won $5 in Vegas.

In short, I spent 15 days in Australia, 3 in Las Vegas, 15 in Boston, 7 in DC and 7 in NYC.

Summer is now over--It's time to turn towards fall and Peace Corps Nicaragua.