White House Office of Public Engagement Weekly Update – 5/31
May 31, 2011
White House Office of Public Engagement Weekly Update – 5/31
The following message is from the White House Office of Public Engagement:
In the wake of tragedy in Joplin, Missouri and across the Midwest, the President lent his support for the victims of the devastation, and promised that we will help to rebuild and repair those damaged communities. The President made his remarks from London on an official visit to Europe where he engaged some of our allies including Ireland, the United Kingdom, France, and Poland on a number of global issues. Back home, we celebrated National Transportation Week where we honored twenty amazing individuals from the transportation industry as Champions of Change for their efforts to create and maintain the infrastructure that keeps our country moving.

This week the First Lady launched Let’s Move! In Indian Country to support the ongoing work that tribal leaders and community members are doing to improve the health of American Indian and Alaska Native children. We also swore-in more than a dozen new members to the President’s Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics, and we continued to celebrate AAPI Heritage month by looking at the ways AAPI students can get access to higher education and by hosting an AAPI roundtable for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) students from across the country.
Blogs and Other Highlights
Kareem Dale blogs about a training for federal hiring managers on how to implement the Executive Order to make the federal government a model employer for persons with disabilities. http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/05/26/hitting-road-part-ii
Kareem Dale Blogs about the Department of Labor’s disability employment event with Secretary Solis http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/05/24/hitting-road
Department of Education Issues Guidance on Rights of Students with Disabilities When Educational Institutions Use Technology Dear Colleague Letter to elementary and secondary schools http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-201105-ese.html.
Dear Colleague Letter to institutions of higher education http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-201105-pse.html.
FAQ http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/dcl-ebook-faq-201105.html.
May 30, 2011
Sign up with Summer Cruisers, Calendar of Summer Fun Starts June 1

Calendar starts June 1st with Park Day at Bruce Ladner Memorial Park on Hwy. 53 in Gulfport at 10am until lunch. Please bring a picnic lunch, snacks, and plenty of drinks for a day of meeting new people.
A summer program that provides a calendar of activities for parents and caregivers of children with or without a disability to participate in with a bit of education sprinkled in. There is no age limit.
Just come and have fun.
Please contact Crystal Epperson for more info:
Crystal Epperson
228-218-6381
Return to Tunica Cut Off – May 27, 2011

Another home moved by current


On this home, water got to halfway to last coarse of blocks
At my website http://repjohnmayo.com I have 50 more pictures that go with this story. Click on photo gallery and then open “Return to Tunica Cut-off”
Return to Tunica Cut Off May 27, 2011
If misery loves company, there will be plenty of both tonight. This is Friday, May 27 and the beginning of Memorial Day weekend for most; heartbreak for others.
Gone from the TV screens is the wall-to-wall reporting of the Great Flood of 2011. Left behind are thousands of people who will now return to their homes to deal with the uncertainty of FEMA Assistance, bank loans, building codes, and living arrangements for many months to come.
I accompanied Commander Weeks of the Tunica Sheriff’s Department, Mr. Bradford, director of Planning for Tunica County, MEMA, FEMA, and DEQ personnel into the “Camps” at the Tunica Cut-off. The pictures I am posting on Facebook and my website http://repjohnmayo .com tell the story without captions. Lacking is the stench of rotting vegetation, dead critters, and the odors of water soaked, mud caked structures.
Mr. Bradford thought he could begin permitting in people this afternoon to begin individual clean-up of homes and other structures. He’s issuing permits to keep out people who are gawkers, interlopers, and possible thieves.
For many, they will see their homes still on stilts but for some with a “condemned” sign, many will have “unsafe” and a very few will be termed “safe”. Mr. Bradford and his crew have been going home-to-home designating the safety levels. “Unsafe” means water got in the home (all but three among 354 structures) and the floor from underneath can clearly be seen sagging. “Condemned” goes to those homes that literally were lifted off their stilts and are flat on the ground, tipped or turned over, or were so badly washed out as to be made unrepairable.
Water still covers some of the roads. The ones that have no water have 3-4 inches of mud. The current is moving towards the River as fast as it came in two weeks ago. By Memorial Day, all the water should be off the roads.
One can easily see there will be many future problems. To begin real clean up, water will have to be turned on and that may yet be several weeks away. Two of the three camps have access to a central collection system and I was told that would have to be checked out and that won’t happen until the water is on.
Other homes have substandard sewage collection—55 gallon drums—and if they have to rebuild back, those systems won’t do. They don’t do now, but there would be no need to inspect unless the house was rebuilt.
My understanding, and this is not gospel, when the county adopted flood plain codes in 1998, current structures were allowed to be “grandfathered”. If the home is more than 50% damaged, I understand they will have to meet current flood plain building heights. For many, that will mean raising their homes several (as in 3-6 feet) more. That alone will cause elicit a lot of complaints.
To give you the scope of what the county will be dealing with, at the Tunica-cut off there are 354 structures. Of those, six are businesses and 348 are homes. Of the 348, 224 are permanent homes for many fixed income men, women, and families. Thirty-two or so had flood insurance.
There are options. None are good. If the county were to choose to NOT enforce the flood plain height requirements, no person living in the county would be eligible to buy flood insurance, even if they wanted. AND, if another disaster came, the county would not be eligible for FEMA disaster relief.
Most of the pictures I am posting are self-explanatory. Trash, mud, stench you won’t see, misery. But take note of the propane tanks and cockeyed structures. Building codes require tanks to be anchored in some way so as not to float away. And, homes on stilts need to be periodically checked to assure they are firmly connected.
There will be three very lucky people out of 354 who will return to a dry home this weekend.
While you party with your family this weekend, remember those folks at the cut off, Smithville, Tuscaloosa, Joplin, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas.
I post all of these pictures to members of the legislature. I am sure they will do what is right by these folks in Mississippi the next session.
I asked FEMA for the following information on applicants they had gotten as of today.
1. As discuss today here are a couple quick facts on Coahoma and Tunica Counties.
Coahoma County (DR 1972)
Applicants for Federal Aid: 485
Housing Assistance Eligible: 81
Coahoma County (DR 1983)
Applicants for Federal Aid: 121
Housing Assistance Eligible: 32
Tunica County (DR 1972)
Applicants for Federal Aid: 391
Housing Assistance Eligible: 40
Tunica County (DR 1983)
Applicants for Federal Aid: 331
Housing Assistance Eligible: 172
May 27, 2011
FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) Children and Disasters Update
Hello Friends,
As you know it’s been a difficult time for many people that have endured the tragic weather disasters of the past few weeks. We wanted to share some information with you that we found useful and interesting. We hope you find it helpful as well.
Sincerely,
FEMA’s Children’s Working Group
How Disasters Impact Children
Our thoughts and prayers are with the families and communities in Joplin, Missouri, Minneapolis, Minnesota and in the other areas affected by the severe tornadoes that swept through the area Sunday evening. As you know, disasters have an enormous impact on children. The video clip below summarizes the emotional impact and provides advice to parents for helping their children through disasters. CNN American Morning Video Clip, Joplin Tornado Traumatizes Its Youngest Survivors: http://clips.shadowtv.net/media/stv/14223/3/2011/146/08/14223_3_20110526_082745_262.wmv
How You Can Help Joplin Survivors
Your help is urgently needed to stem the flow of unneeded goods and volunteers into Joplin. Critical resources are being redirected from the important work of response and relief to managing what has become a crush of unneeded donated items. You are encouraged to reach out to your employees, customers and other constituents on how those wanting to help can do so in a way that doesn’t cause further impact, but rather aids in the response and recovery effort.
The following guidelines were developed by a coalition of government, voluntary agency and faith-based partners:
- Cash to a recognized voluntary agency is the single best way to help disaster survivors. Cash doesn’t need to be sorted, stored or distributed, and it allows the voluntary agency to the donation towards the needs that most urgently need addressing.
- Visit http://sema.dps.mo.gov/recover/donations.asp to donate to the Missouri tornado recovery effort.
- For information on other ways to help go to: www.fema.gov/rebuild/recover/howtohelp.
FEMA and the Red Cross are pleased to announce their first Youth Preparedness Workshop.
The focus will be on how to implement youth preparedness programming in your community. Save the Date June 24th, Chicago, IL.

