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mfcorey1

(11,001 posts)
Fri Aug 28, 2015, 05:18 PM Aug 2015

People are still living in FEMA’s toxic Katrina trailers — and they likely have no idea

As soon as Nick Shapiro turned into the parking lot of the Tumbleweed Inn in Alexander, North Dakota, he recognized the trailers. They were off-white, boxy, almost cartoonish, and unadorned with any of the frills — racing stripes, awnings, window treatments — that a manufacturer would typically add to set a trailer apart on a display lot.

But these trailers had never seen a display lot. Shapiro had first seen them when he was living in New Orleans in 2010, doing fieldwork for his Oxford University PhD. In New Orleans, everyone knew what they were, and the city was desperate to get rid of them. They had been built fast, and not to last. The fact that some people were still living in them because they had never gotten enough money to rebuild their homes, or had run afoul of unethical contractors, was an unwanted reminder of just how far the city still had to go to recover from Hurricane Katrina.

But in the oil fields of Alexander, where Shapiro found them, people had, at best, only a dim memory of hearing something bad about the trailers on the late-night news.

Only one person in the improvised trailer park near the Tumbleweed Inn knew where the trailers were from. Now 19, he’d lived in one as a child, after his family’s home was destroyed when the levees around New Orleans broke in 2005. "It feels like home," he said, looking around the park. "Not the landscape. The trailers. I’m used to it."

Most of the people living in the trailer park were like him: men, young, drawn to North Dakota from all over the US by the prospect of making $16 an hour minimum in an oil boomtown. So what if they had to pay $1,200 a month to live in a trailer out on the prairie? They made it work. They slept in bunk beds, seven to a trailer, so that they could save as much as they could and then get the hell out of there.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/people-are-still-living-in-fema%E2%80%99s-toxic-katrina-trailers-%E2%80%94-and-they-likely-have-no-idea/ar-BBmc5QK?ocid=mailsignout

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People are still living in FEMA’s toxic Katrina trailers — and they likely have no idea (Original Post) mfcorey1 Aug 2015 OP
chemicals are not visible KT2000 Aug 2015 #1

KT2000

(20,581 posts)
1. chemicals are not visible
Fri Aug 28, 2015, 07:31 PM
Aug 2015

so people literally get away with murder in order to not lose money on contamination.
The manufacturers should be held criminally liable since they KNOW formaldehyde has always been a problem in their products. They knew also they could get away with this.

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