Making Best of It

BY JIM MUSTIAN THE DAILY IBERIAN
Published/Last Modified on Monday, January 5, 2009 2:08 PM CST

ABBEVILLE — In Room 104 of the Budget Inn here, a large blue and gold macaw named Love sulks in its cage most days uttering expletives about the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Cooped up in a motel room for weeks, the bird has lost patience with just about everything, its owner says.

Love’s owner, Rebecca Hammons, 58, was among the scores of Delcambre and Erath residents left with nowhere to go after Hurricane Ike. For the past several months, the Budget Inn — one of at least two motels in town still housing the storm’s refugees — has been home.

So far, FEMA has footed the bill while additional aid is processed. Many are waiting on compensatory checks for their devastated homes. They rely, for the most part, on food and can goods from local food pantries.

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Their plight underscores the lingering impact of hurricanes Ike and Gustav: nearly four months after the floodwaters have receded, many are still stranded, waiting on the government to help them get back on their feet.

It’s a life of uncertainty for Hammons and the some 15 other occupants here riding out the storm Ike left behind. Every two weeks, they nervously await word that they’ve received an extension to stay longer.

“I don’t know what they’re going to do. It’s pure hell here,” Hammons said standing outside her room holding two of her seven Chinese crested hairless dogs. The hotel’s manager, Shany Patel, allows Hammons to keep several animals in the room, and others stay outside in a cage.

“If it weren’t for these little guys, I’d have gone crazy a long time ago,” she said. “I depend on them and they depend on me.”

For some of the hotel’s occupants, this marks the second extended stay in a hotel prompted by a hurricane. Elta Wilson, who lived in Erath before she lost her home to Ike, said she spent more than a year and a half in a motel here after Hurricane Rita struck about three years ago.

As many were impacted by both storms, they say they’ve noticed a marked difference in the time and effort it’s taken to get aid this time around.

“It’s like they really want to make sure you need it this time,” said Gene Bodin of Delcambre. “They’re not helping like they did for Rita. I think they overdid it for Rita.”

For all her frustration, Hammons says her life could hardly get any worse. She lost everything in Ike. Her home was rendered uninhabitable, her car undrivable. Many of her animals died as well. She estimates her net loss to be around $170,000.

“This is what I looked like in July,” Hammons said, pointing to the picture of a much younger-looking woman she keeps in her room. “This is what Ike has done to me. I’ve only got three changes of clothing to my name.”

But amid the struggle, Hammons has grown close to many of her neighbors staying at the motel with her. Although they were all strangers in September, the occupants at Budget Inn have formed something of a family. At night they sit outside in lawn chairs smoking and telling stories. They play dominos and cook together.

“We’re family now,” said Donna Choate, a displaced Abbeville resident. “We do everything together.”

The group has also forged an unlikely friendship with Patel. Wilson says Patel has been more than helpful during the group’s stay, offering not just assistance but camaraderie.

“He’s been great,” Hammons said. “If we need anything, he gets it for us. And he’ll come outside and hang out with us, too.”

If one of the refugees needs an extra day before hearing from FEMA about an extension, Patel grants it.

“I want to help all the people,” he said in an interview last fall. “I can treat them all as a family member.”

But like any family, it hasn’t been free of drama and bickering, Hammons said.

Hammons said she is no longer on speaking terms with some of her neighbors and is preparing to file theft charges against one of them.

“I’m the bad guy now,” she said, another phrase Love is likely to start repeating.

Comments

    David wrote on Jan 8, 2009 5:44 AM:

    " We also got flooded for Rita and Ike. We did not have insurance, nor do we want it with all the stipulations. We had nor ask for any help. We just got out the buckets and cleaned up ourselves. I think FEMA should look into these families and ask, "What are you doing for yourself"? "

    enraged wrote on Jan 6, 2009 4:04 PM:

    " Anyone know the value of those animals? Well if she can afford seven of those dogs and that well taught bird maybe she should be ashamed of being put in the papter bad mouthing what she is getting for free. sell the bird and those dogs and maybe you could afford to pay rent somewheres and buy your own food. "

    to bootlander wrote on Jan 6, 2009 12:25 PM:

    " Did Fema/taxpayers fix your home? hmmmmmmmm "

    To Ricochet wrote on Jan 6, 2009 9:45 AM:

    " I have compassion for people who are willing to try to help themselves and who appreciate help when it is given. "

    Money for nothing wrote on Jan 6, 2009 12:37 AM:

    " The homes that are right next to hers were flooded out as well and the people are now living in them. She's taking FEMA for a ride because her home is repairable, she's just trying to get the Government to finish paying it off before she fixes it. "

    boatlander wrote on Jan 5, 2009 10:24 PM:

    " I once heard it said a few years ago, that most of the uninsured can afford insurance. They talk about insurance is too expensive. When further investigation shows that they chose to spend their money on other things. I flooded here in Erath. I make $5,000.00 a month and have little debt. I did not have flood insurance. It was my choice not to have it. cost had nothing to do with my lack of insurance. "

    FEMA Help is a Blessing wrote on Jan 5, 2009 8:17 PM:

    " Isn't FEMA footing the bill for the motel room (utilities included) that the pricey bird lives in for free muttering explicitives about FEMA? Who's feeding the 7 pricey dogs if their owner can't afford to buy food or clothes for herself? Who's buying the pricey cigarettes for the pricey animals to enhale second-hand smoke? Couldn't someone have at least evacuated in that car, taking clothes and animals with them. House and car were valued at $170,000 with no flood ins. !!!
    "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth." FEMA's a blessing. "

    t.c. wrote on Jan 5, 2009 7:03 PM:

    " i cant believe i contribute to food drives to have a bunch of bird lovers soak it up when we have other people that are are deserving ,if i had a motel i would have set a deadline long ago to get out. i dont have any sympathy for any of you,my house got damaged for lillie back in 2002,i was in a motel for two months,state farm took very good care of everything,down to the food on my table an the gas in my truck. get a job ,kill the bird an eat it ,get a life,wake up "

    Ricochet wrote on Jan 5, 2009 6:36 PM:

    " BWOK....Love says ....SINCE YOU CAN'T SPELL T-R-A-I-L-E-R CAN ANY OF YOU SPELL C-O-M-P-A-S-S-I-O-N? "

    wondering wrote on Jan 5, 2009 4:49 PM:

    " Seems to me if you can afford an
    expensive bird and dogs you could
    afford flood insurance! "

    No sympathy wrote on Jan 5, 2009 3:35 PM:

    " You have gone thru this before and didn't learn your lesson? All of you deserve everything you are experiencing. WHY DIDN'T YOU GET INSURANCE? I scrap by every darn month but I pay my insurance on a trailor. You guys sit around and COMPLAIN ABOUT FEMA!! You can AFFORD PRICEY BIRDS AND DOGS but you can't afford INSURANCE? Give me a break. I could go on but you probably wouldn't understand.

    I am, to say the least, enraged. "

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