Tag Galveston TX

The Withering

Even before the current Great Recession, many American cities that had been home to the industrial expansion that built this country in the late 1800s and early 1900s were already in decline. Not even the boom years of the 1990s could bring about the revival of fortunes for many “Rust Belt” cities, and with the deep and long-lasting downturn we face now, some American cities seem all but doomed to practical extinction. This 24/7 Wall Street post looks at “America’s Ten Dead Cities”, but it wouldn’t be too hard to extend the list out by another half-dozen. Two of the cities on the list — Galveston and New Orleans — make the list less for sagging industrial fortune and more for the repeated devastation of those two cities by natural disasters. The recent media “anniversary celebrations” of Hurricane Katrina glossed over the continuing struggle to rebuild New Orleans, while Galveston was practically wiped off the map in 2008, which was not the first time for that city either.

In this past Sunday’s Boston Globe, this article by Drake Bennett looks at a growing interest among urban planners and hard-pressed city governments in deliberately shrinking these dying cities. There are several approaches: some cities are taking advantage of the opportunity to simply reintroduce green space into densely-developed areas. In Detroit, there is a very controversial effort afoot to move residents still living in less-populated neighborhoods into other areas of the city so that the abandoned districts can be demolished. And, such being the times, some places are looking at selling off blocks of property to private developers just to get rid of the burden of maintenance. The article cites similar efforts that were undertaken in cities of the former East Germany, which saw similar drastic declines after reunification.

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Ps-Ike’d Out

These days, my blog-buddy Jack Cluth lives in Portland, OR, but when I first met him online, and up until a little more than a year ago, he lived in Seabrook, TX. Seabrook is a suburb sort of between Houston and Galveston, not far from the Johnson Space Center (as in “Houston, we have a problem”). In fact, his blog was originally called “The People’s Republic of Seabrook”, and when I first discovered it many, many years ago, I initially started reading it because I thought he was in Seabrook, NH, just up the road a piece.

Anyway, being directly in the path of Hurricane Ike last week did quite a number on Seabrook, TX. And, as coincidence would have it, Jack just happens to work for an insurance company as part of one of their first-responder deployment teams that get sent to disaster areas to help quickly process insurance claims for the people whose lives have been torn asunder. So Jack and his co-workers have found themselves dispatched to the Houston area.

Jack’s not directly working in his former town, but he did have a chance to get over there and survey the damage. Things might not be quite as bad as they are in Galveston, but everything is in pretty bad shape, he says. His ex-wife still lives there, and her neighborhood wasn’t too badly affected, but I can only imagine how otherworldly it must feel to be dropped in to a very familiar place, only to find it in ruins. It’s one thing to be in a disaster zone where you don’t have any attachment, but it’s completely something else when you have such a close personal connection.

Best of luck to Jack and his co-workers on their latest mission, but even more good wishes to the people of the Texas coast who have been badly shaken up by the hurricane.

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