President Bush is in the southern city of New
Orleans marking the first anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which killed
more than 1,000 people and devastated much of the southern U.S. Gulf
Coast.
The president and Mrs. Bush joined hundreds of worshippers at St. Louis
Cathedral in the heart of New Orleans' famed French Quarter.
They lit candles of remembrance and knelt for a moment of silence to
mark the anniversary of the first breach of the city's levees, which
ultimately left 80 percent of New Orleans under water.
Following the service, President Bush told local leaders at a high
school that the challenge is not only to help rebuild, but to restore the
soul and the rhythms of everyday life.
"Some of you still do not
know whether you have a neighborhood to come back to. Others of you who
have made the decision to return are living in trailers," he said. "Many
are separated from their loved ones, and simply long to go to church on a
Sunday afternoon with somebody you care about."
Following the storm, President Bush was widely criticized for the slow
pace of the federal response. More than two-thirds of Americans still
disapprove of his handling of Hurricane Katrina, according to an
Associated Press poll earlier this month.
Mr. Bush says he takes full responsibility for the federal response to
the nation's costliest natural disaster - a storm that he says brought
terrible scenes that Americans never thought they would see in their own
country.
"Citizens drowned in their attics. Desperate mothers crying out on
national TV for food and water. A breakdown of law and order, and a
government at all levels that fell short of its responsibilities," said
President Bush. "When the rains stopped and this wounded city was laid
bare, our television screens showed faces worn down by poverty and
despair."
Half of New Orleans still has no electricity and half of the city's
hospitals remain closed.
President Bush says the federal government will stand with the people
of the Gulf Coast until the job is done.
The Army Corps of Engineers is spending nearly $6 billion to repair and
strengthen levees to make the entire hurricane protection system better by
2010.
The federal government has committed more than $10 billion to pay for
damage not covered by insurance for eligible homeowners. Washington has
provided nearly $1.5 billion to small business owners in Louisiana and
more than $5.5 billion to repair roads and bridges, schools, water
systems, and public utilities.
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