Mike Smith
EF5
This is doubly true if you are talking about major disasters impacting areas of poverty and limited resources like Appalachia and north St. Louis city. But it looks like the kind of help that other places got in the past might not happen in St. Louis, as outlined in the article below. So from how it looks to me, things are getting worse, not better.
John, I have thoughts about what you have written but I fear I would violate the rules about political opinions if I wrote too much.
Please keep in mind that north St. Louis has sunk deeper and deeper into poverty since the 1950's. It was already quite poor when I arrived in STL (Carter Administration) and -- tragically -- it still is. A single political party has ruled STL the entire time.
Trying to blame the STL recovery issues on a president who has been in office 7 months (vs more than 60 years of local single party rule) seems to me to miss the mark. I do strongly support the D. mayor for firing the head of the local EM agency after the terrible siren fiasco and related issues (see the report).
As to NC floods and Katrina, the then and current governor of NC plus the mayor of MSY and governor of LA during Katrina are of the same political party that has ruled STL.
That is all I feel I can say without running afoul of the rules.