For
Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
September 2, 2005
President Tours Biloxi, Mississippi
Hurricane Damaged Neighborhoods
Biloxi, Mississippi
12:15 P.M. CDT
THE PRESIDENT: I'm proud to be here
with the Mayor of Biloxi. The reason I'm
proud to be here with him and the
Governor and Senator is because in spite
of this terrible tragedy, their spirits
are high. It's hard to describe the
devastation that we have just walked
through. I just talked to a fellow who
was raised in a house that used to be,
and he's got rubble surrounding him, and
I said, "Are you doing all right," and
he said, "I'm doing fine, I'm alive, and
my mother is alive." I talked to a
fellow who runs a wrecking service -- I
think it's a wrecking service. He said,
"I witnessed Camille. We went through
Camille, and we'll go through this
storm, Katrina."
You know, there's a lot of sadness, of
course. But there's also a spirit here
in Mississippi that is uplifting. I want
to thank the governor for his strong
leadership. He set some clear
parameters, and has followed through on
helping calm everybody's nerves. I want
to thank the mayor. Neither of them
asked for this when they got elected.
Now they're called upon to help solve
the problem.
And I've come down here, one, to take
a look at the damage first hand. And I'm
telling you, it's worse than imaginable.
And, secondly, to tell the good people
of this part of the world that the
federal government is going to help. Our
first job is to save life. And earlier
today, I had a chance to meet with some
chopper drivers, guys dangling off of
cables that are pulling people out of
harm's way. And I want to thank them for
their hard work.
We're going to stabilize the
situation, and then get food and
medicine and water. I traveled today
with the head of the Red Cross and the
Salvation Army, and people here are
going to see compassion pour in here.
There's a lot of folks in America that
want to help. If you want to help, give
cash to the Salvation Army and the Red
Cross. We can ask for other help later
on, but right now we need to get food
and clothes and medicine to the people.
And we'll do so. And one of the main
delivery systems will be the armies of
compassion.
We're going to clean all this mess
up. The federal government is going to
-- will spend money to clean it up. The
first down payment will be signed
tonight by me as a result of the good
work of the Senate and the House, $10.5
billion. But that's just the beginning.
But the people have got to understand
that out of this rubble is going to come
a new Biloxi, Mississippi. It's hard to
envision it right now. When you're
standing amidst all that rubble, it's
hard to think about a new city. But when
you talk to folks that have been through
Camille and have seen what happens, and
you listen to the spirit of people, you
realize, Mr. Mayor, that after a lot of
hard work, people are going to be --
people will be proud of the effort. And
I want to thank you for your leadership
here. And Haley, I want to thank you for
yours.
Again, I want to thank Trent and
Thad. They're going to be very important
members of the -- they are important
members of the Senate, and they're going
to be an important part of this --
making sure that we fund this recovery
effort.
I'll answer a couple of questions,
then I'm going to go.
Q Mr. President, were you prepared
for the vastness of the destruction?
THE PRESIDENT: I don't think anybody
can be prepared for the vastness of this
destruction. You can look at a picture,
but until you sit on that doorstep of a
house that used to be, or stand by the
rubble, you just can't imagine it.
And we took a low -- we took a low
chopper ride from here --to here, and
we're going to take it on over to New
Orleans here. And the destruction is
unbelievable. And it's destruction on
the coast, and it's destruction off the
coast. And we've got a lot of work to
do.
Terry.
Q One of the things you hear is
people saying a lot of resources are
being devoted to Iraq, now this country
needs them. And they're frustrated about
that. What do you say to the people who
say, there's too much money being spent
on Iraq and it's time to bring them
home?
THE PRESIDENT: I just completely
disagree. We've got a job to defend this
country and the war on terror, and we've
got a job to bring aid and comfort to
the people of the Gulf Coast, and we'll
do both. We've got plenty of resources
to do both.
Somebody questioned me the other day
about -- do we have enough National
Guard troops? Of course we do. These
governors have got compacts with other
states. If they need to call upon
another state, the state will send Guard
troops. And the people have just got to
know, we've got what it takes to do more
than one thing, and we'll secure our
country from the terrorists, and we'll
help rebuild this part of the world.
Q This morning, when you said the
results are not acceptable, what
specifically were you talking about?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I'm talking
about the fact that we don't have enough
security in New Orleans yet. Results are
acceptable here in Mississippi. You
know, the results are acceptable in New
Orleans when it comes to the hard work
of the Coast Guard. But we need to get
troops -- we had 1,200 troops arrive
yesterday, I'm told. We're going to have
1,200 today, 1,200 more. These are
troops especially trained for military
police work. They need to get in there.
They need to stabilize that situation.
They need to make sure that the food and
medicine that is in place is given to
the people that need the food and
medicine.
I got a good report today about food
and medicine getting to people that
weren't getting it, but we'll find out
if it's true when we get to New Orleans.
You know, this is a huge task that
we're dealing with. And our jobs, as
people in positions of responsibility,
is not to be satisfied until the job is
done as good as it can possibly be done.
And that's what I was referring to. I'm
certainly not denigrating the efforts of
anybody. But the results can be better
in New Orleans. And I intend to work
with the folks to make it better.
And again, in Mississippi, we've got
a different situation. We've got a Guard
that is in place, activated. Haley made
some clear rules and is following
through on them. But the task, in both
places, the tasks are enormous. And it's
going to take a while. This is -- our
fellow citizens must understand that
we're talking years. Now, we're not
talking years to get people rescued,
we're talking days. And we're not
talking years to get infrastructure back
up here. We're talking weeks to get the
electricity running.
I got some good news on the pipeline,
the Colonial Pipeline. We thought it
would be at 47 percent, at least I was
briefed that yesterday. I'm told it's
going to be significantly more than
that, which is good news. It means that
one of the problem areas that Haley was
talking to me about is how -- and the
Mayor -- was how do you get fuel to
these communities. And obviously, the
more fuel going through pipelines, the
more fuel will be available not only
here in the affected areas, but up and
down the Southeast of the country.
And, listen, we're going to have a
problem this weekend when it comes to
gasoline, just like they've got a
problem here. But we're addressing it.
We're -- the EPA suspended rules so that
we could use -- which attracted --
suspended rules for types of gasoline
which attracted fuel from overseas.
That's good. We're swapping oil out of
the SPRO. We're making sure that there's
oil to be processed in the refineries.
They're working hard to get these ports
open.
Trent was telling me that we got to
get that port of Pascagoula open so we
can get ships of foreign crude oil to
the refinery. And we're -- we just got a
lot of work to do. The good news is we
know what we're going to do, and we're
going to get it done.
Jennifer.
Q Sir, you talk about fixing what's
wrong and you talk about the results not
being acceptable, but there are a lot of
people wondering why you weren't fixing
the problems yesterday or the day
before, and why the richest country on
Earth can't get food and water to those
people that need it?
THE PRESIDENT: The levees broke on
Tuesday in New Orleans. On Wednesday, we
-- and Thursday we started evacuating
people. A lot of people have left that
city. A lot of people have been pulled
out on buses. It's -- I am satisfied
with the response. I'm not satisfied
with all the results. They started
pulling people off roofs immediately.
They started rallying -- we started
rallying choppers to get people off
rooftops, started savings lives. I mean,
thousands of peoples' lives have been
saved immediately, and that's good news.
This is one of the worst storms in
our nation's history. New Orleans got
hit by two storms, one the hurricane,
and then the flood. And it's going to
take a monumental effort to continue
moving forward, but we will. And this is
a nation that has done a lot of big
things before, and this is going to be
one of the biggest, which is to recover
from one of the worst storms, if not the
worst storm. Haley called it the worst,
I'm calling it one of the worst storms
in the nation's history.
Yes.
Q Mr. President, thank you for
coming. We appreciate it very much.
There's a need for immediate housing and
long-term housing. Many people right now
have no shelter, and on top of that,
many people do not have flood insurance.
They never expected a tidal surge of
this magnitude. What can you say about
housing efforts?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I appreciate
that. The -- FEMA will be providing a
lot of temporary housing. And that's one
of the responsibilities that FEMA
assumes, to find shelter for people.
And in terms of the longer term, the
government has got the capacity to make
low-interest loans and help businesses
get back going. And there will be a --
again, once the situation gets
stabilized, there will be the
appropriate authorities here to start
passing out the forms necessary for
people to apply for the relief and the
help they can get. But the federal
government will be providing the
temporary housing.
Q Mr. President, I realize the first
priority is, obviously, saving lives.
But let me ask you about long-term
planning in New Orleans. There are some
who are starting to say that since we're
going to be spending billions in tax
dollars to rebuild that great city, that
we might want to think about building it
in such a way where it's not below sea
level again, whether it's somehow moved
around or relocated or moved up. What
are your thoughts on that?
THE PRESIDENT: My thoughts are, we're
going to get somebody who knows what
they're talking about when it comes to
rebuilding cities. I'm going to
delegate. I'm going to call upon the
best experts, starting with the people
of New Orleans, and get opinions as we
work with the local folks. We're going
to help people rebuild, Stretch. That's
what we're going to do. And we're going
to listen to people who know what
they're doing.
But my objective now, of course, is
to save lives and get people out of New
Orleans, and then -- and make sure that
those who are out of New Orleans and in
New Orleans get food and help, just like
in Mississippi. Mississippi people have
got to understand that I know a lot of
the focus is on New Orleans, but I'm
thinking about Mississippi, as well. I'm
not only thinking about coastal
Mississippi, I'm thinking about rural
Mississippi, places in this part of the
state that are remote and don't have
electricity. And they just got to know
that the governor talked to me about it,
and I listened very carefully about the
problems facing these good folks. And
one of the things we're going to
concentrate on is getting these --
getting these electric plants up and
running and getting the power to the
people so that they can have the
electricity necessary to live a more
normal life.
It's -- these are tough times. This
is a storm the likes of which, you know,
I pray I never see again. It's the like
-- it's a storm the likes of which the
people who have been through Camille,
they said, you know, Camille was
terrible; we're never going to see
anything like Camille again. Camille was
in '69. And a guy said, you know, we
felt safe here in this part of the
neighborhood because Camille didn't hit
it. And sure enough, we witnessed a
storm worse than Camille.
And again, I want to thank all the
people that are working hard. You --
we've seen line crews, we've seen
firefighters from around the country.
People around here are going to be
amazed at the compassion that pours into
this community. First things first,
we've got to make them safe.
Mr. Mayor, again, thank you for your
hospitality, thank you for your
compassion.
MAYOR HOLLOWAY: Thank you, Mr.
President.
THE PRESIDENT: Governor, thanks for
your leadership.
GOVERNOR BARBOUR: Thanks for your
help.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all.
END 12:32 P.M. CDT