Results tagged “galveston”
Break out the beads and the bands! The official Mardi Gras season in Galveston -- which dates all the way back to 1867 -- kicks off tomorrow, February 13th, and runs through February 24th.
If you are of the belief that Glen Campbell's ode to Galveston spoke to the city like a deeply-missed and deeply-loved woman, that woman is in awful shape right now. Nearly four months after Hurricane Ike swept through the city, its eye making landfall directly on the island with a force that belied its Category 2 status, Galveston is making progress towards rebuilding but is still a city in shambles. The city's largest employer, the heavily-damaged University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB), recently laid off 3,800 employees while other area businesses struggle to rebuild. Tourism, an industry upon which the island relied heavily, is also moving sluggishly despite recent efforts to clean up the flood-ravaged Strand in time for the yearly Dickens on the Strand. Island residents are still awaiting insurance settlements to rebuild their homes, while entire neighborhoods languish and rot. Two recent articles in Houston's main papers, the Chronicle and the Press, are asking the tough questions and showing the tough truth about Galveston's efforts to rebuild in the face of national apathy and a brutal recession. The Chronicle discusses how the island is desperate for funds, to the point that they're begging the Texas Legislature for some assistance:
Revenues from property and sales taxes and other sources are dropping so sharply that layoffs of city employees are imminent even after the city slashed spending and cut all its employees' pay by 3 percent, City Manager Steve LeBlanc told the House Select Committee on Hurricane Ike on Wednesday.At the Press, John Nova Lomax tries to understand why Galveston's plight has been largely ignored on both a state and national level:
He asked that the state refund all or part of the sales tax revenues generated on the island for two years and provide a long-term, low-interest loan from an emergency fund that's now empty. "I'm getting to the point of being, in a sense, desperate for help," LeBlanc told reporters after his testimony. "It's becoming very difficult to serve our citizens."
While Katrina's destruction of New Orleans monopolized the eyes of the country and the world for weeks in 2005, Galveston had the misfortune to have Ike fall in the TV-watching dead zone of late night on Friday, September 12, three years later, and then to be eclipsed in the news cycle by even larger national and international events almost immediately. By contrast, Katrina struck New Orleans at eight a.m. on a Monday in a nonelection year, almost as if it were a gift-wrapped page-one story for news-starved organizations the world over. The neglect even has a bottom line: Wilma, Rita and Katrina together inspired people to give to all hurricane-related charities to the tune of almost $6.5 billion. The four biggest charities have only been able to come up with $19 million for Ike victims. If you are doing the math at home, that comes up to less than one-third of 1 percent. It's a practically infinitesimal amount, even if you divide the $6.5 billion by three to account for the three storms. One example speaks volumes. The Bush-Clinton fund, run by the former presidents of those names, raised $135 million after Katrina. The same fund only managed to scrape together $2.5 million for Ike victims, despite the fact the storm hit the hometown of one of the principals.Public consensus seems to lean heavily towards the idea that Galveston will have to rely primarily on private industry and investment to get back onto its feet again, as government and charity spending can only go so far. What this means, however, is a future in which we could see gambling legalized on the island -- harkening back to its old days as a hotbed for organized crime (which is where Tilman Fertitta's family made their fortune, after all) -- and an Atlantic City built on the Gulf of Mexico, the lights from tacky casinos along the Seawall mirroring those twinkling from oil rigs out in the sea. Would it be worth it? We ask you, readers, would you be willing to see a Galveston in which less focus is on the historical and leisurely aspects of the island -- things like the Strand, the Railroad Museum, Ashton Villa, the Elissa, the beaches and the laid-back vibe -- and more focus is on Landry's-style in-your-face tourism and gambling if it meant that the city could rebuild faster and stronger than before? --- Photo courtesy of Flickr user grovesa16.
Moody Gardens Festival of Lights
The infamous lions, tigers and bears trifecta is complete in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike:
Houstonist has just taken our last hot shower for what might be a while, and we're now cozied up to the computer while the comforting blue-green glow of besuited weathermen and frantic on-location reporters on the television fills the room.
Can't decide what to do for the Fourth of July and upcoming three-day weekend? Don't know which Independence Day scene is quite right for you? Don't worry, patriots: Houstonist is here to help.
Can we interest you in the brisk salt air and the reassuring view of distant oil platforms in the Gulf with your beer? If so, you'll want to attend the next Saint Arnold pub crawl this Saturday, June 28th starting promptly at 4:00 p.m.
Good news, Houston! Not only have we finally Jenny Craig'd our way out of the "Fattest City in America" title, we are also steadily becoming less sweaty.
This Saturday the structural and aesthetic skills of the biggest architects and planners around town will be put to test -- on the beach. Special teams from major Houston architecture firms will convene to compete in The 22nd annual AIA Sandcastle Competition on Gavleston's East Beach, and while this might not be the bonus-bringing project of the year each firm takes the competition quite seriously.
From local Houston headlines, we bring you these weekend news bits...
Galveston is hosting the 23rd Mardi Gras of its modern era while New Orleans krewes roll for the second time P.K. (Post Katrina). Dedicated lunatics have been slowly building up their Mardi Gras revelry since the twelfth night after Christmas - the official start of the carnival season. But, the highest concentration of the most celebrated Mardi Gras parades, balls and general debauchery lands this weekend. Attendance for events in both cities is expected to...

Houstonist Flickr Photo of the Day - After a Late Night at Work