NEW ORLEANS - Black contractors on Tuesday said they
have been frozen out of the rebuilding of this city because federal
agencies continue to dole out millions of dollars to large
corporations. At a news conference, the local chapter of the National
Association of Minority Contractors called on Congress and federal
prosecutors to investigate the contracting practices of the Army Corps
of Engineers and the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The group
also said they may resort to protests to get their message out.
“There’s something wrong with this cozy relationship between the Army
Corps and major corporations,” said Ernest Stalberte, an association
board member. Stalberte delivered his remarks in a parking lot in a
hard-hit part of New Orleans and he was surrounded by large digging and
dirt-moving equipment brought in by black construction companies to
show off their companies’ prowess.
The government’s reliance on major companies, such as AshBritt Inc.,
Phillips and Jordan Inc. and ECC Operating Services Inc., to do the
cleanup after Katrina has been a source of contention since Katrina hit
on Aug. 29, 2005. A congressional committee has been calling for
government agencies to do more business with small companies. According
to the House Small Business Committee, the Department of Defense
awarded 8 percent of its Gulf Coast recovery contracts to small
businesses in Louisiana between August 2005, when Hurricane Katrina
hit, and Oct. 4, 2006. However, that number dropped to 1 percent since
then, committee figures show. The committee only had figures for the
Department of Defense as a whole, but corps contracts have far
outweighed other military branches for Katrina work.
The corps disputes the committee’s figures and says that as of March
28, 88 percent of corps work has gone to small businesses in Louisiana. SOURCE OF THIS STORY