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Remember that Gustav hurricane and the evacuation?

Svnla

Lifer
I saw this letter in the local newspaper, you can see the link here:

http://blog.nola.com/loliseric..._have_some_rights.html

<....> is my edit for clarity. Edited and bolded for important points.

-------------------------------------------
Dear Editor,

Before everyone thinks I am a terrible, prejudiced, horrible person, just wanted to send a copy of the letter I sent to the Times <Shreveport Times newspaper in Northwest of Louisiana> editors and Bill O'Reilly. Please pray that Hurricane Ike will NOT come to Louisiana.

I am a nurse who has just completed volunteer working approximately 120 hours as the clinic director in a Hurricane Gustav evacuation shelter in Shreveport , Louisiana over the last 7 days. I would love to see someone look at the evacuee situation from a new perspective. Local and national news channels have covered the evacuation and "horrible" conditions the evacuees had to endure during Hurricane Gustav.

True - some things were not optimal for the evacuation and the shelters need some modification.

At any point, does anyone address the responsibility (or irresponsibility) of the evacuees?

Does it seem wrong that one would remember their cell phone, charger, cigarettes and lighter but forget their child's insulin?

Is something amiss when an evacuee gets off the bus, walks immediately to the medical area, and requests immediate free refills on all medicines for which they cannot provide a prescription or current bottle (most of which are narcotics)?

Isn't the system flawed when an evacuee says they cannot afford a $3 copay for a refill that will be delivered to them in the shelter yet they can take a city-provided bus to Wal-mart, buy 5 bottles of Vodka, and return to consume them secretly in the shelter?

Is it fair to stop performing luggage checks on incoming evacuees so as not to delay the registration process but endanger the volunteer staff and other persons with the very realistic truth of drugs, alcohol and weapons being brought into the shelter?

Am I less than compassionate when it frustrates me to scrub emesis from the floor near a nauseated child while his mother lies nearby, watching me work 26 hours straight, not even raising her head from the pillow to comfort her own son?

Why does it insense me to hear a man say "I ain't goin' home 'til I get my FEMA check" when I would love to just go home and see my daughters who I have only seen 3 times this week?

Is the system flawed when the privately insured patient must find a way to get to the pharmacy, fill his prescription and pay his copay while the FEMA declaration allows the uninsured person to acquire free medications under the disaster rules?

Does it seem odd that the nurse volunteering at the shelter is paying for childcare while the evacuee sits on a cot during the day as the shelter provides a "daycare"?

Have government entitlements created this mentality and am I facilitating it with my work?

Will I be a bad person, merciless nurse or poor Christian if I hesitate to work at the next shelter because I have worked for 7 days being called every curse word imaginable, feeling threatened and fearing for my personal safety in the shelter?

Exhausted and battered,


Sherri Hagerhjelm, RN
 
I salute Sherri for her service to evacuees. And I would completely understand if she had no interest in doing it again.

It's one thing for people to feel entitled yet act civilized. But when there's absolutely no pretense made - "Gimme my free stuff!" - clearly we've lost something in society. There's no sense of shame any more.
 
Originally posted by: kranky
I salute Sherri for her service to evacuees. And I would completely understand if she had no interest in doing it again.

It's one thing for people to feel entitled yet act civilized. But when there's absolutely no pretense made - "Gimme my free stuff!" - clearly we've lost something in society. There's no sense of shame any more.

of course not.

look what happened after Katrina. idiots were bragging about getting a FEMA credit card. many were saying that the goverment should build them a house since where htey lived was destroyed (even though they lived apartments), they demanded the goverment give them trailers. they REFUSE to buy flood insurance. etc etc.

after katrina every big hurricane is going to be a pay day for people that stay or thsoe that evacuate.

we knew it would happen and katrina just proved it.
 
Originally posted by: djheater
My gut feeling is shens on this letter. Maybe it's just wishful thinking though...

I thought so too, but I saw it printed in the Shreveport Times newspaper, in black and white.
 
Originally posted by: Svnla
Originally posted by: djheater
My gut feeling is shens on this letter. Maybe it's just wishful thinking though...

I thought so too, but I saw it printed in the Shreveport Times newspaper, in black and white.

Yea, I did a little Googling, and what I couldn't find was her identity and experience independantly verified. We have one reporter's word that she's a legit source.

 
Originally posted by: djheater
Originally posted by: Svnla
Originally posted by: djheater
My gut feeling is shens on this letter. Maybe it's just wishful thinking though...

I thought so too, but I saw it printed in the Shreveport Times newspaper, in black and white.

Yea, I did a little Googling, and what I couldn't find was her identity and experience independantly verified. We have one reporter's word that she's a legit source.

Not one, but several sources (local and national) to prove that she is a real person and a nurse:

http://www.ksla.com/global/sto...0&ClientType=Printable <TV station in Shreveport, LA)

http://www.ktbs.com/player/pla...=11930¤t_zone=31 <TV station in Shreveport interviewed her>

http://wallerbaptistchurch.com/children/sunday-school/ <church in Bossier City, near Shreveport and she serves as a volunteer)

http://www.snopes.com/katrina/personal/shreveport.asp <Snopes.com says she is a real person>

How was your googling skill?


 
Originally posted by: MikeyLSU
Originally posted by: RichardE
People wonder why the south has the perception of being a bunch of welfare rednecks.

I promise you those werent the rednecks talking.

I haven't known too many rednecks with a victim entitlement mentality, but I've seen it quite a bit in the projects. But what would you expect? For 50 years, the government has been telling these people that they are entitled and should expect something for nothing. I see that mentality all the time. It makes me sad. 🙁
 
Originally posted by: Svnla
Originally posted by: djheater
Originally posted by: Svnla
Originally posted by: djheater
My gut feeling is shens on this letter. Maybe it's just wishful thinking though...

I thought so too, but I saw it printed in the Shreveport Times newspaper, in black and white.

Yea, I did a little Googling, and what I couldn't find was her identity and experience independantly verified. We have one reporter's word that she's a legit source.

Not one, but several sources (local and national) to prove that she is a real person and a nurse:

http://www.ksla.com/global/sto...0&ClientType=Printable <TV station in Shreveport, LA)

http://www.ktbs.com/player/pla...=11930¤t_zone=31 <TV station in Shreveport interviewed her>

http://wallerbaptistchurch.com/children/sunday-school/ <church in Bossier City, near Shreveport and she serves as a volunteer)

http://www.snopes.com/katrina/personal/shreveport.asp <Snopes.com says she is a real person>

How was your googling skill?


obviously hes googling skills suck
 

No doubt everything she said was true, however she should be complaining to emergency mgmt why she didnt have adequate security, and additional nurse staff for a volunteer position. Instead she is "shocked" to find out that sometimes people are greedy, irrational scumbags.

somebody call the WHAAAAbulance.
 
Originally posted by: xochi

No doubt everything she said was true, however she should be complaining to emergency mgmt why she didnt have adequate security, and additional nurse staff for a volunteer position. Instead she is "shocked" to find out that sometimes people are greedy, irrational scumbags.

somebody call the WHAAAAbulance.

Did you read the letter?

She said this "does anyone address the responsibility (or irresponsibility) of the evacuees?" and this " me to scrub emesis from the floor near a nauseated child while his mother lies nearby, watching me work 26 hours straight, not even raising her head from the pillow to comfort her own son?" and this "worked for 7 days being called every curse word imaginable"
She worked for free to help and those people <I am using the term very loosely> had some nerve to treat her and other volunteers like that and had the ball to complaint about the conditions? BEGGARS CAN'T BE CHOOSY.

She volunteered for free and worked 120 hours in 7 days <she is a RN, 120 hours as a nurse = some serious money there for her to give it up>. How many hours did you work for free and had to put up with the entitlement attitude of those people? Well?? Just what I thought. :disgust:

 
Originally posted by: Svnla
Originally posted by: xochi

No doubt everything she said was true, however she should be complaining to emergency mgmt why she didnt have adequate security, and additional nurse staff for a volunteer position. Instead she is "shocked" to find out that sometimes people are greedy, irrational scumbags.

somebody call the WHAAAAbulance.

Did you read the letter?

She said this "does anyone address the responsibility (or irresponsibility) of the evacuees?" and this " me to scrub emesis from the floor near a nauseated child while his mother lies nearby, watching me work 26 hours straight, not even raising her head from the pillow to comfort her own son?" and this "worked for 7 days being called every curse word imaginable"
She worked for free to help and those people <I am using the term very loosely> had some nerve to treat her and other volunteers like that and had the ball to complaint about the conditions? BEGGARS CAN'T BE CHOOSY.

She volunteered for free and worked 120 hours in 7 days <she is a RN, 120 hours as a nurse = some serious money there>. How many hours did you work for free and had to put up with the entitlement attitude of those people? Well?? Just what I thought. :disgust:


Why would anyone in their right mind volunteer to work 72 hours in a evacuee shelter and think the people their would behave rationally and sanely. Most had no other option and perhaps forced. Responsible folks drove far away and stayed in a hotel, or with freinds family. Thats like volunteering to work 72 hours in a homeless shelter and then complain that "those people" STEAL, DRINK ALCOHOL IRRISPONSIBLY AND FOR GODS SAKE SMELL BAD! well no shit.

I'm sure shes a good person, but Mother Theresa she aint.



 
Welcome to why the rest of us here on the Gulf Coast avoid NOLA and don't shed a lot of tears over the city. Obviously most of the people in the city are fine people, New Orleans got 4th, 5th, and 6th helpings of worthless residents.
 
Originally posted by: Svnla
I saw this letter in the local newspaper, you can see the link here:

http://blog.nola.com/loliseric..._have_some_rights.html

<....> is my edit for clarity. Edited and bolded for important points.

-------------------------------------------
Dear Editor,

Before everyone thinks I am a terrible, prejudiced, horrible person, just wanted to send a copy of the letter I sent to the Times <Shreveport Times newspaper in Northwest of Louisiana> editors and Bill O'Reilly. Please pray that Hurricane Ike will NOT come to Louisiana.

I am a nurse who has just completed volunteer working approximately 120 hours as the clinic director in a Hurricane Gustav evacuation shelter in Shreveport , Louisiana over the last 7 days. I would love to see someone look at the evacuee situation from a new perspective. Local and national news channels have covered the evacuation and "horrible" conditions the evacuees had to endure during Hurricane Gustav.

True - some things were not optimal for the evacuation and the shelters need some modification.

At any point, does anyone address the responsibility (or irresponsibility) of the evacuees?

Does it seem wrong that one would remember their cell phone, charger, cigarettes and lighter but forget their child's insulin?

Is something amiss when an evacuee gets off the bus, walks immediately to the medical area, and requests immediate free refills on all medicines for which they cannot provide a prescription or current bottle (most of which are narcotics)?

Isn't the system flawed when an evacuee says they cannot afford a $3 copay for a refill that will be delivered to them in the shelter yet they can take a city-provided bus to Wal-mart, buy 5 bottles of Vodka, and return to consume them secretly in the shelter?

Is it fair to stop performing luggage checks on incoming evacuees so as not to delay the registration process but endanger the volunteer staff and other persons with the very realistic truth of drugs, alcohol and weapons being brought into the shelter?

Am I less than compassionate when it frustrates me to scrub emesis from the floor near a nauseated child while his mother lies nearby, watching me work 26 hours straight, not even raising her head from the pillow to comfort her own son?

Why does it insense me to hear a man say "I ain't goin' home 'til I get my FEMA check" when I would love to just go home and see my daughters who I have only seen 3 times this week?

Is the system flawed when the privately insured patient must find a way to get to the pharmacy, fill his prescription and pay his copay while the FEMA declaration allows the uninsured person to acquire free medications under the disaster rules?

Does it seem odd that the nurse volunteering at the shelter is paying for childcare while the evacuee sits on a cot during the day as the shelter provides a "daycare"?

Have government entitlements created this mentality and am I facilitating it with my work?

Will I be a bad person, merciless nurse or poor Christian if I hesitate to work at the next shelter because I have worked for 7 days being called every curse word imaginable, feeling threatened and fearing for my personal safety in the shelter?

Exhausted and battered,


Sherri Hagerhjelm, RN

president bush doesn't like black people...

 
Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
Originally posted by: Ns1
120 hours as an RN in 7 days is about...

~7000 in earnings

"I am a nurse who has just completed volunteer working approximately 120 hours..."

Volunteer work generally means no pay.

....

It was a response to this

She volunteered for free and worked 120 hours in 7 days <she is a RN, 120 hours as a nurse = some serious money there>. How many hours did you work for free and had to put up with the entitlement attitude of those people? Well?? Just what I thought. :disgust:
 
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