The Cajundome is now home to those displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
September 7, 2005
Outside the Cajundome, a line of cars snakes down Cajundome Boulevard into the parking lots. On the corner of Souvenir Gate, the Lafayette Police Department Mobile Command Unit stands at the parking lot entrance. The cars are filled with young and old, the healthy and the sick, and they all need one thing: shelter from the wrath of Katrina.
Councilman Marc Mouton is directing a group of AmeriCorps volunteers from UL Lafayette on how to collect and deposit the donations being made by local residents from the curb. “This is not a council function,” Mouton says. “This is a Red Cross function. These people are left with nothing. The idea is that we try to make them as comfortable as possible and attend to their needs. That’s the part of the mission of Red Cross. You just do the best you can with what you have.”
The Cajundome opened its doors at noon on Tuesday, Aug. 30, as an American Red Cross shelter. By 4 p.m. there are already 2,400 people there.
Seventy-seven year old Gladys Richardson is walking slowly up the sidewalk with a cane. Her daughter, Joann Spurlock, follows behind her with a small dog in her arms.
“Are y’all coming into the shelter?” Mouton asks.
“We’re trying to get into the shelter,” Spurlock says.
“Well, Rover can’t go in,” Mouton says.
“I know,” says Spurlock. “And it’s not Rover. It’s Shorty. But I’m bringing my mama right here, and I got my people coming behind me. There’s more than us. My little niece is in that wheelchair right there.”
“Tell them to put your mama in the Mardi Gras ballroom,” Mouton says. The ballroom had been designated as a room for people with special medical needs.
While her family unloads its minivan, Richardson sits down while Mouton looks for a wheelchair for her. She’s a soft-spoken woman. After she introduces herself, she asks, “How you doing, baby?”
Her family evacuated on Sunday morning after New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin issued the mandatory evacuation for the city. They had been staying with her nephew in an apartment, but it was too cramped for everyone. When they learned that the shelter was open, the family decided to relocate to the Cajundome.
Spurlock says the family is from the east side of New Orleans, and Richardson starts to cry.
“I know,” Spurlock says to her mother. “We’re going to be all right.”
“I left a lot of grandchildren back there,” Richardson says. “I’m so scared.”
Richardson regains her composure. She’s a lifelong resident of New Orleans and experienced Hurricane Betsy in 1965. “Betsy wasn’t as bad as this,” she says. “Downtown was bad, but where we were staying wasn’t bad. This is the worst. I can’t start over again.” She starts crying again. “I can’t start over again. I’m sick as a dog. I got this here diabetes and heart trouble.”
Spurlock says the plan is simply to stay at the shelter until they can go home. One of her nieces talks to her from New Orleans sometimes on a cell phone. “She says we can’t go home. We can’t do nothing. All of the lights are out in New Orleans. There’s no phone. They’re hungry, and the roof done blowed off of their house. We were going to Bourbon and Orleans where my sister worked, but they said that’s the most dangerous place you could go. So we just got in the car, and we rode.”
“Thank God for y’all,” Richardson says.
“Yes, Lord,” Spurlock adds.
Inside the Cajundome’s administrative offices, Director Greg Davis says no events are on the books for the facility until Sept. 26. Even then, he says events can be shuffled around to assist the operations of the local Red Cross. “We have lots of time to juggle those questions,” he says. “Plus we have some other space. The Mardi Gras Ballroom is about 7,000 square feet. We have the exhibit hall with 32,000 square feet, and the Festival ballroom, that’s another 12,000 square feet. We have the ability to take on more than what you are seeing now, and it’s our intent to be as accommodating as possible. We’ll do whatever it takes, for as long as we have to.”
Behind the Cajundome, numerous volunteers tend a dozen massive barbecue pits billowing with smoke, with hot dogs and hamburgers sizzling on the grill for the evening’s first meal.
Inside the Cajundome, hundreds of people have already laid claim to their space, marked only by a blanket or a sleeping bag and the few personal belongings they have. Others are making their way into the first tier of stands to set up camp. Some are talking, some are napping, and others are watching the large-screen TV overhead broadcasting the latest news from New Orleans on the aftermath of the hurricane.
Tony Credeur oversees seven parishes in Acadiana as executive director of the Acadiana chapter of the American Red Cross, and he’s been working since 4:30 a.m., overseeing some 125 volunteers. He says there’s no end in sight. There’s also no idea how long the Cajundome will be used as a shelter. “There’s no way to know,” he says. “It could be a few days. It could be a few weeks. It could be a few months. Nobody knows.”
The shelter was scheduled to open at 1 p.m., but by noon, there were already people lining up to get inside. “It was just too hot to leave people standing outside,” Credeur says. “As we get utilities brought back on, like in Baton Rouge and east of Baton Rouge, as these facilities become available we’re going to be opening those as shelters and actually moving people into those areas. Our philosophy is that, as fast as we can, we want to get them closer to their homes to see what they have to do to recover. It’s hard for them to do that from way out here.”
The waiting is the hardest part. “We get a couple of days of sunshine,” Mouton says, “and they think that they can go back. It just isn’t possible.”