New
Orleans
residents
Richard
Read
and
John
D’Addario
consider
themselves
lucky.
A
week
after
Hurricane
Katrina
decimated
their
city,
killing
as
yet
untold
thousands,
the
couple
recalls
how
close
they
came
to
being
victims
instead
of
survivors.
“We
had
options,”
Read
said.
“Sticking
it
out,
going
to
a
hotel
near
New
Orleans
or
staying
with
friends.
We
had
a
hard
time
choosing
the
right
game
plan
until
we
had
one
of
those
thunderbolt
moments
Saturday
night
and
said,
‘We
need
to
leave—and
now.’”
Within
two
hours
of
reaching
that
decision,
the
couple
gathered
their
four
dogs,
packed
a
few
belongings
and
headed
for
a
friend’s
house
in
Lafayette,
La.,
about
120
miles
northwest
of
New
Orleans.
Now
they
wonder
what
happened
to
their
home
and
when
they
can
return.
“We
don’t
have
any
definite
plans,”
Read
said.
“Like
most
New
Orleans
residents,
we’re
in
limbo.
We
actually
feel
kind
of
guilty
being
here.
We’ll
probably
be
here
between
three
to
six
months.”
As
Hurricane
Katrina
evacuees
spread
out
across
the
country,
gay
and
HIV-positive
survivors
of
the
storm
may
face
particular
hurdles
as
they
seek
shelter
and
begin
the
daunting
task
of
rebuilding
their
lives.
Residents
of
Lazarus
House,
New
Orleans’
primary
hospice
for
people
with
HIV,
had
no
place
to
go
to
escape
the
storm,
and
many
now
have
no
place
to
go
to
recover
from
it,
according
to
Robert
Banks.
Banks,
who
lives
in
Phoenix,
operates
the
organization’s
Web
site,
lazarushouse.net,
while
his
mother
Susan
serves
as
director
for
the
non-profit
agency.
Hundreds
of
thousands
of
Gulf
Coast
residents
fled
before
the
massive
Category
4
hurricane
slammed
ashore
Aug.
29
with
winds
at
more
than
140
miles
per
hour.
But
the
22
residents
of
Lazarus
House,
including
several
gay
men,
had
zero
options,
Banks
said.
“They
were
stuck,”
he
said.
“When
you
have
people
with
this
type
of
medical
condition,
no
one
wanted
to
take
them.”
Banks
said
he
received
a
call
from
his
mother
three
days
after
the
hurricane
hit.
“The
National
Guard
had
stopped
by
on
Tuesday
and
told
Mom
they
would
come
back
in
a
day
or
two,”
Banks
said.
“She
called
me
on
Thursday,
and
said,
‘Get
us
out
of
here.’”
By
Friday
morning,
Sept.
2,
Lazarus
House
residents
had
been
evacuated
to
various
shelters,
according
to
Banks.
“Staff
members
gave
each
resident
enough
medication
for
at
least
a
week,
and
a
schedule
of
when
to
take
each
one,”
he
said.
Now
they
face
the
difficult
task
of
locating
temporary
housing.
“We’ve
paired
a
stronger
person
with
a
weaker
individual
to
act
as
a
buddy,”
Banks
said.
“But
we
are
having
a
difficult
time
finding
anyone
to
take
two
people
in
this
medical
condition.
While
we
can
always
use
monetary
donations,
we
really
need
places
for
our
residents.”
Banks
said
the
organization
will
pay
for
travel
should
out-of-state
options
become
available.
Donations,
including
offers
of
housing,
can
be
made
through
the
group’s
Web
site.
HIV-positive
people
are
especially
vulnerable
when
displaced,
according
to
Ron
Valdiserri,
deputy
director
for
HIV,
STD
&
TB
prevention
at
the
Centers
for
Disease
Control
&
Prevention
in
Atlanta.
“It’s
becoming
apparent
that
health
workers
are
just
now
beginning
to
grapple
with
HIV-positive
individuals
without
their
medication,”
Valdiserri
said.
“From
a
public
health
standpoint,
you
don’t
want
patients
missing
their
medication
because
it
can
lead
to
the
development
of
resistance.”
But
HIV-positive
residents
from
New
Orleans
would
face
even
greater
risks
if
they
remained
in
the
city,
Valdiserri
said,
citing
unsanitary
conditions
like
no
running
water
or
sewers.
“That’s
a
dangerous
situation
for
those
who
have
healthy
immune
systems,”
Valdiserri
said.
“It
can
be
fatal
for
a
person
who
is
HIV-positive.”
Currently,
the
CDC
does
not
have
information
on
what
steps
are
being
taken
at
individual
shelters
to
provide
for
HIV-positive
individuals,
Valdiserri
said.
Initial
relief
efforts
in
the
three
states
slammed
by
Hurricane
Katrina—Alabama,
Louisiana
and
Mississippi—focused
on
meeting
individual
needs
for
food,
water,
shelter
and
medical
care.
But
when
efforts
turn
from
rescue
to
recovery,
gay
couples
may
find
themselves
at
a
decided
disadvantage—especially
those
whose
partners
perished
in
the
monster
storm.
The
Defense
of
Marriage
Act,
which
became
law
in
1996,
denies
federal
recognition
to
same-sex
marriages
and
gives
states
the
right
to
refuse
to
recognize
gay
marriages
licensed
in
other
states.
Widows
and
widowers
from
heterosexual
marriages
can
receive
surviving
spouse
Social
Security
benefits,
which
gay
couples
are
denied
because
the
federal
government
will
not
recognize
their
relationships
as
marriages.
The
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency,
also
...