May 23, 2010

455838main_Louisiana_dd0a2.A2010138.1900.250m-4x3_946-710_0.jpg (graphic courtesy of NASA, h/t Evet)

Isn't there something we can do for these people? Can't these people get emergency cash payments and food stamps? We seem to have all the money in the world to fund wars. Why can't we ever seem to help our own people?

The situation in the gulf is getting so dire for some in the seafood industry, they've thought about committing suicide. Steps to intervene are underway.

Desperation is setting in in Southeast Louisiana. "I spoke to a group of fishermen, mainly Vietnamese Americans and a group of them came up to me and said, they told me that they contemplated suicide because they're in such despair," says Congressman Joseph Cao. He says fishermen are feeling compounded stress on top of post-Katrina troubles. "For some people, this is almost a boiling point where they can no longer handle it and they're going to crack."

"These are grown men that broke down and cried this morning because they don't know what to do and we don't know how long it's going to be," says Plaquemines Parish President Billy Nungesser.

That's why Cao and organizations like Volunteers of America are working to get mental health workers on the ground to intervene. "They've just recovered as a result of their businesses, their homes and the rebuilding effort and now you have a number of these small businesses, these fishermen, who have to go through this all over again," says Voris Vigee with the Volunteers of America.

She says organizations are expediting crisis and mental health counseling among other disaster-related services.

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