Virginia senator suggests U.S. is spending too much on Iraq, not enough on New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS (AP) _ Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, set to deliver the Democratic rebuttal to Tuesday's State of the Union address, suggested Monday that the United States is spending too much on reconstruction

Monday, January 22nd 2007, 6:09 pm

By: News On 6


NEW ORLEANS (AP) _ Virginia Sen. Jim Webb, set to deliver the Democratic rebuttal to Tuesday's State of the Union address, suggested Monday that the United States is spending too much on reconstruction in Iraq while ignoring the rebuilding of New Orleans.

Webb said his ``gut instinct'' tells him not to support more funding for Iraq without a full accounting of the money already spent there.

``If we're putting all this money into Iraq and ignoring New Orleans, then we're doing something wrong,'' he told reporters during a teleconference.

But Webb, a freshman senator, stopped short of calling for money earmarked for Iraq to be diverted to New Orleans, which, he said, has languished in the nearly 17 months since Hurricane Katrina.

Adam Sharp, a spokesman for Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., said that the federal government has a role to play in meeting future funding needs but that he didn't know how great that role would be. Congress already has allocated more than $100 billion to rebuild the Gulf Coast, Sharp said, and those funds must be distributed efficiently and accounted for.

Webb said he believes the Bush administration mishandled the city's recovery and said the city's struggles have ``kind of fallen off the national radar screen over the last year.''

Webb said the enormity of what happened in New Orleans ``is almost beyond description, but we haven't, as a government, really stepped forward to do anything about it.''

Webb would not say what additional resources the city needed or whether he would bring up New Orleans during his rebuttal address Tuesday night.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.

Parts of New Orleans remain devastated, with houses vacant, and many small businesses struggling. The Lower Ninth Ward, one of the hardest-hit neighborhoods, still lacks telephone service. Street lights work intermittently. And the city's criminal justice system is in shambles.

Fewer than half of the city's pre-storm population of about 454,000 people have returned.
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