Coverage of the Congressional Visit Begins: "Do We Live in America?"

We start with AP coverage at the Clarion Ledger. Cowboy is capturing the NOLA news as we speak.

House Democrats said Sunday they are honoring their pledge to bring resources to the Gulf Coast and keep attention there, nearly three years after Hurricane Katrina.

“This is all about us doing right by the American people,” House Majority Whip James Clyburn, D-S.C., said at a news conference.

Members of the delegation led by Clyburn said progress is being made with the billions of dollars in recovery aid set aside by Congress so far but that much work remains, particularly in improving health care, increasing affordable housing opportunities and repairing New Orleans’ underground infrastructure.

Clyburn and others called on President Bush to extend from three years to 30 the time the state will have to pay for its $1.8 billion share of levee work.

In an e-mailed statement to The Associated Press, an aide to Gen. Douglas O’Dell, federal coordinator for Gulf Coast rebuilding, said the president “has been consistent in his commitment and efforts to rebuild the Gulf Coast.”

The statement from O’Dell’s chief of staff, Paul T. Conway, went on to say Bush and Congress together have put forward more than $120 billion in federal funds targeting the region, plus tax incentives and $5.8 billion in new levee funding.

Clyburn and others said the trip is not only to gauge progress so far but to also determine what needs still demand federal attention.

Rep. Laura Richardson, D-Calif., said seeing a family living inside a small, federally issued trailer made her question, “Do we live in America?”

“I was appalled, being an American, living in California, seeing what our people are going through,” she said. Richardson gave credit to the Democratic-led Congress for keeping attention on the region.

A Clyburn spokeswoman said Republicans were invited but none were expected to join the 20 or so Democrats, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, on the four-day trip to south Louisiana and Mississippi.

The itinerary includes meetings with state and local officials, tours of the New Orleans area and a town hall meeting on insurance issues in Mississippi.