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MARGARET TAYLOR lends a hand.
U.S. Representative Gene	just;
Taylor has become an	"W<
icon for the people	who
of the Gulf Coast in a	It's
gargantuan battle with	"W
insurance companies	he	ri
that has all the drama of the legendary	17-y
confrontation between David and	situ
Goliath.	Hi
On one side you have the citizens	so t
of the Gulf Coast who lost their	the;
homes and businesses in the most	hig
catastrophic hurricane to hit the	he :
United States in the last 100 years.	A
These are folks who grew up with the	wh
catchy slogans "like a good neighbor"	the
and "you're in good hands." They	rer
thought their insurance company	It
would be there to help if disaster came	ar<
knocking.	w<
On the other side you have the	ga
insurance companies -corporate giants	Ta
who with straight faces say the life-	gc
changing event called Katrina was a	1
flood. A flood with anywhere from	p>
50 to 175 mile per hour winds which washed away your home, my home,	f<
Gene Taylor's home - thousands of	V
homes - and left the Gulf Coast with a	/
serious case of the slabs.
These good neighbors insist that all	r
damages which occurred from this	c
catastrophic event should be assigned	i
to the federally-backed National	1
Flood Insurance program and not them. A stance Gene Taylor does not agree with. He believes the insurance companies should be held accountable to both the policyholders and the taxpayers.
During the week Taylor is in Washington D.C. demanding justice for the people of the Gulf Coast
-	which is exactly what we expect our U.S. Representative to do.
But on weekends he's in Bay St. Louis, in a trailer with his wife Margaret, rebuilding their home and their life - one stick of wood at a time
-	just like the rest of us.
He recently took time out from working on his house to reflect on the last 20 months.
Sometimes it seems like it happened
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Taylor, Gene 005
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