We thought that was the mother of all recessions. This is almost twice as large.

The tax base will shift more to where they have their residences, instead of where they work. That's where they will pay their property taxes, buy their groceries, buy their cars.

There's no way you could spin that into good news.

We have slight improvement in employment, maybe enough to bring down unemployment three- or four-tenths of a percent, but not enough to bring it down this far.

According to the National Homebuilders Association, that is a heroic assumption. We're really being optimistic with that figure.

The problem is more basic than 'where are the people?' The problem is the people don't have anywhere to live.

It's probably one of the few last best hopes out there for people whose homes were flooded, and had no flood insurance. Without this kind of help, there's a very large number of people who are just sunk.

It's going to take decades, plural, to replace those homes, which is not encouraging.