(TOP) Memorial Medical Center nurse Mary Jo D’amico fans a patient waiting in the hospital’s parking garage for helicopter transport from New Orleans on Sept.1, 2005, days after Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast. (BOTTOM) The Memorial Medical Center parking garage sits vacant on Aug. 22, 2006. Photos: AP/Wide World photos

(FinalCall.com) – A Louisiana judge has given a preliminary approval to a $25 million settlement in a class-action lawsuit by plaintiffs against a New Orleans hospital that was submerged in flood waters after the levees broke following Hurricane Katrina.

The settlement was reached between Tenet Healthcare Corp, which owned New Orleans’ Memorial Medical Center at the time, and an undisclosed number of plaintiffs who were either being cared for in the hospital or said family members died due to hospital negligence.

“It is a shame that people who suffered so much during and after Katrina has waited this long to receive compensation. The wheels of justice grind very slowly in this city,” Jacques Morial, a health rights advocate, told The Final Call.

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The lawsuit, filed on behalf of at least 187 people, charges that Tenet Healthcare failed to properly prepare the hospital for the storm or establish evacuation plans. Backup power generators malfunctioned after floodwaters surrounded the hospital and the temperature inside escalated. Reportedly 45 patients lost their lives and some doctors later admitted to unethically euthanizing patients. Tenet Healthcare argued that the fault should be laid at the feet of the breached levees and the slothful response of FEMA.

“This $25 million can in no way fully compensate for what people have endured all of these years since Katrina. I believe they purposely drag on cases like this in hopes that people will get word out and will eventually settle for less than what they receive. It’s good that the people are getting something but we should never think this amount matches the full damages done to their lives,” said Mr. Morial, who is also the brother of former New Orleans mayor Marc Morial.

On July 20, Civil District Judge Rosemary Ledet granted the preliminary approval and said it was “fair, reasonable and adequate.” A fairness hearing is scheduled for Oct. 27 to allow plaintiffs time to object to the amount of the settlement if they so choose. Once the final approval is made Gilbert Andry IV, a court-appointed Special Master, will determine how much each plaintiff will receive.

This settlement comes on the heels of an agreement reached in another lawsuit brought against the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the state of Louisiana regarding the highly criticized Road Home program. The federal government awarded $62 million in Road Home funds to 1,460 homeowners.

The New Orleans Police Department is also in the midst of trials that are unraveling Katrina-related incidents, including officers allegedly taking the lives of innocent citizens. Mr. Morial believes more lawsuits and exposure of corruption during that catastrophic storm are yet to be unveiled.

“I would like to hope not, but I expect to see more of these things unfolding for years to come out of what happened before and after Katrina,” said Mr. Morial.

Related news:

Settlement reached in Hurricane Katrina housing discrimination case  (FCN, 07-18-2011)

March remembers unarmed Blacks shot by New Orleans police  (FCN, 09-20-2010)

Activists continue pressure as fourth New Orleans officer pleads guilty  (FCN, 05-14-2010)

A victory for Katrina flood survivors?  (FCN, 11-25-2009)

FCI Documentary: The Unmasking of New Orleans  (Final Call Broadcasting)