Friday, April 19, 2024

11 years after Katrina, African Americans still have not recovered

Nearly 100,000 African Americans never returned to New Orleans following Katrina (Image: Black Agenda Report)
Nearly 100,000 African Americans never returned to New Orleans following Katrina (Image: Black Agenda Report)

96,000.

That’s how many fewer African-Americans are living in New Orleans now than prior to Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall 11 years ago today. Nearly 1 in 3 black residents have not returned to the city after the storm.

It was the worst urban disaster in modern U.S. history. Eighty percent of New Orleans lay under water after the epic collapse of the area’s flood-protection system—more than 110,000 homes and another 20,000 plus businesses, along with most of the city’s schools, police and fire stations, electrical plans, and its public transportation system.

Most shocking is the Lower Ninth Ward, where the average resident was living on $16,000 a year before the hurricane. You can still drive blocks there and not see a single home. The neighborhood is still missing more than half its pre-Katrina population.

Read more of this story here.

Although this story is a year old, unfortunately it remains very much true, visit here to read the Black Agenda Report’s story here.

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