Posted inExtreme Weather, Politics & Policy, Voting

Hurricane Helene’s Black Survivors Face Floods, Disinformation, and a Threat to Their Vote

ASHEVILLE, N.C. — Robert Thomas’ home is still standing after the coffee-colored floodwaters of Hurricane Helene rushed through his community, but everything that made up his life has been swept away.  Thirteen days after Helene first made landfall in the U.S., it is known that at least 230 people died during the storm’s surge, with […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Partner Content

Small Town’s Trash Policy Has Left Black Moms Criminally Charged Over Unpaid Garbage Fees

This story was originally published by Inside Climate News. CHICKASAW, Ala.—Shaquala Jackson’s three-year-old daughter screamed. A rat was scurrying across the bathroom floor. “I grabbed the kids and ran out of the house,” she said.  Jackson said that was the day she knew she and her three young children could no longer live in Chickasaw, a […]

Posted inClimate Change, Extreme Weather

Potential NOAA Cuts May Make Storms Like Helene Even More Devastating

As Hurricane Helene barrels across the Southeast, Black communities in Florida, Georgia, and Alabama face devastating floods and power outages, with concerns mounting over inadequate post-disaster resources.  All but one of Florida’s counties were placed under a state of emergency, and tens of thousands of people living in the state’s coastal communities, which are disproportionately […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Rural Issues

Black Communities Left to Sink as Insurance Companies Abandon the South

On Sept. 29, Pastor Timothy Williams will lose the property insurance coverage for his home in rural Elba, Alabama. It’s another mark on a long list of recent letdowns for him in the aftermath of a persistent flooding crisis born by the expansion of a highway next to his home.  Since the state raised and […]

Posted inExtreme Weather, Rural Issues

Louisiana’s Black Rural Communities Feel Neglected After Hurricane Francine

On Tuesday, six days after Hurricane Francine smashed into Louisiana’s coast as the strongest storm of this year’s hurricane season, the Biden administration announced a major disaster declaration for the state and ordered federal aid to supplement the recovery process.  How quickly states and local counties can help individual households largely depends on how quickly […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Housing

Flooded, Foreclosed, and Forgotten: The Unkept Promises to Hurricane Katrina’s Victims

NEW ORLEANS – Robert Green guesses it was about 5 a.m. when the water first broke through.  By 5:10, he, his mother, brother, cousin, and three grandchildren, ages 4, 3, and 2, were on the roof. Within five minutes, their house was floating down the street. By 5:20, the home, pinned against an oak tree, […]

Posted inExtreme Weather, Housing

Hurricane Francine Leaves 400,000 Louisianans Without Power

Hurricane Francine zig-zagged through southern Louisiana on Sept. 11, leaving widespread power outages and flooding behind. Some parts of the state experienced winds of 100 mph and 10 inches of rain.  As thousands of Gulf Coast residents were under mandatory evacuation orders, those remaining, particularly in the state’s largest city, New Orleans, were left riding […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Environmental Justice

America’s Rural South Is Paying the Price for Europe’s Energy

Treva Gear doesn’t want the forest in her town of Adel, Georgia, to be the next place “sacrificed” for someone else’s energy needs. However, a new tax credit proposed in the nation’s largest climate spending bill may make it more likely for her community and dozens of others.  The credit could accelerate the construction of […]

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