Posted inExtreme Weather, Partner Content

Her Mother Died Just Before Katrina. In the Storm’s Wake, Grief Had No Room.

As part of Capital B’s coverage of the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina later this month, we’re proud to present “What Was Lost,” a series of reflections by Louisianans who survived the storm, produced by our collaborators at Verite News. The death of her mother — a heart attack, sudden — took Selarstean Mitchell by […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Land Pollution, Partner Content, Unsafe Water

Decades of Water Neglect Pushed This Alabama Activist Into Politics

Just last year, Carletta Davis had the ear of the White House.  In July 2024, she traveled from her hometown of Prichard, Alabama, to Washington, D.C., to attend the Biden administration’s first environmental justice summit.  It was a celebration of the nearly four years of work by the administration to propel forward on a federal […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Mental Health, Partner Content

What Was Lost: Stories From Hurricane Katrina

As part of Capital B’s coverage of the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina later this month, we’re proud to present “What Was Lost,” a series of reflections by Louisianans who survived the storm, produced by our collaborators at Verite News. NEW ORLEANS — Growing up, holidays were a lot of fun because we had really huge family […]

Posted inCulture, Environmental Justice

This Photographer Preserved Life in New Orleans Before Katrina — With a Polaroid Camera

This is the fifth story in our series chronicling the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. All photos by Polo Silk unless noted. NEW ORLEANS — There weren’t always a pair of security guards standing outside of Big Man’s Lounge in Uptown New Orleans. As a teenager in the early 1980s, Selwhyn Sthaddeus “Polo Silk” Terrell […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Mental Health, Partner Content

What Was Lost: Stories From Hurricane Katrina

As part of Capital B’s coverage of the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina later this month, we’re proud to present “What Was Lost,” a series of reflections by Louisianans who survived the storm, produced by our collaborators at Verite News. New Orleans — Ten years before Katrina, my wife, Phyllis, and I were house shopping. […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Housing, Mental Health

20 Years After Katrina, Louisiana Residents Are Most Vulnerable to ‘Die of Despair’

This is the fourth story in our series chronicling the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Trigger warning: This article contains descriptions of suicide, gun violence, and child deaths that may be distressing to some readers. As the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approached in 2015, Michelle McCullum, a 25-year-old mother of two, drove her children, […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Unsafe Water

Black Neighborhoods at Risk as U.S. Pushes to Cancel Important Climate Protection

As nearly two-thirds of the U.S. population sweltered under extreme heat advisories on Tuesday, news echoed through Black neighborhoods already scorched by the effects of climate change: the Trump administration was moving to tear the heart out of America’s climate protections.  In a decision that environmental activists say is one of the most severe blows […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Culture, Extreme Weather, History

Hurricane Katrina Displaced a Generation — and Led to a Renaissance in Houston

HOUSTON — On a recent Sunday afternoon, tears welled in Sharon Becnel’s eyes as she heard her now 34-year-old daughter reminisce about the scrapbook she lost to Hurricane Katrina.  Inside the pages were Ronisha Johnson’s childhood dreams of becoming an actress and winning a big case as a lawyer. She had only packed for a […]

Posted inEnvironmental Justice, Housing, Land Pollution

Black Women Fight for Life in Houston’s Most Toxic — and Gentrifying — Neighborhood

When Carolyn Rivera moved to Settegast, a majority-Black neighborhood in northeast Houston, 45 years ago, horses roamed the streets and nearly every homestead had a backyard farm where chickens and speckled feather guinea hens darted between rows of corn and greens.  Rivera, who turns 83 next month, remembers those early days with a kind of […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Partner Content

30 Years After Chicago’s Deadliest Heat Wave, Systemic Racism Is Still the Root Problem

Originally published by Inside Climate News CHICAGO — Cheryl Johnson was watching the news during the worst heat wave in her city’s history when she learned that a man she’d known since she was a child had been found dead on the steps of a church downtown. She’ll never forget the moment. Her friend — […]

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