• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Monday, May 29, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Katrina to COVID: New Orleans’ Black community pounded again

August 28, 2020
in Technology
Reading Time: 4min read
A A
Pence turns up heat on Biden with Wisconsin speech
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Levee breaches from Hurricane Katrina dumped six feet of water into the New Orleans home of Mary Duplessis and her husband in 2005. The house was uninhabitable. Rebuilding meant piles of paperwork in a mountain of bureaucracy. She didn’t return to the city for a year.

But as the 15th anniversary of the storm approaches, and as another monster storm narrowly missed the city, it’s not memories of Katrina that weigh on Duplessis’ mind. It’s the coronavirus.

The Black community of New Orleans, already economically lagging behind white residents before Katrina, was pummeled by the Category 3 storm that made landfall Aug. 29, 2005 and by the lengthy rebuilding process. Images of residents, mostly Black, on top of roofs, cars and at the Superdome stadium became the most iconic of a storm that revealed to the world a city starkly divided into haves and have-nots.

Today, the city is still majority African American but has nearly 100,000 fewer Black residents than it did before Katrina. Many couldn’t imagine the community taking a bigger hit than it did from Katrina, but in some ways, that’s happening with the coronavirus pandemic. Data show New Orleans’ Black residents dying at greater rates — a trend mirrored nationally — and finding themselves less able to bounce back economically .


After Katrina, Duplessis’ husband, Barrett, was back at work as a Sheraton Hotel maintenance mechanic within weeks. Now, he’s been out of work for nearly six months. They visit food banks and use disability checks and retirement saving to get by.

She fell ill with the virus in March, she said, was hospitalized for seven days. The list of people she knows who’ve died of COVID-19 is growing — a sister-in-law, two close friends.

“Every night I go to sleep, I say, ‘Is it going to ever be the same?’” Duplessis said. “We don’t know when this is going to be over with.”

Black New Orleanians account for 60% of the city’s population but 77% of its coronavirus-related deaths as of June, according to a study by The Data Center, a New Orleans-area think tank. Among contributing factors, the study found: African Americans are more likely to live in multigenerational homes where it’s harder to self-isolate, and a larger proportion fill essential jobs that potentially put them in contact with infected people.

“My estimation of the COVID health and economic crisis is that it will be more severe on Black New Orleanians than Katrina was in terms of personal trauma, in terms of financial impact, in terms of potentially the number of deaths at the end of the day,” said Allison Plyer, of The Data Center.

For Doreen Ketchens, the pandemic is economically much tougher than Katrina. When she isn’t touring the world for clarinet concerts, she’s playing in the French Quarter with her husband (sousaphone) and daughter (drums). After Katrina, she could travel for gigs around the country, but that’s not an option now. A once-full calendar has dwindled to nothing.

Around her, she sees the virus’s racial disparities. In one day, she lost her brother and a teacher. It’s frustrating, she said: “It’s only serious if you are Black or brown.”

A sign on downtown’s Joy Theater reads, “Everything you love about New Orleans is because of Black people” — a testament to the food, music, and parades that African Americans have created in the city.

But for the Black people who make up the tourism industry’s backbone — hotel cleaners, Frenchman Street musicians, line cooks — the work usually doesn’t meant wealth.

“This is still the best tourist destination in the world,” said Jay H. Banks, a Black City Council member. “People want to come here because of this magic. But it certainly has not been of great benefit to the people that make the magic happen.”

Black and Hispanic workers fill a disproportionate share of hotel-industry jobs paying less than $15 hourly, while the relatively small number paying more are largely filled by white staffers, a 2018 Data Center report found.

That’s amid soaring housing costs. Rents increased 50% from pre-Katrina amounts, a 2015 Housing NOLA report said. Black residents have more trouble making rent, with over 60% using at least a third of income on housing.

Renter Shaun Mills sees how the housing landscape has changed since Katrina — the double shotguns converted to single-family homes, rebuilt public housing with fewer units, pricey condos springing up.

Even before he lost his line-cook job at Harrah’s sports bar amid the pandemic, he said, he struggled.

“The prices of your rent, the prices of the insurance, the living expenses, the food expenses. Everything goes up year after year except for the pay,” he said. “How can you expect a grown person to be able to provide for his family?”

After Katrina, billions of recovery dollars flowed into the city, largely rebuilding structural damage. Yet Black New Orleans families are hurting, advocates say. Black households earn significantly less. About half the city’s Black children live in poverty, compared with 9% of white children, The Data Center says. Analysts do point to some gains — the 2016 Medicaid expansion improved health care access, and the jail population has dropped.

Mary and Barrett Duplessis have found firmer footing since Katrina but still lived month-to-month pre-pandemic. When the virus hit, and Mary was hospitalized, Barrett was glued to his phone, awaiting updates. When she came home, he was still so worried that Mary feared he’d make himself sick.

Prayer has helped. So has staying busy at home — their iron fence is now painted black and gold, for their beloved New Orleans Saints. They try to help neighbors by giving milk or vegetables from food-bank visits. Mary’s attention was briefly diverted to Hurricane Laura, as she worried the storm could make a last-minute shift toward New Orleans. They were largely spared.

Meanwhile, the bills keep coming, including September’s $900 one for health care. As long as coronavirus is around, that’s one expense the Duplessises can’t drop.

“I’m really scared of that COVID,” Barrett said. “It scares me.”

__

Associated Press reporter Kevin McGill in New Orleans and researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed.

Copyright © 2020 . All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

The key to business success in the coming years

Next Post

Should The NBA Have Cancelled The Season?

Next Post
Look At His Record – Not At What He Writes

Should The NBA Have Cancelled The Season?

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
If owner Daniel Snyder were to get ousted, this is how it would go

If owner Daniel Snyder were to get ousted, this is how it would go

October 20, 2022
Why a commitment to equity should be everyone’s resolution for 2022

Why a commitment to equity should be everyone’s resolution for 2022

January 4, 2022
Women’s Empowerment Organization to Open First Black-Owned Supermarket in the Tri-State Area

Women’s Empowerment Organization to Open First Black-Owned Supermarket in the Tri-State Area

August 24, 2020
San Mateo Hair Salons Allowed To Reopen Under New State Coronavirus Rules

Iowa City Hosts Black History Month Events Throughout February 2021

January 31, 2021
All Things Marketplace to host Black Business Month events in February

All Things Marketplace to host Black Business Month events in February

January 23, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Notable Alabama alumni to know – The Crimson White

May 29, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Opinion | The Empire of Racial Preferences Strikes Back – The Wall Street Journal

May 29, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Nick Cannon’s ‘consensual non-monogamy’: Fathering 12 kids with 6 different women – EL PAÍS USA

May 29, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Opinion | Change the Washington Commanders name to the … – The Washington Post

May 29, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Here are the top education issues state lawmakers battled over this year – The Hill

May 29, 2023

Recent News

Meet 4 Successful HBCU Grads Turned STEM Professionals, Products of a Black-Owned Non-Profit

Meet 4 Successful HBCU Grads Turned STEM Professionals, Products of a Black-Owned Non-Profit

May 26, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

High blood pressure plagues many Black Americans. Combined … – St. Louis Post-Dispatch

May 27, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

How Oakland takes back Coliseum and its sports destiny from the A's – San Francisco Chronicle

May 28, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Honoring Black Americans' Role in the Inception of Memorial Day – Sacramento Observer

May 26, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Notable Alabama alumni to know – The Crimson White

May 29, 2023
Retailers try to curb theft while not angering shoppers – ABC 10 News San Diego KGTV

Opinion | The Empire of Racial Preferences Strikes Back – The Wall Street Journal

May 29, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com