News

Wall St. Insights While New Orleans has grown by 150,000 residents since Katrina, it is still far from its peak population.
Coastal advocates urge Louisiana to resume the Mid-Barataria project, fearing delays will derail critical restoration of ...
Organized sports programs have returned to the 7th Ward’s Hardin Park, thanks to coordinated efforts by city agencies to ...
Neighbors, friends, and strangers raise funds for Melvin Crump, a beloved Mid-City figure critically injured in a hit-and-run ...
Twenty years after Hurricane Katrina, residents and city leaders reflect on the impact of demolishing New Orleans’ major public housing projects in favor of mixed-income redevelopment.
New Orleans shines as the focus of Essence Magazine's May, June issue marking 20 years since Hurricane Katrina. The covers of the magazine serve as a heartfelt love letter to the Crescent City ...
Before Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans had more than 7,000 public housing units, according to a congressional report. Though largely spared from the storm’s winds and floodwaters, the city’s ...
Some of the neighborhoods where the city has implemented these strategies are in Mid-City and ... Williams said Hurricane Katrina was a big turning point in the way New Orleans approaches drainage ...