It's hard to believe it was 5 years ago that Hurricane Katrina devastated the gulf area. There is still much work that needs to be done - many areas are still trying to recover from the devastation and destruction. Today's post highlights a charity that is still working to rebuild those areas affected by Katrina.
Common Ground Relief rose out of the immediate crisis created by Hurricane Katrina when tens of thousands of residents lost their homes, their possessions and their way of life. In the Lower Ninth Ward where approximately 14,000 people lived and 4,800 homes were located, this devastation represented the loss of a community where over 54% of the residents had lived at 25 years and roots in the neighborhood had resulted in the highest percentage of African American home ownership of any city in the United States. The loss of these homes represented the disappearance of a family’s major asset, economic livelihood and, as a result, their future.
Through Common Ground Relief, we have provided a vehicle for nearly 25,000 people of all ages and backgrounds to volunteer in the recovery of the area. We have gutted over 3,000 homes, provided for the basic needs of thousands of New Orleans residents and founded a, now independent, health clinic and women’s shelter. We meet the residents who need help in rebuilding their flood damaged homes and offer assistance for new construction at our Anita Roddick Advocacy Center. The Center also houses our free Legal Clinic, staffed with law school student volunteers and supervised by a Louisiana licensed attorney, we continue to provide free legal services that now encompass wrongful demolition, succession documentation, mortgage application assistance and contractor fraud.
Additionally, we strive to re-create historic levels of agricultural self-sufficiency in the Lower Ninth Ward through the fiscal sponsorship for and as co-founder of the Lower Ninth Ward Urban Farming Coalition. We conduct soil testing, build raised garden beds for residents, organized a local garden club and provide gardening advice throughout the community. Our Wetlands Restoration program, combined with an educational partnership with Martin Luther King, Jr. Charter School, strives to rebuild the destroyed buffer of wetlands of coastal Louisiana and create awareness of its historic importance to local residents. We have established a tree farm in a partnership with Nichols State University, the Louisiana Department of Agriculture and Forestry, EPCO Construction and Bayou Rebirth to grow hardwood trees and grasses for wetlands plantings and landscape plants for the yards of returning residents.
Finally, our Job Training program, in partnership with EPCO Construction, a Louisiana licensed, bonded and insured general contractor is teaching construction skills to residents and at risk youth. This salaried program provides gainful employment and training that will lead to successful careers for the participants.
With your support, Common Ground Relief will continue to provide grassroots, environmentally aware and politically conscious assistance to this beleaguered community and allow us to help this important area not only survive, but thrive.
Get Involved:
Donate to Common Ground Relief
Volunteer with Common Ground Relief. (Short term & Long term opportunities)
Common Ground Relief's Wish List.
Common Ground Relief on Facebook.
Source: Common Ground Relief
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