IHCenter is pleased to be a listed and active participant with:
New Orleans: A Labor of Love
New Orleans: A Labor of Love is using the power of independent journalism; social media; and
grassroots organizing to motivate, educate, sustain and mobilize a civic
movement of volunteers who will aid in the ongoing reconstruction of the Gulf Coast.
The
Gulf Coast Still Needs Us
Four
years after Katrina, people are still homeless, displaced, living in
overcrowded conditions, or squatting in unstable structures.
Currently,
71,000 homes in New Orleans need to be rehabilitated. Since Katrina, homelessness
has doubled to 12,000 people and just 34% of Orleans Parish Public Schools have
re-opened. Only eleven percent of families have returned to live in the Lower
Ninth Ward. *
Residents
are discouraged by the appalling slowness of the recovery effort. Media
attention for Gulf Coast relief issues has all but disappeared. The remaining
coverage has shifted from telling the personal stories of those impacted by
Katrina to detailing exposés about corruption and bureaucratic red tape. These
are issues that depersonalize the plight of the hundreds of thousands whose
lives have been disrupted because they have lost their family and friends,
their homes, their neighbors, their jobs, their sense of community - the
essential elements that make life worth living.
While
some Katrina, Rita and Gustav survivors celebrate the triumph of rebuilding
their beloved homes, there are many who feel forgotten and deserted. Those
people who are suffering, those are our people and they still need our help.
Universally,
Katrina survivors rely upon volunteers to bring a sense of hope, commerce, and
invigorating energy to the Gulf Coast. And now, because the media focus has
changed, volunteer numbers are dwindling.
Four
years in, the chaos of post-Katrina disaster relief has settled and the real
story of the recovery effort is just beginning to be told. It's the
neighborhood association leaders who are fighting valiantly to restore their
communities; the volunteers who went for a week, fell in love with The Big
Easy, and never left; or those who stayed until they ran out of money, returned
home, raised more money, and went back again.
We
join those who've chosen to be of service long after the storms have past to
create a forum where we tell our stories of triumph with hope that it will
inspire others; to engage and educate a new population of volunteers who will
join the rebuild effort; and to help spread the word: New Orleans needs us now.
Through
our www.nolaboroflove.org social
networking community and associated social media properties like our Facebook
Fan Page our goals include:
1)
Recruiting volunteers, connecting them with assignments, and providing
resources to help them have life-changing experiences.
2)
Improving quality-of-life resources for Gulf Coast residents through our Idea
Lab - a space for generating solutions for relief issues.
3)
We are keeping media attention on Gulf Coast relief issues through our DreamBig
SeriesTM, our Viral Video Series and strategic partnerships.
We
will never give up.
*Statistical
data was gathered from the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center.