As the 5-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approaches, Salon‘s Matt Davis examined the New Orleans of today. Unlike much of the nation, New Orleans has recently being going through an economic boom. The number of economically disadvantaged people in the Orleans Parish has halved to 68,000 over the last five years, and the median household income has been rising.
Yet, these statistics are not as positive as they seem. Instead, they are largely the result of poor residents leaving New Orleans after Katrina and not returning.
“By most measures, it’s quite clear that the 100,000 people who are missing are the poorest and darkest former residents of the city,” says Rachel Luft, professor of sociology at the University of New Orleans. “And they are being replaced by a slew of YURPs, or young urban redevelopment professionals, who tend to be whiter, wealthier and better educated than the traditional residents of New Orleans. I think they’re being held up as the great white hope for rebuilding the city.”
Many of these “YURPs” are participating in volunteer programs like Teach for America. Others are participating in celebrity-run charities like Brad Pitt’s organization.
…Brad Pitt’s charity, the Make It Right foundation, has acquired the nickname the “Make It White” foundation, and has drawn quiet criticism for foisting $350,000 Frank Gehry-designed houses on poor black property owners in the Lower Ninth Ward, who may well, at some point, see an incentive to sell out and realize the nonprofit’s equity in their homes.
Today, New Orleans hosts 354,850 residents, which is almost 78% of its pre-Katrina population. Yet, only 60% of these residents are black, compared to 67% before the storm.
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