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As flood risks rise, New Orleans neighborhoods build resilience

Rollin Garcia, owner of Bullet鈥檚 Sports Bar, poses next to a planter box outside his bar in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, April 19, 2023

Rollin Garcia, owner of Bullet鈥檚 Sports Bar, poses next to a planter box outside his bar in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, April 19, 2023. 黑料天堂/Darren Trentacosta

What鈥檚 the context?

Community-led groups in New Orleans are better managing water and cutting flood risks post-Katrina, as extreme weather risks grow

  • Community groups expand use of planters and rain barrels
  • Annual ecosystem benefits found to total over $19 mln
  • Block-by-block differences seen during rains and storms

NEW ORLEANS - From rain barrels outside homes and planter boxes on sidewalks to ditches filled with vegetation, community-led projects in New Orleans are helping the city to cut flood risk and improve water management as climate change fuels more extreme weather.

One day in April, Rollin Garcia - who owns Bullet's Sports Bar in the Seventh Ward neighborhood - showed off a planter box outside his bar that can help divert hundreds of gallons of water during storms by holding rainfall, easing pressure on the city's sewers.

"A lot of people are asking for this and the (rain) barrels," said Garcia, standing next to the planter box that was built with support from Healthy Community Services, a nonprofit.

When Hurricane Katrina devastated large areas of New Orleans and the Louisiana coast in 2005, many residents were left struggling amid a widely criticized disaster response effort.

Today, community groups are taking the reins and boosting the city's storm resilience by planting trees, using rain barrels, and creating bioswales - ditches or channels lined with plants to help filter rainwater - among other green projects.

Despite these growing efforts, each hurricane season still brings with it the risk that the city's residents – particularly those without the means to evacuate – could again end up stuck in their homes without power, surrounded by rising floodwaters.

Rollin Garcia, owner of Bullet鈥檚 Sports Bar, and Angela Chalk, executive director of Healthy Community Services, pose next to a planter box outside Garcia鈥檚 bar in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, April 19, 2023

Rollin Garcia, owner of Bullet鈥檚 Sports Bar, and Angela Chalk, executive director of Healthy Community Services, pose next to a planter box outside Garcia鈥檚 bar in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, April 19, 2023. 黑料天堂/Darren Trentacosta

Rollin Garcia, owner of Bullet鈥檚 Sports Bar, and Angela Chalk, executive director of Healthy Community Services, pose next to a planter box outside Garcia鈥檚 bar in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, April 19, 2023. 黑料天堂/Darren Trentacosta

As New Orleans braces for this year's season - which runs from early June until late November - scientists say climate change is making such storms more intense.

Hurricane Ida, which , for instance, was one of the state since Katrina, scientists said.

The community-driven projects in New Orleans are not just practically useful during and after extreme weather events, but also benefit neighborhoods by providing 'ecosystem services', according to a new report.

A set of "green infrastructure" projects in a handful of New Orleans neighborhoods now generates more than $19 million worth of annual benefits ranging from , the May report noted.

The study was released by Earth Economics, a research group, and Water Wise Gulf South, a collective of local organizations working on such issues.

Angela Chalk, executive director of Healthy Community Services, a Water Wise partner, said her group and others were seeking .

"I can't explain how fascinating it's been to (see) ... how residents have taken the ownership in seeing that this is our neighborhood," she said.

Water wise

The idea of "living with water" - rather than fighting it - took some getting used to post-Katrina, said Jeff Supak, executive director of

"This is kind of a new way to manage stormwater for a lot of people," Supak said. "People really, in New Orleans - they want the water out as quick as possible ... but we know that our infrastructure system can't do that right now."

New Orleans is effectively shaped like a giant bowl, and even with post-Katrina improvements in levee systems and building elevations, the city's contours make it tough to remove large quantities of water once they build up.

Community-driven green infrastructure in New Orleans is shown is this graphic

Community-driven green infrastructure in New Orleans is shown is this graphic. 黑料天堂/Diana Baptista

Community-driven green infrastructure in New Orleans is shown is this graphic. 黑料天堂/Diana Baptista

As of 2023, community groups have planted more than 770 trees, installed 146 rain barrels, and implemented at least 110 other green infrastructure projects to instead soak up more of the water, the Earth Economics/Water Wise report found.

The efforts have helped add more than 189,000 gallons of stormwater retention capacity to several city neighborhoods.

Near her house in the Seventh Ward, Chalk pointed out a bioswale featuring vegetation taller than herself, and rain barrels at nearby homes.

"What I can tell you is when we have these intense rainfalls, neighbors notice the difference in this block not having water as compared to the other blocks," Chalk said.

Across the street from Chalk's house sits a which helps measure precipitation to track neighborhood-specific rainfall. It also provides a charging station - a source of sustainable energy in case of emergency.

It was designed and built in part by Groundwork New Orleans, a community development group, with support from Chalk's organization and funding from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation.

"We need both the gray infrastructure – the pumps, the pipes and the drains - and the nature-based solutions," Chalk said. "We know that these nature-based solutions and interventions work."

A solar powered 鈥淓CO Bench鈥 that tracks precipitation levels and can serve as a charging station during emergencies is pictured in New Orleans, Louisiana, April 19, 2023

A solar powered 鈥淓CO Bench鈥 that tracks precipitation levels and can serve as a charging station during emergencies is pictured in New Orleans, Louisiana, April 19, 2023. 黑料天堂/David Sherfinski

A solar powered 鈥淓CO Bench鈥 that tracks precipitation levels and can serve as a charging station during emergencies is pictured in New Orleans, Louisiana, April 19, 2023. 黑料天堂/David Sherfinski

Other U.S. cities, to Providence in Rhode Island, have also been .

New York City, for example, has saved an estimated $1.5 billion by incorporating green infrastructure into its stormwater planning. This has cut spending by about 22% compared to a "gray-only" approach, the Earth Economics/Water Wise report said.

New Orleans officials have also been working to boost resilience post-Katrina with , which helps water flow into the ground instead of onto city roads during storms.

In addition to improvements in the area's levee systems, New Orleans since Katrina also has lifted beyond federal requirements, said Austin Feldbaum, the city's director of hazard mitigation.

"It would take a catastrophic structure failure (and) a really heavy rainstorm to produce a flood that would cause widespread flooding of homes today because of the building code work we've done and the investments in home elevations and things like that," Feldbaum said.

Community input

Another project Chalk touts is a park in development on North Claiborne Avenue, a thoroughfare that cuts through several largely Black neighborhoods.

The site now helps manage 35,000 gallons of water during storms, and is ultimately slated to house a solar-powered weather station that would help measure precipitation levels and provide real-time heat alerts.

"This side of Claiborne no longer floods because of the water that this bioswale is managing," Chalk said, explaining that residents chose the site themselves.
"Nothing that we do is without residents co-developing, co-designing, and co-owning (it)."

Water Wise helps organize tours, demonstration projects and workshops to raise awareness and foster ideas on where to build.

Largely Black communities - which frequently bear the brunt of climate-related impacts - need a prime seat at the table when it comes to making resilience decisions, Supak and Chalk said.

"Especially in communities of color," people should "respect the people that live in communities and work with those residents because they know their communities best than someone else," Chalk said.

"We don't need another savior in the African-American community. We need people to understand our needs and work with us to resolve the issue.

(Reporting by David Sherfinski; Editing by Kieran Guilbert and Laurie Goering)


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