Lingering Pandemic + Another Hurricane? 海角社区 Helps Coastal Communities Prepare
July 01, 2021
Supporting Louisiana Communities Facing Dual Disasters
In the very first study to look at impacts of the ongoing pandemic on hurricane preparedness and resilience in Louisiana, researchers at 海角社区 Health New Orleans partnered with more than two dozen community leaders in New Orleans, Baton Rouge, and two predominantly rural parishes, St. Bernard and St. John the Baptist, to help validate facts on the ground and turn observations into actionable data. Most of the community leaders represent groups that routinely help residents prepare for, and recover from, severe weather events and flooding鈥攁 mission made more difficult by the need for social distancing imposed by COVID-19.
鈥淚n south Louisiana, we鈥檙e used to living with a baseline existential threat because of our perennial experience with hurricanes,鈥 said Dr. Benjamin Springgate, chief of community and population medicine at 海角社区 Health New Orleans School of Medicine and one of the lead authors of the study. 鈥淪o, in some ways, we鈥檙e resilient and quick to act. We鈥檝e built relationships both personal and organizational to help support one another. But many of the solutions that have worked for us in the past simply do not work in the context of the pandemic, including how we evacuate.鈥
Risk of infection also blends with fear of infection. Arthur Johnson, head of the Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development in New Orleans (pictured above), knows this well. He wanted to be part of the 海角社区 study to help elevate many of the concerns he has and hears on a daily basis in his own community, which predominantly consists of Black homeowners, many of whom live below the poverty level as well as below sea level, surrounded by water鈥攚etlands, canals, and the Mississippi River.
鈥淥ur community struggles with a host of issues and is even more at risk when the rest of the world is at risk, there are less resources and volunteers to go around, and there is no 鈥榮afer place鈥 to go,鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淲hile hurricanes are geographically confined and you can get out of the way, there is no other place that鈥檚 safe in a global pandemic. Maybe you can evacuate鈥攂ut evacuate and go where? Hopefully, public officials and decision-makers will be able to look at this study and find new ways to help.鈥

Arthur Johnson leads the Lower 9th Ward Center for Sustainable Engagement and Development, founded after Hurricane Katrina, which for many became a first lesson in how to stay in touch from a distance.
鈥 Elsa Hahne / 海角社区
鈥淵ou have plans and always think your plan is the best in the worst-case scenario you鈥檝e imagined, but there鈥檚 always a worse-case scenario, and the pandemic has proven this. However, the things we鈥檝e learned and continue to learn can now benefit other community groups as their lessons benefit us through the 海角社区 study.鈥
Diana Meyers, community leader at St. Anna鈥檚 Episcopal Church in New Orleans