Content starts here
CLOSE ×
Search
Reply
Honored Social Butterfly

๐Ÿ“‹ Looking Back at Hurricane Katrina 20 Years Later (AARP Article)

FROM THE ARTICLE.

 

20 Years After Katrina, These Older Adults Are Still Stepping Up.

Our reporter returns to the Gulf Coast to talk to six 50-plus residents who have made it their mission to rejuvenate their communities.

 

By David Hochman, AARP. Published August 22, 2025.

 

In New Orleans, longtime residents once sat on their porches and waved the weather forecasters along, certain the Mississippi would mind its manners. If youโ€™d weathered Betsy in 1965 and other big blows, the wisdom boiled down to a shrugged โ€œWeโ€™ve been through worse.โ€
Then came Katrina. When the levees failed on August 29, 2005, nearly 80 percent of New Orleans was submerged, making it one of the costliest residential disasters in U.S. history. Nearly 1,000 people were confirmed dead and 200,000-plus jobs disappeared almost overnight. Though those 75 and older made up just 6 percent of the cityโ€™s population, they accounted for more than half of all lives lost.

 

USE LINK BELOW TO READ THE ARTICLE.

 

https://www.aarp.org/events-history/hurricane-katrina-anniversary/

0 Kudos
1,541 Views
1
Report
1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
Bronze Conversationalist

I was told that there was a neighborhood in NO that actually looked up at the river. They lived on the lower side of a levy. I went there 50 years ago and never had the desire to visit again. 

Papaw of Boo

View solution in original post

1,491 Views
0
Report
Bronze Conversationalist

I was told that there was a neighborhood in NO that actually looked up at the river. They lived on the lower side of a levy. I went there 50 years ago and never had the desire to visit again. 

Papaw of Boo
1,492 Views
0
Report
cancel
Showing results forย 
Showย ย onlyย  | Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 
Users
Need to Know
More From AARP