Road to New Life After Katrina Is Closed to Many

CONVENT, La. – This was not how Cindy Cole pictured her life at 26: living in a mobile home park called Sugar Hill, wedged amid the refineries and cane fields of tiny St. James Parish, 18 miles from the nearest supermarket. Sustaining three small children on nothing but food stamps, with no playground, no security guards and nowhere to go.
No, Ms. Cole was supposed to be paying $275 a month for a two-bedroom house in the Lower Ninth Ward – next door to her mother, across the street from her aunt, with a child care network that extended the length and breadth of her large New Orleans family. With her house destroyed and no job or savings, however, her chances of recreating that old reality are slim.
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Read the full New York Times article here: Road to New Life After Katrina Is Closed to Many
If you want to learn more about the struggle people are going through, just type “Katrina” in the NYT search.


Anonymous Says:
Is the lady in the picture really 26? She looks like she’s 70…
Niqaabis Says:
Maybe its a typo and she’s actually 62
Allaahu a’alaam
Anonymous Says:
The picture above is in reference to the situation of another woman not Cindy Cole.
The caption at the bottom of the picture says
“Gwendolyn Marie Allen lives in a FEMA trailer near Baton Rouge with her son, who has schizophrenia, and her severely retarded brother, right.” She is 55. Very Sad situation indeed.