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After Hurricane Ida, a Historic Black Community Races to Save Its Future
Audrey Trufant Salvant has deep roots in Ironton, a close-knit, majority-Black community 25 miles downriver from New Orleans.
Her great-great-great grandmother, who had been enslaved, is buried here, and her descendents kept the unincorporated town in Plaquemines Parish alive, despite near-impossible circumstances.
Founded by formerly enslaved people in the late 1800s, Ironton鈥檚 residents have since endured racial terror, , and even the most basic services. But they fought to survive. They gained access to running water in 1980 and rebuilt the town after Hurricanes Katrina and Isaac in 2005 and 2012, respectively.
Today, residents say devastation from Hurricane Ida, which struck exactly six months ago, poses an existential threat.
鈥淲hen you would ask an average person, [what鈥檚] the worst hurricane that hit the Southeast? Automatically, they probably would say Katrina. But I would say, 鈥楧efinitely not,鈥欌 Trufant Salvant said. 鈥淚da was the worst that hit this community.鈥
The Category 4 hurricane made landfall in Louisiana on Aug. 29, 2021, with 150-mph winds and a 12-foot storm surge. The state 26 deaths, and in the weeks that followed, tens of thousands remained without power. According to , Ida caused nearly $100 billion in damages across the East Coast, making it one of the costliest hurricanes in U.S. history.
Few places sustained as much damage as Ironton did. Situated on the west bank of the Mississippi River, near Louisiana鈥檚 southern coast, the town is particularly susceptible to flooding. Ironton is nestled at the base of a levee on the Mississippi River, where floodwaters advancing from the bayou to the southwest have nowhere to go but into the community鈥檚 streets and homes. Of Ironton鈥檚 roughly 50 homes, only a handful, including Trufant Salvant鈥檚, survived. Most of her neighbors left after the storm; she says they likely won鈥檛 return until they secure the funds to rebuild and elevate their homes.
Rev. Haywood Johnson Jr., pastor of Ironton鈥檚 Saint Paul Missionary Baptist Church, says Ida was the worst storm in living memory. 鈥淚t devastated the community to a point where I had never seen nothing like that in my entire life,鈥 he said. Johnson, who was born and raised in Ironton, now lives in Harvey, a suburb of New Orleans. He says his home was not affected in the storm.
The floodwaters dislodged dozens of coffins, which remained scattered across yards and streets for weeks.
Johnson says many of the coffins contained parishioners鈥攆riends, relatives, neighbors鈥攈e had buried over the years. 鈥淚t was difficult for me to come and see the people that I laid to rest floating in the yard,鈥 he said.
Johnson and Trufant Salvant worry that if homeowners decide to leave or not rebuild, restoring the fabric of the close-knit community may be impossible. Many of the plots stand empty, and Johnson and Trufant Salavant say their neighbors have been approached by different entities with lowball buyout offers.
Trufant Salvant, a former Plaquemines Parish councilwoman, bristles at talk of a managed retreat, and says things didn鈥檛 have to be this way. She says additional levees, something residents have been advocating for since Katrina, could have prevented much of the flooding. 鈥淭hey neglected building the levees mainly because of who [the flooding] was impacting鈥攊t impacted people of color,鈥 she said.
She says she is committed to fighting for Ironton鈥檚 recovery because it is inextricably linked with preserving her family鈥檚 legacy. 鈥淚 just can鈥檛 see walking away from it, because I feel the struggle that my ancestors endured in order to secure property or little, small cracks of property in this community,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would never walk away from it.鈥
Trufant Salvant also worries that the funds it will take to rebuild Ironton will not reach her community. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 been the problem for forever,鈥 she said. 鈥淢illions was allocated for Katrina. And it basically went into the wrong neighborhoods鈥濃撯搒pecifically with minimal damages.
In January, the Biden administration announced to 鈥渂uild back more resilient from extreme weather events,鈥 including shoring up levee infrastructure in Plaquemines Parish.
Michael Esealuka, a community organizer with the NGO Healthy Gulf, says Louisiana鈥檚 , paired with additional federal funds, means the state can afford to help residents return to Ironton and rebuild. 鈥淭here is definitely money on the table to support the recovery of coastal communities like Ironton,鈥 she wrote in an email to Nexus Media, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 a matter of getting organized and building the political will to force our officials to do the right thing.鈥
A coalition of environmental organizations, including Healthy Gulf, has secured a $3 million commitment from the state鈥檚 coastal protection agency to elevate homes in Ironton. According to Esealuka, these funds aren鈥檛 enough to cover all of Ironton鈥檚 recovery costs, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 a good starting point and puts some fire in our belly to start fighting for more.鈥
Esealuka says now is the time for the public to apply pressure on state and federal officials, as the stakes couldn鈥檛 be higher. 鈥淭here鈥檚 that cliche 鈥榮o goes the South, so goes the nation,鈥鈥 she wrote. 鈥淲hen it comes to the climate crisis, I believe this is true. Ironton鈥檚 plight represents what comes next for the rest of us if we do not act.鈥
This story was originally published by , a nonprofit news service covering climate change, and was made possible by a grant from the Open Society Foundations.
Briana Flin
is a video editor and producer for Nexus Media News, where she covers environmental justice and climate change. Her work has appeared in outlets like The Atlantic, WIRED, Newsy, KQED, and Twin Cities PBS. Prior to joining the Nexus Media team, she was at WIRED, producing videos on everything from kinetic sculptures to praying mantises sporting 3D glasses. She鈥檚 a proud alumnus of the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism and a Californian born-and-raised. After work, you can find her attempting to train her rambunctious rescue dog, baking treats, or rewatching Mad Men for the umpteenth time.
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