Topic Cloud
keystone xl pipeline
Immigration
oil pollution
fishermen
Recovery and Renewal
Law and Policy
dispersants
bp health crisis
community action
Environment
Feinberg
Louisiana
housing
public health
Environmental Justice
Social and Economic Justice
Mississippi
bp oil disaster
Culture
criminal justice
Texas
Alabama
new orleans
hurricane katrina
citizen action
Archives
- June 2010 (1)
- July 2010 (2)
- August 2010 (40)
- September 2010 (35)
- October 2010 (16)
- November 2010 (25)
- December 2010 (22)
- January 2011 (26)
- February 2011 (21)
- March 2011 (29)
- April 2011 (35)
- May 2011 (24)
- June 2011 (22)
- July 2011 (22)
- August 2011 (20)
- September 2011 (19)
- October 2011 (22)
- November 2011 (24)
- December 2011 (12)
- January 2012 (22)







By Susan Buchanan, crossposted from 

The St. Martin Parish School Board’s recent decision to log the cypress-tupelo swamps on land owned by the entity in the Atchafalaya Basin has become a source of controversy.
Crossposted from 
On May Day, over one hundred New Orleanians marched to City Hall, where they called for justice for the city's immigrants. The protestors called for an end to inhumane immigration practices, such as deportation and local law enforcement's targeting of immigrants.
Roughly two weeks after the second year memorial of the BP oil disaster, a few moving parts are looking like they're coming to closure, even if not on completely amenable terms. The federal judge overseeing the trial against BP has approved settlement terms. And Mississippi passed a law to encourage local hiring in the wake of disasters. Meanwhile, national policymaking and politics that affect the Gulf Coast continue. 
At a May 1 New Orleans 
The lie that we are consistently fed in this society is that in order to find happiness, we have to have lots of stuff -- that if $1 million makes us happy, $2 million will make a person ecstatic. This concept is inaccurate. We know that because many of the richest people in the world are miserable and lonely creatures.
By Kent H. Haughton. Lots of us on the Gulf Coast who lost our jobs or income because of the BP oil disaster have a story about the Gulf Coast Claims Facility (GCCF). For many, the process, which was supposed to pay us for the economic losses we sustained, meant rejection, underpayment, frustration, stress, and sinking into debt and financial ruin.
An Inspiring Community Leader from Bayou La Batre's Historic African American Community Passes. By Zack Carter. I am sad to report that one of our inspiring community elders, Stella Mae Smith of Snows Quarter, Bayou La Batre, Alabama has died. She suffered a heart attack at her home.
After the BP oil disaster, Thao Chi Nguyen worked with 
Editor's Note: With President Obama's historic statement in support of marriage equality, the national political debate over who has the right to marry has heated up. But the right to marry is not always the most pressing issue confronting queer people, especially in queer communities of color, which continue to face criminalization and police violence. 
We, the people of the Gulf of Mexico, have been born, raised, or adopted into a living, breathing region, whose cultures span the continents. We have nourished ourselves from the Gulfstream waters. Our cities breathe, our ecosystems speak, and we proudly and artfully contribute to the economic and cultural fabric of our nation and world.
Editor's note: Last week Deon Haywood, the Executive Director of
As the BP oil disaster claims process leaves the hands of the Gulf Coast Claims Facility and goes under court supervision, there's unfinished business, or rather an unfulfilled promise that it looks like Kenneth Feinberg's old outfit may be trying to cover up. Meanwhile, Alabama covers up its ugly immigration law with an even uglier one. 










