The news outlet links below represent many viewpoints, aggregated here for reference purposes only. The Louisiana Office of Community Development makes no claim as to the veracity or accuracy of any views contained herein.
If you are a member of the media, please contact Marvin McGraw and indicate your name, news outlet, contact information and deadline.
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![]() Relocating Coastal Tribe Indicates Future Challenges For LouisianaSource: WWNO Date: 09/07/2016 Sea level rise and land loss is affecting communities all over the world, not just in Louisiana. But Louisiana has one of the first communities that will be entirely resettled as a result: the Isle de Jean Charles. |
![]() Stay or go? Isle de Jean Charles families wrestle with the seaSource: The Times-Picayune Date: 09/13/2016 The message scrawled on the whitewashed plywood sign was clear, even if it was only one man's perspective: "We are not moving off this island. If some people want to move, they can go. But leave us alone." It was signed, "Edison Jr." |
![]() How Louisiana Is Relocating a Community Threatened by Climate ChangeSource: Curbed: Urban Planning Date: 09/29/2016 Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana, a small coastal island in the Gulf of Mexico, is currently the site of a far-reaching experiment that may shape how the government, at every level, thinks about one of the looming issues of climate change: resettlement. |
![]() Washed AwaySource: Full Measure Date: 10/16/2016 A small Louisiana community is part of a groundbreaking project to relocate together at taxpayer expense |
![]() Leaving ParadiseSource: The Weather Channel Date: 11/07/2016 Thanks to a federal grant that made them the nation’s first “climate refugees,” the people of Isle de Jean Charles will be given a chance to move to higher ground, away from the rising water that threatens their two-century-old Gulf Coast community. But residents say that they only feel at home when they are near water and family... |
![]() The people of Isle de Jean Charles aren't the country's first climate refugeesSource: The Lens Date: 12/06/2016 Isle de Jean Charles is endangered for the same reasons that much of coastal Louisiana has become part of the Gulf of Mexico: The land is sinking, river levees are preventing it from being replenished, oil and gas drilling accelerated erosion--and on top of that, seas are rising. |
![]() America gets its first group of climate refugeesSource: Marketplace Date: 02/01/2017 America has its political refugees and its economic refugees. And now, for the first time, it has climate refugees. |
![]() when is it time to retreat from climate change?Source: The New Yorker Date: 03/27/2017 Isle de Jean Charles, a stitch of land on the tattered southern fringe of Louisiana, is thin and getting thinner. Battered by storms and sea-level rise, and deprived of revitilizing sediment from the Mississippi River, its surface area has shrunk by ninety-eight percent since 1955, and its remaining three hundred and twenty acres can flood in... |
![]() A new home: Work continues in effort to relocate island residentsSource: The Daily Comet Date: 04/08/2017 Rita Falgout grew up on Isle de Jean Charles, left and returned after 40 years. When she came back for good, she said, it looked totally different. "The island is not going to be here for much longer," she said in an interview there last week. "If I can move up, I'm going." |