Lessons learned about language equity, the road ahead for flood-prone areas, a Louisiana gator goes to Florida, plus HGTV and summer reads!
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As part of our Shaping the South series, we spoke to Mary Moran, the executive director of Our Voice Nuestra Voz (OVNV) in New Orleans. It's an advocacy organization that works with immigrant families.
From language access to storm preparation. We have a story this week that examines the road ahead for flood-prone states like Louisiana. Is there a way to mitigate the damage that an active hurricane season will bring?
What a year of distance learning revealed about language access in schools
Mary Moran, the executive director of Our Voice/ Nuestra Voz in New Orleans, talks about how the organization helped families manage language access issues when schools went online during the pandemic.
Our Voice/Nuestra Voz
Excerpt
The American South: What has the pandemic revealed about the need for better language access in schools?
Mary Moran: The pandemic has been extremely difficult on everyone. But it has especially been difficult on folks who have the extra hurdle of a language barrier. When there's low language access, then it becomes a barrier. There was a loss of a safety net that made things especially difficult for our families.
We can only stress that our demand for more access to resources in shared languages is really just about equity.
Flooding caused by climate change could hit Louisiana the hardest
South Louisiana damage left from Hurricane Laura the day that Hurricane Delta made landfall on Friday, October 9, 2020.
Henrietta Wildsmith/The Times
June 1 marked the official start of hurricane season. But two weeks before what's projected to be another highly active season, south Louisiana parishes were pummeled by the kind of sinister spring storm that's become all too common in recent years.
Lake Charles, still recovering from last year's hurricanes Laura and Delta, saw hundreds of homes flooded and more than 12 inches of rain. While floods are common to several parts of our region, a new report shows that no single state is more vulnerable than Louisiana.
What is expected this hurricane season and what is being done to improve drainage infrastructure and floodplain management in the state?