Latest Research Document for Long Term Homelessness

Resources Scarce, Homelessness Persists in New Orleans : Most Homeless People in New Orleans Are From City, Survey Finds

While many of the city's homeless have addiction problems or mental illness, a survey by advocacy groups in February showed that 86 percent were from the New Orleans area.

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Jul 16, 2008
Louisiana
Katrina's Most Vulnerable

Published by The New York Times
Louisiana is set to receive $73 million in desperately needed federal aid to help house some of the region’s lowest-income families, including ill and disabled people left homeless by Hurricane Katrina.
May 28, 2008
Louisiana
Housing Groups Get Grants : Money will give local projects boost

Published by New Orleans Time Picayune
Housing advocates will receive $2.6 million in grants -- ranging from $300,000 to $1 million -- to build or renovate housing in neighborhoods and communities across New Orleans.
Mar 28, 2008
Louisiana
Homeless Still Feel Katrina's Wrath

Published by USA Today
Cedric Allen once wrestled with his crack addiction in an apartment he shared with his fiancée or in a home surrounded by his four grown daughters. Today, Allen, 48, struggles with the same addiction alone in a camping tent under an interstate overpass in downtown New Orleans. His daughters and fiancée are gone, displaced by Hurricane Katrina.
Mar 17, 2008
Louisiana
New Orleans Homeless Rate Soars to 1 in 25

Published by AHN Media
The percentage of homeless people in New Orleans has nearly doubled since Hurricane Katrina and is now four times the rate for the rest of the country. About 12,000 people or 4 percent of the city's population is homeless, versus a national rate of 1 percent.
Mar 7, 2008
Louisiana
Tenants in Poll Don't Want Old Units

Published by Times-Picayune
While more than 70 percent of New Orleans' displaced public housing residents want to return to the city, most of those surveyed recently by the University of Texas at Arlington said they have no desire to return to New Orleans' public housing complexes.
Mar 5, 2008
Louisiana
Mental Health Crisis Plagues New Orleans

Published by USA Today
Bernel Johnson showed all the signs. He was diagnosed by a psychiatrist as aggressive, homeless and schizophrenic. He was kicked out of a Salvation Army homeless shelter late last year for holding a fork to a fellow resident's throat. On Jan. 4, Johnson was committed to a psychiatric facility for causing a disturbance at a bank. He was released and, a few weeks later, attacked New Orleans police officer Nicola Cotton, 24, in a parking lot.
Mar 1, 2008
Louisiana
U.N. Experts Weigh in on Katrina Housing

Published by U.S.A. Today
United Nations experts weighed in Thursday on the debate over public housing in New Orleans, accusing the U.S. federal government and local authorities of forcing predominantly black residents into homelessness.
Feb 27, 2008
Louisiana
First Tenants Move Into New Permanent Supportive Housing Units : Part of state's plan to build 3000 units for citizens with disabilities including those who are homeless or at risk of homelessness

Published by Technical Assistance Collaborative
As part of its hurricane recovery activities, the state of Louisiana has committed to the development of 3,000 units of Permanent Supportive Housing (PSH) for citizens with disabilities including those who are homeless or at risk of homelessness in areas most affected by the 2005 hurricanes.
Feb 21, 2008
Louisiana
$20 Million Gift Planned for Gentilly Neighborhood in New Orleans : Foundation has purchased land for 20 new homes, to get started

Published by Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
The founder of Barnes & Noble bookstores will spend $20 million from his private foundation to build and renovate homes in the devastated Gentilly neighborhood of New Orleans, an initiative that will match and possibly exceed the investment Brad Pitt's charity has made in the Lower 9th Ward.
Feb 20, 2008
Louisiana
Those in Tent City are Shelter Bound

Published by The Times-Picayune
Before month's end, City Hall officials say, police and social workers will dismantle the tent city downtown and move its homeless denizens to a huge tent in Central City, where they will sleep in triple-decker bunks and must stay clean of drugs and booze.

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LOWER 9TH WARD, NEW ORLEANS

 

DONOR'S GUIDE TO GULF COAST RELIEF AND RECOVERY

Info on nonprofits working with populations affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and resources to grantmakers and donors who are considering funding programs that address the needs of those affected by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

H.R. 1227: GULF COAST HURRICANE HOUSING RECOVERY ACT OF 2007

To assist in the provision of affordable housing to low-income families affected by Hurricane Katrina.

COMPLETE KATRINA COVERAGE:

Katrina Coverage in New York Times

Katrina Coverage - National Public Radio

Urban Institute - After Katrina series

PHILANTHROPY AND HURRICANE KATRINA

"Philanthropy has the opportunity to make a huge difference in the lives of hundreds of thousands of people as it responds to the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina."

-- George D. Penick
Former President, Foundation for the Mid South

KEY PARTNERS IN NEW ORLEANS AND LOUISIANA
The Partnership to End Long Term Homelessness is working with a variety of local and national partners to plan and advocate on behalf of the long-term homeless and those at risk of homelessness in New Orleans. Our partners include:

Unity of Greater New Orleans

Greater New Orleans Community Foundation

Technical Assistance Collaborative

Enterprise Community Partners

Providence Community Housing (Catholic Charities)

Unified New Orleans Plan

Rockefeller Foundation (planning grant)

Southern Mutual Help Association, Inc.