The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Families rebuild separately, together

- By Allen G. Breed

Bunk beds dominate the narrow living room of Chevelle Washington’s modest three-bedroom brick townhouse apartment. A large box in the corner is piled high with kids’ shoes. The 51-year-old is raising six of her grandchild­ren. Her home is a refuge, a haven.

It was that way back in her native New Orleans, too — never so much as on Aug. 29, 2005, when Hurricane Katrina struck.

“I had 21 people at my house,” she says of that horrible night. “Because I had an up- and downstairs.”

The water rushing through the city’s breached floodwalls climbed all 17 of those front stairs, stopping just below the porch. It had receded to the 11th step by the following day, when a uniformed man appeared in a motorized flatboat.

As their anonymous savior steered the craft into the lake that the Upper Ninth Ward had become, Washington burst into tears.

“It ain’t never going to be the same no more,” she cried.

Her youngest son, Steven, remembers how the man at the helm tried to comfort his mother. “You’re moving on to something better,” he said.

An estimated 1.5 million Gulf Coast residents fled Katrina, scattering like wind-tossed seeds to all 50 states. Many thousands of them, like Chevelle Washington, have taken root where they landed.

But for son Steven, the pull of home, of New Orleans, was too strong.

A few months after Katrina, he returned to his ruined city, hoping to recapture that sense of belonging he couldn’t find in Texas.

Standing on that 11th step recently, his mind wandered back to the day he and his family climbed into that boat. He was never really sure what the man meant by “something better.” A shortterm shelter? A bigger house? A safer city?

Like so many families splintered by the storm, the Washington­s are still searching.

The storm did not “drown” New Orleans. But there’s no denying it is a changed city.

The black population has dropped from nearly 67 percent in 2000 to 59 percent today; whites, once about onequarter of residents, now account for nearly a third.

“The people who have not returned have been disproport­ionately African-American, renters, low-income, single mothers and persons with disabiliti­es,” says Lori Peek, an associate professor of sociology at Colorado State University and co-editor, with Weber, of the book, “Displaced: Life in the Katrina Diaspora.”

Since the storm, rents in the Crescent City have skyrockete­d — up 33 percent for a one-bedroom apartment and 41 percent for a two-bedroom.

Following Katrina, officials demolished four of the city’s notorious projects, vowing to replace them with modern, mixed-income developmen­ts. Despite much progress, there are still about 3,200 fewer low-income, public housing apartments than before the storm.

Most of the people living in those units were black. Like Linda Nellum.

Revitaliza­tion had already pushed Nellum out of the murder-plagued Magnolia projects. Living in temporary Section 8 housing when Katrina hit, Nellum was evacuated to Houston.

From Texas, she applied for return and was put on a waiting list. She’s still waiting.

“Every now and then, you think about going home,” the 43-year-old says, a tear trickling down her cheek. She feels “trapped” in Houston.

Chevelle Washington chooses to see it differentl­y.

Growing up, sisters Chevelle and Champernel­l Washington never saw any reason to fear the landscape around them. But there was something different about that mid-summer’s day 10 years ago, says Champernel­l.

“You could just about smell it in the air,” she says.

When the skies began to clear, Chevelle Washington thought all was well — until she opened the door to the garage below. A refrigerat­or and her grandson’s basinet swirled up toward her, “like trying to see who was going to get up the stairs first.”

Steven, then 16, waded down the front steps and stared as shrimp and crawfish skipped past.

When the rescue boat arrived the next day, Chevelle Washington was reluctant to get in, not wanting to split up the family.

The boatman dropped them on a nearby street where, hours later, a military truck took them to the Superdome.

After a few days, the refugee family escaped New Orleans.

Champernel­l had once lived in Houston. She’d loved the schools there, and there always seemed to be plenty of work.

And so, she, Chevelle and other family members resettled in Texas.

In southwest Houston, the Washington clan has created a little slice of New Orleans.

Chevelle lives just a couple of miles from Champernel­l and her two girls. About a 10-minute drive east, brother Rene’s restaurant, Sleepy’s Po Boys, offers fellow Katrina refugees a taste of home.

Each has been back to New Orleans numerous times. Despite obvious progress, “It’s still that sense of death in the air,” says Champernel­l, 45, night manager at a hotel.

Chevelle talked of a friend who moved her family back — only to have three of her boys killed in a drive-by shooting, victims of apparent mistaken identity.

“I’m not ready to bury none of my kids,” says the former hotel maid, who now makes do largely on disability benefits for one of the children.

Much as she loves her hometown, it’s not worth the risk. Besides, she says, “It would never be home again.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Chevelle Washington, right, sits in the hospital room of her sister, Chelette Price, in Houston on Aug. 13. One profound change wrought by Hurricane Katrina was the splitting of families as a mass evacuation from chaotic New Orleans sent thousands,...
Chevelle Washington, right, sits in the hospital room of her sister, Chelette Price, in Houston on Aug. 13. One profound change wrought by Hurricane Katrina was the splitting of families as a mass evacuation from chaotic New Orleans sent thousands,...
 ?? PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rene “Sleepy” Washington stands outside his po boy sandwich shop in Houston on Aug. 28.
PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rene “Sleepy” Washington stands outside his po boy sandwich shop in Houston on Aug. 28.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States