Ashana Bigard is a native of New Orleans and a parent. This is her warning to the parents and other citizens of Houston.
She writes:
“My prayers are with you, Texas. My memories are with you too. The day after Katrina hit New Orleans, my family and I made the 17 hour car ride to Houston. The people of Texas welcomed us, opening their homes and helping us out with clothing, even financial assistance. As a native New Orleanian, I wish that I could do the same for you now. But what’s happened in my city and to its schools serves as a cautionary tale to residents of Houston. Reeling from the disaster, our communities were scattered like the four winds. I returned from Houston, many of us did, but the New Orleans we left doesn’t belong to us anymore.
“Rents have quadrupled as gentrification remakes whole neighborhoods, pushing out long-time residents. Nearly half of the children here now live in poverty, and job security is worse, salaries lower. The sense that we’re doing worse than before Katrina is borne out in the data: Black New Orleanians have 18% less wealththan we did in 2005.
“My prayers are with you, Texas. But my warnings are too.
“1. Be wary of elites with big plans. Even as Katrina’s waters were receding, a handful of local elites were making plans for taking over the city’s schools. In the years following the storm, more than $76 billion came to the city of New Orleans. Yet the native population is poorer than we were before Katrina; we have 18% less wealth than we did in 2005. It became obvious early on that the money for New Orleans wasn’t making it into the hands of native New Orleanians. Huge sums of money demand oversight, accountability, and, most importantly, a vision for how exactly investment will help the people who need it most. All parts of your community must be allowed to participate fully in the rebuilding of their own city.
“2. Trauma can’t be “disciplined” out of kids A hurricane is a deeply traumatic experience for children and trauma cannot simply be “disciplined” out of kids. New Orleans is now full of schools with “college prep” in their names, but their strict rules, harsh discipline and fixation on a culture of compliance have more in common with prison than with college. The “new” and “innovative” approach to educating kids that swept through our city after Katrina seems to start from the assumption that what children need to be successful is to be treated like adult criminals. We’ve had multiple incidents of children as young as five being handcuffed in schools, even arrested. Students who can’t afford the uniforms that are now mandatory at virtually every school in New Orleans are suspended, often for long periods of time. As an advocate for children in the schools, I’m regularly reminded that our post-Katrina schools in New Orleans intersect with the criminal justice system starting in the earliest grades, and ensnaring parents too. Louisiana, after all, that incarcerates a higher percentage of its residents than any other state. I wonder why that is?
“3. Don’t let your teachers get swept away Three months after Katrina, 7,500 school employees, including 4,000 teachers, were fired. Many of them had lost their homes to the hurricane. New Orleans lost the core of its Black middle class, and our schools lost adults who were connected to the city and its culture. What happens when all of your teachers are fired? You have a teacher shortage. New Orleans now imports its teachers: recent college grads from programs like Teach for America, who are entrusted with our kids’ development after receiving less training than what we require from workers at a nail salon.
“4. Your culture isn’t a liability to be overcome Beware of people who see your culture as a liability. The culture and soul of our city is music, arts and drama. Yet the people who came to “fix” New Orleans viewed the city and its culture as the source of our problems that they had to help us overcome. That mean schools without art, music or drama, in a city whose culture draws people from all over the world. Think about that. Without arts in the schools where will the next generation of performers come from? The arts are also an important way for kids to deal with trauma in a city that’s seen so much of it. Our kids desperately needed art, music and drama—yours will too.”
But that’s not all she writes. Read it all. Share the wisdom.

Agreed …The ruling elite will certainly use this tragedy to impose charter schools and other forms of privatization. But what will the teachers organizations (AFT, NEA) do about it? Nothing, except lip service.
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I don’t think AFT or NEA has any say in Louisiana. No unions? Certainly if they were unionized the city could not have fired all its teachers.
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There was a union in New Orleans before Katrina. It was wiped out when all the teachers were fired. That’s why Arne was so happy.
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Must not have been much of a union if they could fire all the teachers.
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I’d like to see numbers on whether the Trump Administration are allocating funding to the “dead end” public schools they disdain.
Betsy DeVos has an ideological objection to the schools that most US children attend, and so does half or more of Congress. This is a problem, due to the fact that the VAST MAJORITY of children attend the schools she disfavors.
I want to see proof. I don’t trust these people as far as I can throw them. They don’t come thru for public school families, ever. DeVos’ entire focus last week (as every week in DC) was promoting the ideological goals of ed reform using taxpayer funds.
Call me crazy but I think a federal agency that purports to work with public schools has to occasionally do some work on behalf of public schools – I know this is a controversial stance, but this it’s NUTS that we have thousands of public employees out working against public schools.
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Amen, Chiara. I get more and more disgusted with the deformers with every passing day. These deformers care not a wit about anything except themselves and $$$$$.
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It’s called “The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism” by Naomi Klein. Never pass up a natural disaster to sock it to the poor, the dispossessed and even middle class working people. The teachers and school employees of New Orleans were stabbed in the back as they were thrown under the bus. And these were solid middle class people who had just lost everything that they owned. The privatizers are without conscience and that includes Arne Duncan, though Bush/Cheney and his gang of plutocrats deserve most of the blame.
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*though Bush/Cheney and his gang of plutocrats deserve most of the blame. [during and after the Katrina disaster]
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Ashana’s words are soooooo informative and accurate. New Orleans is one of my two home towns. I left in 1991 and still go back for visits. I was there a few weeks ago and it truly is amazing to see the transformation in the city and culture since 2005. I don’t know if it’s better or worse—I think that kind of collective judgment is impossible—but I do know it is different. The situation with the schools if obviously wrong. As Ashana rightly observes, the regimentation is definitely beating aspects of its unique culture out of the children. The “immigrants” who came in, rather than being absorbed by and adding to the local culture as they once were, seem to be putting their foreign imprint upon it. And the gentrification is not limited to the cost of living, I see it in the university from which I graduated. When I attended this small, Catholic liberal arts school, a major part of its vibrance and impact, as I look back, was the diversity of the student body. We had poor students, rich students, and everything in between. As I walked through the campus recently, I noticed that the student body was overwhelming made up of wealthy students. It seems like there’s no room for economic diversity because the tuition has become so staggeringly high.
I can’t remember if it was on this blog that I recently read that the person could not listen to “Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans” without tearing up. I’m the same way. And when I listen to Steve Earle’s “This City” I can’t get through it without sobbing. Earle’s song is about the resilience of the city. What it doesn’t have in it is acknowledgment of what has died and will never come back. It’s the missing parts that now make me cry. Thanks so much for sharing this. Citizens of Houston, take heed of Ashana’s warning.
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It is estimated that between 40,000 and 100,000 people that left New Orleans after Katina became permanent residents of Houston. Many of these people have also been flooded by Hurricane Harvey. Some are choosing to return to New Orleans. For these people Harvey is a deja vue experience they would rather forget.
I hope the people of Houston resist the temptation to fall for the slick talking carpetbaggers that feed on the misery of others. Houston already has a large network of Kipp schools and other charters. There are also many middle class neighborhoods that depend on maintaining decent public schools. Above all, stakeholders must plan to resist.
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I just sent this post to friends in Houston, and I also sent a copy to the Houston Branch of the NAACP. This article should be read by people in Houston so they will not be caught by surprise when the corporate schools and big talkers start rattling their sabres.
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Those thousands of New Orleans teachers who lost their livelihoods were in great part African American. They were replaced with white TFAers. Black jobs matter. Privatization is the new Jim Crow.
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Yes, yes and yes.
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Reblogged this on maureenkeeneyblog.
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Hoping Houston can stay strong and protect their schools ! I do no feel hopeful with out present administration and DOE!
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Really an amazing account of the New Orleans teardown of public schools marketed now as the “New Orleans Miracle.” Houston: Pay attention.
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A reminder of Secretary Duncan on Katrina: http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/02/02/duncan.new.orleans/index.html
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This is such a profound statement. How sad that Katrina washed away so much of what made New Orleans so special! The Jewish community in Houston has been flooded out 3 times since 2010! It will take a long time to rebuild homes, schools, businesses and infrastructure. Many will temporarily relocate and face the same challenges as did the Black middle class community in New Orleans. The warning should be heeded!
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You recognize it, Helen. Please speak out and educate your community! Wishing you all the strength and persistence you will need in the coming months and years.
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