Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Hurricane Katrina


Fresh Foods Signal a Fresh Start for New Orleans' Lower Ninth Ward

August 05, 2016 Jillian Semaan, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights

I’m really looking forward to celebrating National Farmers Market Week. Farmers markets play a key role in developing food systems that help local grow economies. They bring people together, create bridges between rural and urban communities and increase access to locally-grown fruits and vegetables...

Food and Nutrition Farming

Do YOU Have a Plan for Your Pets Should a Hurricane Strike?

September 17, 2015 Pam Boehland, USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service Legislative and Public Affairs

August marked the 10 th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. The powerful storm had a devastating impact on the people, the culture and the pets of the Gulf Coast states. According to The Humane Society of the United States, more than 6,000 pets were rescued during Katrina, and responders and...

Animals Plants

Prepare to Expect the Unexpected

September 15, 2015 Judy Rude, National Institute of Food and Agriculture

It’s hurricane season again. It’s hard to believe that it was just 10 years ago when Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans and a large portion of the Gulf Coast with floods, power outages, food and water shortages, as well as many other after effects. September is National Preparedness Month...

Conservation

A Greenhouse Garden Inspires an Urban New Orleans School

May 06, 2015 Sarah Haymaker, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Louisiana

Tucked in the middle of a mixed commercial and residential area of New Orleans still struggling to recover from the effects of Hurricane Katrina, is Carter G. Woodson Middle School − a state of the art public charter school known as Knowledge is Power Program (KIPP) Central City Academy. As I...

Conservation

Inspiring Recovery

February 28, 2013 Justin DeJong, Deputy Director, Office of Communications, USDA

Earlier this week, I traveled to New Orleans with Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan to meet with the local farming and fishing community. What I saw at the Mary Queen of Vietnam Community Development Corporation (MQVN) was inspirational.

Conservation

Energy Advisor Says a Host of Factors Affect Food Prices

November 30, 2012 Sarah Bittleman, senior energy advisor to Secretary Vilsack

Rob Green’s recent Wall Street Journal op-ed “The cause of higher grocery bills isn’t the drought. It’s the failed federal ethanol policy” fails to take into consideration a host of factors, other than demand for corn, that affect food prices. In the domestic and global markets commodity, labor...

Energy

An Epic Disaster Required Unprecedented Response

May 16, 2012 Jessica Shahin, Associate Administrator, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), Food and Nutrition Service

It’s hard to believe it’s been nearly seven years since the lives of the citizens of New Orleans and surrounding areas of the Gulf Coast were changed forever in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. This epic storm demanded an immediate and unprecedented response. I was proud to be part of USDA’s team that...

Food and Nutrition

Restoring Historic Habitat and Creating Outdoor Education Opportunities for Youth

October 26, 2010 Judi Craddock, NRCS

Camp Binachi is a Boy Scouts of America camp located in rural Lauderdale County, Mississippi, that focuses on teaching scouts about ecology and the conservation of natural resources. In 2005 Hurricane Katrina caused severe damage to Camp Binachi, which is managed by the Choctaw Area Council. But the...

Conservation

Commemoration of 5th Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina

August 31, 2010 SWR RA, Bill Ludwig

On Friday, August 27, 2010, I was in New Orleans to commemorate the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation to the Gulf Coast. The event was held at the Second Harvest Food Bank of Greater New Orleans and Acadiana. It was a hot and humid morning as we began the assembly of emergency...

Food and Nutrition

Five Years After Hurricanes Rita and Katrina, USDA Continues to Assist Gulf Residents

August 26, 2010 Dallas Tonsager, Under Secretary of USDA Rural Development

Cross-posted from the White House Blog Devastation caused five years ago to the Gulf region by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita remains historic in proportion. It resulted in loss of life, families being displaced, homes and businesses destroyed, and communities left in ruins. In the midst of this great...

Initiatives Rural
Subscribe to Hurricane Katrina

AskUSDA

One central entry point for you to access information and help from USDA.