The Louisiana Parish of St. Bernard, adjacent to New
Orleans, remains a washed-out shadow of its former, pre-Katrina
self — so much so, according to the New Orleans
Times-Picayune, that even the problem of counting the parish's
remaining population for the 2010 census has become a political
and administrative football
("
St. Bernard Parish officials push to get residents counted in
2010 census," by Bob Warren).
"St. Bernard Parish's official 2000 population, according to
the Census Bureau, was 67,229. The bureau estimated the parish
had a 2008 population of 37,722 - around 56 percent of the
pre-Hurricane Katrina count," reports the Times-Picayune.
However, "[Parish President Craig] Taffaro said parish
officials, basing their number on several factors including
utility permits, estimate the parish's current population at
around 41,000."
Taffaro and other area political leaders are pressuring the
Census Department to use counting methods that will list some
displaced residents as residing in the parish, even if they
have yet to rebuild their houses. There's a lot at stake, notes
the Times-Picayune: "Census numbers factor into things ranging
from congressional representation to the distrIbution of
federal dollars."
Meanwhile, the
Louisiana Land Trust,
the non-profit corporation that holds title to properties
bought out by the state as part of the Road Home program for
Katrina recovery, is about to launch a project in cooperation
with St. Bernard Parish government to erase the last traces of
thousands of homes that were destroyed in Hurricane Katrina
flooding. As the Times-Picayune reports here, the Trust and the
Parish plan to spend millions of dollars tearing up and carting
away the slab foundations that remain on sites where the actual
houses are now long gone
("
In St. Bernard, concrete slabs will be turning into grass,"
by Chris Kirkham).
The slab demolition project, which will take six months to
complete, is being described as the largest single concrete
demolition project in history. But while it may represent
progress in the parish's recovery, it's not likely to lead to a
return of displaced residents: according to press reports, most
of the properties where the slabs now lie will be offered to
neighboring property-owners as part of the parish's "Lot Next
Door" program. The Times-Picayune describes that program here
("
St. Bernard homeowners get chance to expand lots," by Bruce
Eggler).