Students Spend Spring Break Rebuilding Homes
and Lives in New Orleans
Rebuilding Homes and Rebuilding Lives
in New Orleans, LA
An Alternative Spring Break
By Melissa Tanguay, Class of 2009
And “Team Penn State Dickinson Law”:
Matt Allen, Andrea Miller, Jen Prizeman, Alex
Smith, Phil Taw & Andrew Tuozzolo
Team
Penn State Dickinson Law poses for
a group picture during the first day
assisting the St. Bernard Parish Government
(t-shirts donated by the PSU-DSL Bookstore!).
Front (L to R): Jen Prizeman, Alex
Smith, Matt Allen, Andrew Tuozzolo.
Back (L to R): Melissa Tanguay, Andrea
Miller, Phil Taw. |
|
From March 11 to
17, 2007, I led a group of seven Penn State
Dickinson law students to New Orleans, Louisiana,
to volunteer over spring break rebuilding
the homes and lives of Hurricane Katrina victims.
We spent the week in St. Bernard Parish, a
community in metropolitan New Orleans devastated
by Hurricane Katrina in August 2005 when the
storm sent a 25-foot surge over the levees
and completely flooded the entire parish.
Before the hurricane, the parish was home
to approximately 67,000 lower/middle class
residents; today, only a fraction of those
people have returned home.While nearly all
of the houses in the parish have been gutted
or demolished over the past 18 months, the
rebuilding phase has only just begun with
sky-high construction costs and limited resources.
Many parish residents are living in FEMA trailers
right next to their destroyed houses, waiting
for construction on their homes to begin or
finish or just waiting for help. Some can
afford to rebuild their homes, but so many
other elderly and poor residents lack the
funds and manpower to get the job done. |
“Team Penn State Dickinson Law”
stayed the week at Camp Hope, a gutted elementary
school turned volunteer base camp run by Habitat
for Humanity in the heart of St. Bernard Parish.
The school was home to 650 spring breakers
from colleges across the U.S. working on various
rebuilding projects in the parish that week.
We volunteered for two different projects
during the five days of our spring break.
The first two days we worked for the St. Bernard
Parish Government organizing and moving supplies
– including 1,099 shovels, 32,000 face
masks, 200 cleaning kits and too many “portable
restroom kits” to count. It was tedious
work, but invaluable to the parish employees
whom we helped. Our site supervisors even
rewarded us with a famous New Orleans “King
Cake” to thank us after our work was
complete!
The rest of our week we really got our hands
dirty as we worked for the St. Bernard Project,
a new non-profit organization that rehabs
gutted homes in the parish. |
Alex
Smith and Jen Prizeman show off some
of the 1,099 shovels the team hauled,
sorted and counted while assisting
the St. Bernard Parish Government. |
|
The Project was started last fall by four Washington,
D.C., professionals (including a lawyer) looking
for a way to help get New Orleans back on its feet.
Our team was split between two houses, where we
expanded our marketable skills by learning how to
install insulation and drywall, as well as the true
test of operating power tools from a ladder! When
I arrived at my assigned house on Wednesday morning,
I could look straight through from the front to
the back of the “shotgun” style house
as it was only a bare frame with siding.
Andrew
Tuozzolo, Alex Smith and Andrea
Miller collaborate to hang the last
piece of sheetrock of the day while
rehabbing a home with the St. Bernard
Project. |
|
(L to R) Phil Taw, Jen Prizeman, Matt Allen and Andrew Tuozzolo begin scraping paint off of a home in St. Bernard Parish to prepare the exterior for priming and painting. |
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Matt Allen and Melissa Tanguay finish stapling insulation while rehabbing a home with the St. Bernard Project. |
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By the time my team left on Friday afternoon, the
frame of the house was covered and each of the five
rooms was separated by real walls. The greatest
accomplishment was the realization that you could
no longer hear the radio blasting country music
in the bathroom from one room to the next. After
we left, the St. Bernard Project would complete
the rehabbing process by installing flooring and
appliances and painting the interior and exterior
of the house before the owners move home in April.
This is one of the St. Bernard Parish homes that Team Penn State Dickinson Law assisted in rehabbing during the week. Under the direction of St. Bernard Project site supervisors, the team installed insulation and hung sheetrock to cover the interior structure of the home. |
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In addition to lending our “blood,
sweat and tears” during the week, we
had the opportunity to tour the most devastated
areas of New Orleans, including St. Bernard
Parish and the Ninth Ward. My most memorable
impressions were of a community gym where
the basketball hoop had rotted off when the
floodwater settled near the ceiling, a house
that was totally washed away except for its
foundation (you could still differentiate
among the rooms due to the various ceramic
tile designs) and a shed that had been lifted
up and was lodged on the roof of a house.
We also spent some of our free time in the
French Quarter in downtown New Orleans, which
is alive and well despite the damage in surrounding
areas.
By the time we departed New Orleans at the
end of our spring break, we were exhausted,
but satisfied with our contribution to rebuilding
homes – and, in turn, rebuilding lives.
No picture or article can describe the loss
the people of New Orleans have experienced,
but the most important thing we walked away
knowing is that New Orleans still needs help
to get back on its feet and will need help
for many years to come. |
There are dozens of great volunteer organizations
to assist hurricane victims, such as Habitat for
Humanity and the St. Bernard Project, and unskilled
workers are always welcomed. No one in our group
had ever done construction work before spring break,
but by the end of the week we were using terms such
as: “take the sheetrock to the left,”
“hand me the dremel so I can cut out this
outlet” and “who took my T-square?”
In addition to construction work, hurricane victims
in New Orleans need legal help, too. During our
trip, I met other law students in St. Bernard
Parish working for the Student Hurricane Network,
an organization started by students at Tulane
Law in response to Hurricane Katrina that facilitates
law students helping hurricane victims in New
Orleans deal with legal issues such as fair housing
and insurance claims.
I am already looking forward to returning to New
Orleans, hopefully bringing other Penn State Dickinson
law students, faculty and administration with
me to rebuild more homes and lives destroyed by
Hurricane Katrina. Stay tuned for more information
about our next Penn State Dickinson School of
Law field trip down to the Bayou!