Sharon Hanshaw: "The water stage is over."

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DSCN1198.JPG, originally uploaded by BenTG.

Sharon Hanshaw, age fifty-one, has lived in Biloxi most of her life. Before Katrina she was in a rental unit, which adjoined her cosmetology business, on Bayview Ave, the road that runs along Back Bay in East Biloxi. Hanshaw had been away the weekend before the storm. When she returned home with her three daughters, she found the front her home and about half the roof gone. She lost everything except a few keepsakes. Five months later, when I spoke with her, she had only very recently received a trailer from FEMA. Ms. Hanshaw has not yet received any financial assistance from FEMA.

All of Biloxi to the east Keesler Air Force Base was very hard hit. Bill Stallworth, City Councilor for Ward 2, which includes most of the heavily African American, predominantly low-income East Biloxi neighborhood, estimates that Katrina destroyed 5,000 homes in that neighborhood, alone. Bayview Ave and the east most portion of the peninsula, which is predominantly Vietnamese, with some African Americans and some whites, and is known as The Point, were almost entirely wiped out.

I spoke with Sharon Hanshaw in East Biloxi, in the FEMA trailer of Alice T.







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