Verite News
20 years after Katrina, New Orleans’ levees are sinking and short on money
The city’s $14 billion flood system faces new threats from climate change, land subsidence, and Trump budget cuts.
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8mLouisiana takes steps to bring its HIV exposure law in line with modern science
People with HIV can only be prosecuted for contact that poses “a substantial likelihood of transmission,” narrowing the once-broad state law.
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8mNew Orleans schools continue to see growth in LEAP scores, outpacing nearby parishes
School leaders say the growth is due to a focus on targeted instruction for students, but that there’s still work to be done.
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7mFormer Orleans District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro appointed to the state Judiciary Commission, worrying advocates of criminal justice reform
Cannizzaro, who recently retired from his position leading the criminal division within Attorney General Liz Murrill’s office, started his four-year term in June.
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3mThomas Chester, Civil War's first Black war correspondent
Writing under the pseudonym “Rollin,” Chester became the first and only Black correspondent during the Civil War for a major newspaper.
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12mWhat happened to Nolan Xavier Wells?
“We just want to know what happened and why our baby didn’t come home … We want it to be an honest, through investigation. That’s all we’re asking for,” said Christine Wonsley, the mother of Nolan Xavier Wells.