2006/2007: Rebuilding Communities, Restoring the Environment in the Gulf Coast

In 2006/2007, the JBL Awards focused on recognizing individuals who were integral to the rebuilding efforts in the Gulf Coast, in the devastating aftermath left by Hurricane Katrina. The need for public infrastructure systems, a social safety-net, environmental monitoring and toxic clean-up--and the crucial element of civic participation to achieve these goals--were some of the issues which these awardees incorporated into their work. The awards were expanded to include seven activists; a total of $21,000 went to seven Gulf Coast activists, advocates, and organizers; each was awarded $3,000 in recognition of their deep commitment to the public interest and the innovative approach of their work towards social change.

Victoria Cintra
Victoria Cintra was born in Cuba and migrated to the United States when she was eight years old. She is currently the Gulf Coast outreach organizer for the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance (MIRA), an organization that provides assistance and advocacy for immigrant workers across the state. Since Katrina, Victoria has spoken forcefully and articulately on the struggle for justice for the thousands of immigrant workers who have come to rebuild the Gulf Coast. She has become a forceful immigrant advocate with FEMA, the Red Cross, private contractors and state and local governments. Victoria has been integral in identifying health hazard issues impacting immigrant workers, disparities between ethnic groups, discriminatory practices by both government and non government agencies and testifying before international commissions.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Victoria Cintra
Derrick Evans
Derrick Evans is a sixth-generation native of Turkey Creek, a Mississippi Gulf Coast community settled by freed slaves in 1866. Derrick founded Turkey Creek Community Initiatives to promote sustainable local development that is both environmentally and culturally sensitive. After Katrina, Derrick maxed out credit cards and loaded up a U-Haul truck with $20,000 worth of water, gas and other supplies to build a volunteer camp in Turkey Creek. Since the storm, he has been a tireless organizer and advocate for the needs and rights of coastal communities. Derrick was also one of the founding organizers of the Steps Coalition, a collaboration of groups fighting for fair and equal justice in the allocation of resources in rebuilding South Mississippi.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Derrick Evans
Tanya Harris
Tanya Harris was born and raised in New Orleans. Her family is deeply rooted in the Lower Ninth Ward and have been members of ACORN for over 23 years. Tanya is currently the head organizer for New Orleans ACORN and since Katrina she has been working tirelessly to organize displaced residents from New Orleans and assist them in rebuilding their lives and communities. Tanya has organized and recruited thousands of volunteers to help gut homes all across the city, saved thousands of homes from being seized by the city as public nuisance without due process, stopped land grab bills at the state legislature, and won certified water for the entire city.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Tanya Harris
Rev. Jennifer Jones-Bridgett
A native of Baton Rouge, LA, Reverend Jennifer Jones-Bridgett is an ordained Baptist Minister and presently the executive director of PICO Louisiana InterFaiths Together (LIFT). She believes that justice is not just a matter of putting the right policies in place or involving the community in a planning process, it means ensuring that families have the power to also define the agenda and control the future of the Gulf Coast. It means equipping historically marginalized residents to organize themselves for power. Reverend Jones-Bridgett strongly believes in community building across lines of race, class and denomination.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Reverend Jennifer Jones Bridgett
Malik Rahim
Malik Rahim, a veteran community organizer, was raised in New Orleans and has been fighting for racial, economic and environmental justice for the last thirty years. In 1970, he co-founded the Louisiana chapter of the Black Panther Party (BPP), and the platform of the BPP has remained his guiding principles. Malik co-founded the Common Ground Collective with Sharon Johnson and Scott Crow on September 5, 2005, only days after Hurricane Katrina. Since then, Common Ground has been working to deliver services and resources to the most marginalized communities in the Greater New Orleans area. Common Ground has initiated 15 program areas that have served over half a million people in the areas of medical care, legal assistance and advocacy, food and water distribution, roof tarping, house gutting, toxic remediation, children's programs, a women's center and much more.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Malik Rahim
Anne Rolfes
Anne Rolfes grew up in Lafayette, Louisiana and is the founding executive director of the Louisiana Bucket Brigade. Since the hurricanes, the major focus of her work has been to help organize the local communities affected by the storms so that they can make informed choices regarding their health and safety. She teaches community members sampling techniques to measure toxic sediments on their homesites located in the footprint of the Murphy Oil Spill and the Katrina disaster. Anne's current project is planning a gathering called “Fenceline Neighbor Power Conference." This conference will bring together dispersed communities facing similar environmental problems to talk and work more collaboratively together.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Anne Rolfes
Father Vien thé Ngyuen
Father Vien thé Nguyen is the pastor of Mary Queen of Vietnam Catholic Church in East New Orleans. He has been integrally involved in the struggle and rebuilding of Versailles in New Orleans East, home to one of the largest concentration's of Vietnamese Americans in the United States. Since saving lives during the storm, he has become known throughout the city and has grown to prominence in the fight and eventual win against the Chef Menteur landfill in New Orleans East. Father Ngyuen is deeply committed to working to ensure that communities have a strong voice in determining public policies that invest in effective government systems which truly serve people.
Tides Foundation JBL Awardee Father Vien thé Ngyuen
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