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  • 25 Sept, 2005. Carlyss, Louisiana.  Hurricane Rita aftermath. <br />
 Local cajun man Chase Reider takes his boat to unload meat from a family convenience store to a family home where a generator powering freezers and refrigerators will stop the meat from spoiling.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    25 sept 05013.JPG
  • 21 December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
20 yr old Tristan Devezin clears his grandfathers' devastated, mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans034.JPG
  • 21December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
The mould grows quickly and infests a house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans033.JPG
  • 21December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A bed remains where it floated to in a mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans031.JPG
  • 10 December, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A lavish Mardi Gras Indian costume is laid out in the front yard of a devastated home in Gentilly, New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans007.JPG
  • 21st, December 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Armand Devezin clears his grandfathers' devastated, mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurrican Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.
    168-21dec05-168.JPG
  • 10th December, 2005. Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, Louisiana. A broken photo frame lies in the front porch of a house in Gentilly where sadly a victim of the storm perished.
    159-10dec05-159.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 Gentilly. Ruined in the floods, christmas decorations lie out in the road.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans035.JPG
  • 10 December, 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 A broken photo frame lies in the front porch of a house in Gentilly where sadly a victim of the storm perished.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans028.JPG
  • 10 December, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A lavish Mardi Gras Indian costume is laid out in the front yard of a devastated home in Gentilly, New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans003.JPG
  • 21st, December 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. City contractors start thje long and arduous task of clearing the trash strewn streets of the  9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurrican Katrina subsided.
    166-21dec05-166.JPG
  • 23 July 2010. Grand Isle, Louisiana. <br />
A sales poster pitched primarily to oil clean up workers as seen on the wall at the Grand Isle marina advertising FEMA trailers at discount prices. These would be the same FEMA trailers that are known to be contaminated with formaldehyde and are the subject of extensive legal wrangling following their use after hurricane Katrina. The FEMA trailers are known to have made people very sick. How is it possible for these trailers, effectively contaminated government owned stock to now be available through private dealers to the general public? <br />
BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico would appear to be encouraging additional contamination of clean up crews through private sales of contaminated FEMA trailers. How is this possible? <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    23july10-BP oil008.JPG
  • 23 July 2010. Grand Isle, Louisiana. <br />
On what should be the busiest weekend of the year at the Grand Isle marina, there are just a few boats. More seagulls than people visited the marina on what is traditionally the weekend of the Tarpon Rodeo, Grand Isle's fishing 'Mardi Gras,' and greatest cash earner of the year. Ordinarily the marina would be overflowing with people and boats but with fishing still restricted and a potential tropical storm in the gulf, the marina is mostly deserted. The local economy has taken a massive hit. It will be years before the town and the area is able to recover from BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    23july10-BP oil004.JPG
  • 21 December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
20 yr old Tristan Devezin clears his grandfathers' devastated, mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans035.JPG
  • 21December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
Four month old washing up remains in the sink of a  mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans032.JPG
  • 21 December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
Armand Devezin clears his grandfathers' devastated, mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans029.JPG
  • 21December 2005. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
Armand Devezin clears his grandfathers' devastated, mould filled house in the 9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. The house has only recently been refurbished and has seen water to the ceilings before when Hurricane Betsy hit in the 1960's.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans028.JPG
  • 21December 05. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
 City contractors start thje long and arduous task of clearing the trash strewn streets of the  9th Ward long after the  flood from Hurricane Katrina subsided. <br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    22Dec05-New Orleans027.JPG
  • 10 December, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A lavish Mardi Gras Indian costume is laid out in the front yard of a devastated home in Gentilly, New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans005.JPG
  • 10 December, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A lavish Mardi Gras Indian costume is laid out in the front yard of a devastated home in Gentilly, New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans002.JPG
  • 10 December, 05.  New Orleans, Louisiana.  Post Katrina aftermath.<br />
A lavish Mardi Gras Indian costume is laid out in the front yard of a devastated home in Gentilly, New Orleans.<br />
Photo; ©Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10Dec05-New Orleans004.JPG
  • 23 July 2010. Barataria Bay near Grand Isle, Louisiana. <br />
A 'floatel' passes by heading inland away from the coast as tropical storm 'Bonnie' threatens the Gulf of Mexico. BP contractors prefer to house clean up crew workers in these floating container motels to save a few lousy dollars rather than station workers on land where they would benefit the local economy. Already reeling from poor decisions and an economic and environmental disaster thanks to BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, the corporation continues to oversee economic devastation wreaked on local communities. Private contractors continue to get rich taking BP's cash as local economies flounder. 'Floatels' do not benefit local communities in any way. BP contractors bring all food and supplies to the 'floatels.' In an area both economically and ecologically devastated by BP, this would appear to be yet another slap in the face to struggling local economies - and all to save a few bucks to make a few contractors even wealthier than they already are! This should be a national disgrace. <br />
Photo credit; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    23july10-BP oil011.JPG