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  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe010.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe008.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe007.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe006.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
 (l-r) Shiek, Wesley Schmidt, Craig Klein, Andy Lehman and Bill Phillips of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe help clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe005.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe003.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe002.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil030.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil029.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Sophisticated boom repair tool. Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil024.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil021.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil018.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil016.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil015.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Craig Taffaro, president of St Bernard parish heads up a crisis meeting at the command center in Hpedale.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil013.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil043.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Ricky Robin, captain of the boat 'Lil Rick.,' plays his trumpet in the wheel house. Robin, a commercial fisherman since he was a teenager is now subcontracted to BP. Robin awaits equipment to be loaded onto his shrimp boat which has been converted to an oil skimming vessel. Robin doubts how effective the equipment will be and suggests BP should leave such work to the professionals.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil011.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Ricky Robin, captain of the boat 'Lil Rick.,' plays his trumpet in the wheel house. Robin, a commercial fisherman since he was a teenager is now subcontracted to BP. Robin awaits equipment to be loaded onto his shrimp boat which has been converted to an oil skimming vessel. Robin doubts how effective the equipment will be and suggests BP should leave such work to the professionals.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil010.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil040.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Ricky Robin, captain of the boat 'Lil Rick.' Robin, a commercial fisherman since he was a teenager is now subcontracted to BP. Robin awaits equipment to be loaded onto his shrimp boat which has been converted to an oil skimming vessel. Robin doubts how effective the equipment will be and suggests BP should leave such work to the professionals.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil007.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Ricky Robin, captain of the boat 'Lil Rick.' Robin, a commercial fisherman since he was a teenager is now subcontracted to BP. Robin awaits equipment to be loaded onto his shrimp boat which has been converted to an oil skimming vessel. Robin doubts how effective the equipment will be and suggests BP should leave such work to the professionals.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil005.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Paul Trosclair, a fisherman all his life on his boat the Karen Susan. Trosclair is now subcontracted to BP. A religious man, Trosclair wonders if he is not seeing the 'end of days,' as predicted in Revelations where he believes the Bible reads one of the signs will be 'when the sea turns to blood.' He does not know when or if he will ever be able to return to shrimping. He puts his faith in the Lord.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil001.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil035.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
Immigrant workers speaking barely a word of english file past after a day of oil clean up operations in and around Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. An American supervisor following the men advised them not to stop and kept shouting 'vamanos,' encouraging the men to keep moving and not to be photographed.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 043.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
Immigrant workers speaking barely a word of english file past after a day of oil clean up operations in and around Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. An American supervisor following the men advised them not to stop and kept shouting 'vamanos,' encouraging the men to keep moving and not to be photographed.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 042.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
Immigrant workers speaking barely a word of english file past after a day of oil clean up operations in and around Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. An American supervisor following the men advised them not to stop and kept shouting 'vamanos,' encouraging the men to keep moving and not to be photographed.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 041.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-Lower9 ward057.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. R/L; Josh Gillikin and David Rosa, contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward046.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Rene Lagos, a contractor working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward045.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward040.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward039.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward038.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe009.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe004.JPG
  • 01 Feb 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Post Katrina.<br />
Shiek of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe helps clear a house of mold in the Gentilly neighbourhood. As federal, state and local authorities dither, members of the Arabi Wrecking Krewe, many of them musicians themselves, team up to strip homes of fellow musicians ready to be repaired. To date the Krewe has stripped over 40 homes.  <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01feb2006-Arabi Wrecking Krewe001.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Sophisticated boom repair tool. Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil023.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil020.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil017.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil042.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil039.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil036.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. L/R; Josh Gillikin and David Rosa, contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward043.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-lower9 ward037.JPG
  • 10 June 2010. Breton Sound Marina, Hopedale, Louisiana. USA.  <br />
Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale. Over 1,000 people now work in what was, just weeks ago empty fields. A city is rising out of the marshes to deal with the BP's catastrophic oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Workers load and unload, repair and haul miles and miles of oil boom. The 'hard boom' is not owned by BP or the federal government. It is leased with prices allegedly over $1.00 a linear foot per day. In St Bernard Parish alone there is over 200,000 linear feet of hard boom. Someone, somewhere is making a fortune on the back of this crisis. Workers are hired by contractors, who themselves are hired by bigger contractors. Yet again, the middle men are making a fortune on the backs of workers and on the back of this crisis. The scandal continues to grow.<br />
The ecological and economic impact of BP's oil spill is devastating to the region. Oil from the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe is evading booms laid out to stop it thanks in part to the dispersants which means the oil travels at every depth of the Gulf and washes ashore wherever the current carries it. The Louisiana wetlands produce over 30% of America's seafood and oil and gas production. They are the most fertile wetlands and nurseries of their kind in the world. BP's oil is killing everything.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    10june10-BP Oil031.JPG
  • 23 August 2013. Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans, Louisiana.<br />
Katrina 8 years later. In a tale of two cities, the hardest hit neighbourhoods struggle to revitalize and return. Contractors working for Brimmer Construction Services begin the extensive process of rebuilding a formerly derelict house. Many half finished or blighted properties and vacant overgrown lots remain dotted throughout the landscape. Residents who have returned complain of limited services, infrequent police patrols, high crime rates, rampant mosquitos and uncontrolled vermin. <br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    23aug13-Lower9 ward058.JPG
  • 1 June, 2006. Lakeview, New Orleans, Louisiana. The first day of hurricane season 2006. Illegal Mexican immigrant workers gut a marina boat house on Breakwater Drive which backs onto the New Orleans Marina. The workers wait at gas stations early in the mornings in the hope they will be picked up by contractors. Few speak any English and all send money back to their families in Mexico every week.
    278-01june06-278.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA04.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 027.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv599.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Slurry and semi dry kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant in Sandersville, Georgia. The plant was originally built in the 1930's.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA97.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Slurry and semi dry kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant in Sandersville, Georgia. The plant was originally built in the 1930's.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA96.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the King mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA88.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA82.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA81.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA76.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA75.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA74.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA71.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA70.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA69.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA61.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA59.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA54.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Kaolin is processed from the Shepherd mine close to the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA134.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA39.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA36.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA30.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA26.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA129.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA128.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA25.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA22.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA20.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA18.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA119.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA15.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA118.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA13.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA11.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA07.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA03.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
'Air floated' Kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant on Deepstep Road near Sandersville, Georgia.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA106.JPG
  • 29 August 2006 - New Orleans - Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.
    364-29aug06-364.JPG
  • 30 August, 2005. New Orleans Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina aftermath. <br />
A pregnant woman goes into labour at the makeshift hospital triage unit set up at the Superdome in New Orleans following her rescue from the flooded lower 9th ward. <br />
Photo Credit: Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    30aug05-Hurricane Katrina016.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 040.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 037.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 036.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 034.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 032.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 030.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 028.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 024.JPG
  • 01 June 2010. New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.  <br />
British Petroleum's staging area at the  Breton Sound Marina in Hopedale where tons of oil boom awaits deployment in the marshes and swamps of St Bernard Parish in southern Louisiana.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    01june10-BP-oil-fishing 016.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv603.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv602.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv601.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv600.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv597.JPG
  • 29 August 2006. New Orleans, Louisiana. Lower 9th ward. On the one year anniversary of hurricane Katrina, and most of the area remains derelict and abandoned. However a crew of undocumented Honduran immigrants work in the mid day heat to repair a roof, overlooking the devastation all around them. A small symbol of hope amidst the rubble.<br />
Photo Credit©; Charlie Varley/varleypix.com
    29aug06-kat-anniv596.JPG
  • 15 Feb 2010. Sandersville, Georgia, USA.<br />
Imerys, North America Ceramics, a part of the Imerys Group worldwide.<br />
Slurry and semi dry kaolin is processed at the Kentucky Tennessee Clay plant in Sandersville, Georgia. The plant was originally built in the 1930's.<br />
Photo; Charlie Varley
    15feb11-imerys GA100.JPG
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