Teamwork during disaster reporting and finding ways to buoy spirits

Reporters often specialize in a certain type of coverage – news, politics, justice, features. Photojournalists usually do not. We shoot it all, from portraits to news, wildlife to culture. But reporters and photographers both gain entry to situations we would never experience, and people we would never meet in different careers. It’s thrilling; it’s interesting; it’s different every day. But … this job can be challenging when we’re faced with the difficult stuff.

Writer Patrik Jonsson lives in the southeast United States, and one of his beats is storm reporting. In a recent Monitor Weekly cover story, he focuses on his coverage of Hurricane Katrina, one of the most destructive storms in current memory. He tells how he and those affected wrestled with the impact. I joined him on multiple journeys to report on Katrina’s aftermath.

I remember when we first got to New Orleans 20 years ago, just a week after Katrina hit the city. Levees had failed, spilling water into neighborhoods filled with iconic homes. Floodwater flowed into our tall rubber boots as we navigated streets turned into rivers. 

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