leaving

the island

 Lessons Learned From The First-Ever
Federally-Funded Climate Resettlement

THE STORY

“Leaving The Island” is an investigative podcast examining the first-ever federal attempt to relocate an entire community - the mostly Indigenous residents of Isle de Jean Charles, Louisiana - because of climate change.

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The Series

Albert Naquin,
Traditional Chief of Jean Charles Choctaw Nation, 2022
(Photo by Olga Loginova) 

Episode 1: Ancestral Home

It took Albert Naquin, the Chief of the Jean Charles Choctaw Nation, over 20 years and two failed attempts to move his tribe from Isle de Jean Charles, a tiny barrier island at the tip of Louisiana’s Terrebonne Parish. Since the 1950s, the Isle has lost 98% of its landmass. And with a federal grant of over $48 million awarded to the state of Louisiana in a national competition, Chief Albert’s plan started to become reality. The Isle de Jean Charles resettlement was positioned as a pilot program for other US communities in need of climate relocation. But then, a letter landed on the Governor’s desk and changed everything.


The resettlement site,
The New Isle, under construction,  2023. (Photo by Olga Loginova)

Episode 2: Broken Promises

Upon the receipt of the $48.3 million award, the state agency administering the grant, Louisiana’s Office of Community Development (OCD), learned that members of the Jean Charles Choctaw Nation were not the only people who called the disappearing Isle home — a fact that forced the OCD to change the resettlement plans. The Jean Charles Choctaw Nation fought back to restore its original vision. 


Chris Brunet sorts through his possessions after Hurricane Ida damaged his house on Isle de Jean Charles in May, 2023
(Photo by Olga Loginova)

Episode 3: When The Dust Settles

In August 2022, a year after Hurricane Ida had devastated Isle de Jean Charles, the first families moved to the resettlement site, The New Isle. As challenges over construction issues and affordability threaten the sustainability of the new settlement, a new state agency takes over management of the subdivision, bringing its own vision of what success will look like there.

Credits

“Leaving The Island” is an Audiation Original Production. It was produced in partnership with the nonprofit newsroom Type Investigations. The story is based on an earlier print investigation by Columbia Journalism Investigations in partnership with The Center for Public Integrity and Type Investigations. Episode three was partially funded by Columbia Journalism School's Joan Konner Program in the Journalism of Ideas.

Executive Producer, Reporter and Host

Olga Loginova

Executive Producer and Showrunner

Sandy Smallens

Series Producer

Max Wasserman

Investigative Editor

Sasha Belenky

Audio Editor and Visuals

Trailer Mixer

Matt Noble

Sound design, mix engineering and original music composition

Tom Sullivan and
Paul Vitolins of
Audiography

Fact Checkers

Iqra Salah and
Zak Cassel

Story Editor and Co-Producer

Susie Armitage

Cultural Sensitivity Reader

Noah Collins

a citizen of Cherokee and
White Mountain Apache Tribes

Associate Producer

Matthew Rubenstein

Voice Actor

Dontonio Demarco

Theme music composition and performance

Mobéy Lola Irizarry

Cover Art

 Matt Zivkovic for Mateeya

Editorial Partner

We’d like to thank the following folks for their assistance with the series

Jane Eisner and Jacob Kramer-Duffield