News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
My complicated love for the American flag
by Fatima Saidi, Louisiana Illuminator
July 4, 2025
This Fourth of July, I bought an American flag. As a refugee, I bought this flag not because America is perfect, but because of its promise.
The first time I saw the American flag, I was 9 years old. My family and I were at the Pakistan–Afghanistan border, preparing to return to Afghanistan after years of fleeing the Taliban and living in exile.
We waited to be vaccinated and processed for return, and the American flag was attached to the back of a U.S. Army vehicle. My uncle, pointing at the flag, said, “Look, now we will be safe.” At that moment, the American flag felt like a promise.
Since then, the flag’s meaning has shifted, but I refuse to let hate define it.
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Years later, I was granted a student visa and arrived in the United States as an international student. In the airport, I stood again in front of the American flag, where it waved its 13 red and white stripes and 50 stars. It was a profound moment when I felt welcomed. I knew then, deep in my heart, that I was safe and my life was full of possibilities.
As I experienced America and life in it, that sense of safety changed. Slowly, I began to fear the flag that once gave me hope.
I saw the American flag in the hands of people shouting vulgar things about immigrants. I saw it on t-shirts worn by those who looked at me with hate. I started to believe that when an American flag was hanging on someone’s porch or painted on their truck, it meant I wasn’t welcome. The flag that once symbolized safety and freedom slowly started to feel like a warning.
But, a few days ago, I found myself revisiting the most joyful moments of my life in this country: arriving in the U.S. for the first time, the day I became a U.S. citizen, my siblings making it to America safely, and my mother stepping off a plane onto American soil.
In every photo from those moments, we are smiling — some of us crying — with the American flag waving in the background. Despite everything, that flag was always there, not just in fear, but in celebration of survival and homecoming.
This Independence Day, I bought an American flag.
I do not believe this country is perfect, but I believe we belong in it. I know we are part of America’s flawed, painful, and beautiful story. I bought the flag because we, too, arrived here with teary eyes and hopeful hearts. Like that little girl at the border all those years ago, I still choose to believe in the promise of safety, dignity and a better life.
But belief alone is not enough. We must act.
When you turn on the news or scroll through social media, the stories are grim. The Trump administration continues to sow fear and division. In states like Maine, where refugees are revitalizing communities, federal policies are stripping refugee resettlement while programs have been indefinitely paused. Funding cuts have gutted resettlement and legal support systems. Fundamental rights, such as asylum and due process, are under constant attack. Families are being separated. People from entire countries are once again banned from entering America. Refugee and immigrant rights organizations are being systematically targeted.
Last year, 625 refugees found safety in Maine, bringing their resilience, vibrancy, and skills to a state facing an aging population and labor shortages. Maine’s essential refugee agencies are now grappling with how to preserve basic services after federal funding cuts gutted their support systems. These actions are a cowardly way to treat people who have crossed continents and oceans, left everything behind, and risked it all to come home.
For many of us, America was not our first choice. However, it is our last hope. And still, we love this country not because it’s easy, but because we’ve invested our futures in its promises and potential. Refugees know that we are not just part of America—we help make it whole.
As we step into a new chapter of American history, the flag belongs to us all. The flag, and the country for which it stands, belongs to those who believe in something better, kinder, and in the promise of liberty and justice for all. It belongs to everyone who dares to hope, who fights for compassion, and who still—despite everything—believes in its promise. This flag is our flag.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.
The post My complicated love for the American flag appeared first on lailluminator.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This article presents a perspective aligned with center-left values, emphasizing compassion toward refugees and immigrants and critiquing policies from the Trump administration related to immigration and refugee resettlement. The language frames these policies as harmful and divisive, focusing on the humanitarian impact and the promise of America as a refuge. While the article expresses hope and belief in American ideals, it clearly critiques conservative immigration policies and highlights funding cuts and restrictions under Republican leadership, which reflects a viewpoint sympathetic to progressive or liberal immigration stances without extreme rhetoric.
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
LUS reverses course on coal power plant closure – The Current
SUMMARY: Lafayette Utilities System (LUS) planned to retire the coal-burning Rodemacher 2 power plant by 2027, but rising power demand and construction delays at the new Bonin natural gas plant (now expected by 2029) have changed this. The Lafayette Public Power Authority voted to pursue $95 million in bonds to renovate or convert Rodemacher 2, potentially extending its life. Options include converting to natural gas, upgrading to meet wastewater compliance, or maintaining the plant as is. Though costly renovations were once avoided, market conditions now make keeping Rodemacher 2 operational advantageous to meet energy needs and maximize market value.
The post LUS reverses course on coal power plant closure – The Current appeared first on thecurrentla.com
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Transgender Louisianians on Medicaid being denied coverage for gender-affirming care
by Drew Costley, Verite, Louisiana Illuminator
August 22, 2025
But when she got to the pharmacy, she learned that her medication was going to cost approximately $70.
But it wasn’t a surprise. Green had been expecting Medicaid — which is mostly federally funded but administered by the state — to stop covering her hormone replacement therapy, a common form of gender-affirming health care. For nearly a year, she and other trans advocates in Louisiana had heard about sudden, unexpected Medicaid denials from dozens of transgender people around the state.
Whatever happened, it wasn’t a change to Medicaid law. Earlier this year, Congress contemplated stripping gender-affirming care coverage as part of President Trump’s sweeping tax and spending bill, known as the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” But the provision didn’t make the final version passed by the Senate in early July.
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State lawmakers over the past several years have passed a wave of anti-trans and anti-LGBTQIA+ legislation, including banning doctors from providing gender-affirming care to minors. So Green and other trans advocates had been watching the state legislature closely, anticipating movement to prohibit Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care for adults. That didn’t happen, either.
That likely meant that there had been an administrative change from the Louisiana Department of Health, which oversees Medicaid. But there had been no notice of any such change from the state department.
“The only way a lot of people are learning about this is that they’re going into the pharmacy to pick up their monthly or once every three months…regular prescriptions that they’ve been on for a long time, and just getting hit with a completely unexpected bill,” Green said. “Because there’s been no communication from the state about this.”
The Louisiana Department of Health did not respond to Verite News’ requests for comment on the denials of Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming care for adults and why the denials are happening. But LDH records reviewed by Verite show that the department has made changes to its Medicaid billing and diagnosis codes so that gender-affirming surgeries and hormone therapy are excluded from coverage. The changes appear to have started in August 2024.
As a result, people have been cancelling surgeries they’d been waiting years to get and trying to find other ways to afford their medications, Green told Verite News. Without coverage, these surgeries and medications can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars.
Nationally, between 20% and 25% of transgender adults are enrolled in Medicaid, according to recent estimates.
While there are no readily available data on how many transgender people in Louisiana are enrolled in the public insurance program, the state as a whole has the second highest share of Medicaid-enrolled residents, according to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
“Many trans people only have access to Medicaid coverage, I’m one of them. [It] definitely is very scary,” said Blu DiMarco, who works with the Queer and Trans Community Action Project. “It’s frightening to know that I could just, like, go to routinely pick up my medication, and they could be like, ‘Oh yeah, this is $200.’ I don’t have $200.”
Community care, collective rage
In response to the LDH policy change, the Trans Income Project, a New Orleans-based social services nonprofit, this month announced a partnership with CrescentCare, a clinic that primarily serves low-income residents. The Trans Income Project, on which Green serves as a board member, will cover the cost of medication used in hormone replacement therapy for Medicaid-eligible transgender adults. (Participants in the partnership have to get their medication from the Avita Pharmacy locations inside of CrescentCare’s Elysian Fields and Mid-City facilities.)
Natalie Rupp, executive director of the Trans Income Project, told Verite News that the organization “saw a serious need in the community” when they began hearing about people losing Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming care.
“We’re trying to make sure that those most vulnerable in our community aren’t going to be stuck with additional extra costs that they previously weren’t having to cover,” she said.
The program has been praised by other trans advocacy organizations in Louisiana as an example of people coming together to support those most in need and fight back against anti-transgender policies.
“It’s a really great show of community force and how community will take care of community, even when politicians aren’t taking care of community,” Peyton Rose Michelle, executive director of Louisiana Trans Advocates said.
Rupp said she hopes that healthcare providers and pharmacies in other parts of the state and country replicate the partnership at a time when governments are moving to limit access to gender-affirming care for trans and gender nonconforming people. Eleven other states already explicitly prohibit Medicaid from funding gender-affirming care for both adults and minors.
Although it’s located in New Orleans, Crescent Care serves transgender Louisianians throughout the state, so the hope is that people outside of the metropolitan area will be able to make use of the partnership as well. Michelle said that she knows people in Lafayette, where she lives, who use CrescentCare.
Still, it’s unlikely that the partnership will be able to cover everyone who loses access to hormones as a result of the LDH coding changes, and there’s still the question of how people who need gender-affirming surgeries, which are not covered under the partnership, will afford that care.
“I think even the organizers of their beautiful plan to provide care via Avita,” Michelle said. “I think even those people understand this isn’t going to save everyone. It is just a band aid kind of solution that will only help a subset of people.”
In order to further raise awareness about the state’s decision to stop covering gender-affirming care through Medicaid and express anger about it, the Queer and Trans Community Action Project is holding a protest Saturday at New Orleans City Hall. The Louisiana Department of Health has an office about a block away on Poydras Street that protestors will march by. The march and rally starts at 5 p.m.
“I think that the issue is not very well-known, and I think that is a very important issue to note, even for people who aren’t queer or trans, because it’s kind of a larger indicator of Medicaid cuts,” DiMarco said. “If they can come for us, then how do you know that you’re not next?”
Madhri Yehiya contributed to this report.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
This article first appeared on Verite News New Orleans and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://veritenews.org/2025/08/21/louisiana-transgender-care-medicaid-denial/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }
Louisiana Illuminator is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Greg LaRose for questions: info@lailluminator.com.
The post Transgender Louisianians on Medicaid being denied coverage for gender-affirming care appeared first on lailluminator.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
This content focuses on the challenges faced by transgender individuals in Louisiana regarding access to gender-affirming healthcare, highlighting Medicaid coverage cuts and state-level anti-trans legislation. It emphasizes the negative impact of these policies on marginalized communities and features voices from trans activists and advocacy groups. The framing is sympathetic to transgender rights and critical of conservative state policies, which aligns with a left-leaning perspective on social and healthcare issues.
News from the South - Louisiana News Feed
Hurricane Erin floods coastal North Carolina plus 3 other potential tropical formation spots
SUMMARY: Hurricane Erin, a large Category 2 storm with 100-mph winds, is located 260 miles east of Cape Hatteras, NC, moving north-northeast at 18 mph. Hurricane-force winds extend 105 miles from its center, with tropical-storm-force winds reaching 320 miles. The National Hurricane Center forecasts Erin to weaken and become post-tropical by Saturday as it moves between the U.S. East Coast and Bermuda, then south of Atlantic Canada. Storm surge warnings remain for parts of North Carolina, with tropical storm warnings and watches for Virginia and Bermuda. Erin brings dangerous surf, rip currents, and flooding risks. Multiple other tropical disturbances in the Atlantic show potential for development.
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The post Hurricane Erin floods coastal North Carolina plus 3 other potential tropical formation spots appeared first on wgno.com
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