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    Tattered Jeans

    Louisiana Revisited: Searching for Hanna, Walking the Way of the Cross

    Katie Oxford
    Katie Oxford
    Jun 30, 2013 | 12:00 pm

    Editor's Note: In 2010, Katie Oxford filed a series of riveting columns from the heart of the Gulf oil spill disaster. She recently returned to Louisiana to find out what happened to some of the people she had talked to back then. This is her tenth column in a new series.

    In Montegut, the Live Oak Baptist Church was celebrating Good Friday with a crawfish boil. Earlier, I'd asked a member there if I could attend, and in that simple, warm word you so often hear in Louisiana, Arline said, "Sure."

    I admit that I had a motive. Really, it was a hope, that someone might tell me where Hanna was, a little girl who I'd met three years ago when she was sweeping inside the Church.

    Strangely, Hanna had haunted me. Maybe it was her innocence and exuberance that I wanted to protect. Nurture. There seemed a loneliness about her that scratched something deep. Wanted to give company to.

    When I'd called the Church earlier, the current pastor, Matthew Chouest, said that Hanna and her family had moved. He wasn't sure where exactly, but he thought they lived in New Orleans. I'd asked others in the community but no one seemed to know.

    When I returned to Louisiana, I would visit Hanna again. Success wasn't essential. Only the knowledge that when I left Louisiana, I'd done everything I could to keep that promise.

    I was set on finding her, which was exactly my promise. When I returned to Louisiana, I would visit Hanna again. Success wasn't essential. Only the knowledge that when I left Louisiana, I'd done everything I could to keep that promise.

    On Good Friday morning, I was glad to be back on Hwy 665, a narrow winding road that stirs the senses a little like the Bayou DuLarge. Not surprisingly, an unexpected stop was just around the corner.

    In Montegut, near the Pointe Aux Chenes Elementary School, I saw a long line of people moving down the sidewalk. Leading them was a boy carrying a cross. Russell Dardar was walking too. At intervals, they stopped while someone holding a microphone read from a leaflet. I'd pulled over to observe all this.

    Minutes later I made a U-turn and followed the line to St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church where the sign out front read "Walking Way of the Cross." There, I spotted other friends. Anna Mae and Raymond Dupre, who I'd dropped in on during previous trips, were standing there on the steps. "Hey Pirogue!" Anna Mae called out (it was a nickname she'd given me), "I thought you'd left!"

    I was reminded that the love between Anna Mae and Raymond is palpable. Sorta like how the Bayou Lafourche rolls toward the Gulf. A force you see not hear. Refreshing. In July, Anna Mae and Raymond will celebrate their 66th wedding anniversary.

    After a prayer in the parking lot, folks moseyed over to an oak tree where lunch was spread across picnic tables. "I hope you'll join us," said Father Thomas warmly. Suddenly, I wished that I wasn't scurrying off to the crawfish boil but, then, so it goes here. In Louisiana, your heart's tugged all the time, like a crab on a string of bacon.

    I thanked Father Thomas but explained that I had to be somewhere else.

    As I turned into the driveway at the Live Oak Baptist Church, members were gathering next door underneath the blue house on stilts where Hanna had lived.

    Pastor Matthew Chouest was at the grill cooking up some grillades, he called them. (Pronounced GREE-yahds). "It's pork roast sliced real thin," he explained. You add a little barbecue sauce along with Tony Chachere's Creole seasoning and voila.

    It was a small but friendly group. When someone's name was spoken, it came with a prefix like "Brother Jay, "Sister Shirley." They seemed to have known each other for longer than they had lived. Jake Billiot was there too, wearing a blue shirt the color of the sky.

    We sat at picnic tables near a lemon tree and enjoyed a fine meal of crawfish, crabs, grillades and things made in home kitchens. Someone brought a cake with rows of strawberries on top the size of golf balls.

    Before heading back to Galliano, I took a group photograph. Then, I thanked them, especially, Bernadette, the pastor's wife. Earlier, she'd handed me a slip of paper. "If you can't reach Hanna's family," she said, "this man can probably give you their number."

    Nice thing was, I hadn't asked her.

    After a prayer in the parking lot, folks moseyed over to an oak tree where lunch was spread across picnic tables.

    5 Katie Oxford Louisiana Revisited Part 10 June 2013 St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church, Montegut, La.
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    After a prayer in the parking lot, folks moseyed over to an oak tree where lunch was spread across picnic tables.
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    in this economy?

    This is the salary you need to live comfortably in Houston in 2026

    Amber Heckler
    Mar 26, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    money, salary, income to live comfortably, SmartAsset
    Photo by Giorgio Trovato on Unsplash
    Single Houstonians need to make a little more than $82,000 to live comfortably in the city, the report found.

    A 2026 report analyzing how much it costs to live "in sustainable comfort" in the biggest U.S. cities has found Houston residents have the 11th lowest salary requirement to live a comfortable life in 2026.

    SmartAsset's annual report found single adult residents in Houston need to make $89,981 a year to qualify as "financially stable." Compared to last year, single Houstonians needed to make $83 more to live comfortably in the city.

    Families with two working parents and two children need to make a household income of $204,672 to have a financially stable life in Houston, the report found. That's almost $2,000 less than what families needed to make last year.

    To determine the rankings, SmartAsset's analysts examined 100 of the largest U.S. cities and used the latest cost of living data – such as the costs for housing, food, transportation, and income taxes where applicable – from the MIT Living Wage Calculator for childless individuals and for two working adults with two children.

    For the purpose of the study, the 50/30/20 budgeting strategy was used to determine "comfortable lifestyle" costs for both individuals and families: 50 percent of income to cover needs and living expenses, 30 percent for "wants," and 20 percent for savings or paying down debt.

    Here's breakdown of a Houston resident's comfortable lifestyle based on SmartAsset's findings:

    • $44,991 dedicated to needs and living expenses
    • $26,994 dedicated to wants
    • $17,996 dedicated to savings or debt repayment

    This is SmartAsset's interpretation of a comfortable lifestyle for families of four:

    • $102,336 dedicated to needs and living expenses
    • $61,402 dedicated to wants
    • $40,934 dedicated to savings or debt repayment
    SmartAsset said single individuals and families should compare the fluctuating local cost of living and their long-term goals to fully "understand the context" of their respective household incomes. But it's worth pointing out that a financially stable life in Houston isn't quite attainable for many residents: The city had a median household income of $64,361 in 2024, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

    Comfortable salaries in other Texas cities
    Elsewhere in Texas, the report found that families in the Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs Frisco and McKinney "are closest to a comfortable salary."

    "In Frisco, [Texas], the median household earns $145,444 – substantially higher than the national median of $83,730," the report's author wrote. "This figure also accounts for 63.1 percent of the $230,464 income a family of four in Frisco needs to live comfortably. In McKinney, TX, the $124,177 median household income accounts for 53.9 percent of the $230,464 needed."
    Both cities also tied with Plano for the 29th highest salary needed nationally to live comfortably in 2026. Single adults living in these cities need to make $109,242 a year to live a financially stable life this year.

    On the opposite end, San Antonio has the lowest salaries needed to live comfortably in the U.S. Single adults only need to make $83,242 a year, and $192,608 for families of four.

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