{"id":118806,"date":"2021-07-27T12:27:03","date_gmt":"2021-07-27T12:27:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=118806"},"modified":"2021-07-27T12:27:03","modified_gmt":"2021-07-27T12:27:03","slug":"want-proof-we-need-a-civilian-climate-corps-look-no-further-than-louisiana","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/politics\/want-proof-we-need-a-civilian-climate-corps-look-no-further-than-louisiana\/","title":{"rendered":"Want Proof We Need a Civilian Climate Corps? Look No Further Than Louisiana"},"content":{"rendered":"

The January family calls their house “the Ponderosa,” after the home at the heart of the 1960’s TV western Bonanza<\/em>. But while that Ponderosa was a sprawling ranch in the pine-covered mountains near Lake Tahoe, Nevada, the Januarys’ is a simple one-story brick house with a spacious porch in low-lying Lake Charles, Louisiana. The house earned its nickname because it’s been the meeting ground for the Januarys’ entire extended family for going on six decades. It’s where they crowd in for birthdays and holidays, where relatives stay when visiting Lake Charles, and where elders come to convalesce and sometimes to die. “That’s why this house is so sacred,” says Van January, 56, standing in his living room. “It’s why we’re really trying to maintain the structure, to keep something here. It’s a refuge.”<\/p>\n

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