Lead contamination widespread at New Orleans playgrounds, Verite finds

Unsafe lead levels were found in the soil at about half of New Orleans playgrounds tested in a new investigation by nonprofit newsroom Verite News.

Why it matters: There is no known safe exposure level for children, and even small amounts can cause behavioral problems and reduced cognitive ability.

The big picture: Elevated lead levels tended to track with the age of neighborhoods, Verite reporters Tristan Baurick and Halle Parker write.

  • The city’s older neighborhoods — including the Irish Channel and Algiers Point — had some of the highest lead levels, while Gentilly and New Orleans East tended to have lower levels, according to Verite’s findings.
  • The highest lead levels were found at Evans Park in the Freret neighborhood.

Zoom in: New Orleans has a long history of soil contaminated with lead from lead-based paint, leaded gasoline and emissions from waste incinerators and other industrial facilities, the reporters say.

  • Lead particles spread easily by wind, eventually settling in the topsoil.

Catch up quick: In 2010, Sarah Hess was one of the parents who urged the city to fix Mickey Markey Playground in the Bywater after her toddler was diagnosed with lead poisoning.

  • The city hired a company to remediate the soil at Markey and other parks.
  • The last significant effort to test parks for lead ended in 2011, Larry Barabino, CEO of the New Orleans Recreation Development Commission, told Parker and Baurick.

Yes, but: Verite’s findings indicate the cleanup efforts fell short, and a large number of New Orleans children are still exposed to excessive amounts of lead, said Howard Mielke, a retired Tulane University toxicologist and one of the nation’s leading experts on lead contamination.

  • “It’s a failed program,” he told Verite. “They didn’t do what they needed to do to bring the lead levels down in a single park.”

What they did: Verite reporters tested hundreds of soil samples from 84 city parks with playgrounds in fall 2025.

  • Adrienne Katner, a lead contamination researcher with Louisiana State University, verified the results.
  • The testing found about half the parks had lead concentrations exceeding a federal hazard level set in 2024 for urban soil.
  • Check the playgrounds in your neighborhood.

What’s next: Barabino told Verite he would share their results with city project managers and MMG, the city’s environmental consultant…

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