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Some Business Owners Allowed Back In: Temporary permits are available for business owners who wish to return to the CBD and portions of the Garden District and Uptown. See nola.com article for details (article talks only about CBD businesses).

Recovery: NYTimes Article On NOLA Recovery Efforts

[FEMA] sending 600 public works laborers to the city, is instead focused on draining the floodwaters, repairing the water system and getting the sewage system operating. Entergy is trying to restore electricity to the drier areas … the Army Corps of Engineers estimates that the city will be drained in another month … officials hoped to get the water system running citywide in 90 days … assuming that thousands of houses will have to be bulldozed … houses can be raised according to the level of risk … Louisiana’s highways need $1.3 billion in repairs (maybe) … future floods could best be deterred through landscape restoration and engineering … “The French Quarter, Algiers and the St. Charles Avenue corridor – all those big houses, all the things the tourists want to see – they’re all still in place.”

NYTimes - Neighborhoods Worst Hit By Flood
From the NYTimes – New Orleans Neighborhoods Worst Hit By Floods

Political Debris Hinders Efficient Rebuilding Effort: Quite purposefully, I have stayed away from the finger-pointing battle that escalates between the federal government and state & local officials, i.e. who is to blame for what happened in New Orleans?

Guess what, real New Orleanians do not care whose fault it is. We want to see cooperation among all agencies work toward a lasting solution for a city that is vital to America. Aye, there’s the rub: an American city.

Democrats, Republicans, Libertarians, Independents and Anarchists alike, I have one request: Stop arguing over who caused this problem. Each time the citizens of New Orleans hear anyone lay the blame wholly at the feet of others, they see Americans distancing themselves from an American problem. Even through one of the worst disasters to hit our country, you care more about your teflon armor than watching a unique American port city come back to life and thrive. For once, can this not be about politics and you, but about people who cry themselves to sleep every night or remain sleepless because they have no certainty about anything, much less their political allegiance?

Instead, be positive for New Orleans and America. Request that all of the energy going into castigation be diverted to finding the optimal combination of financial, intellectual and physical resources, at ALL levels of government, to rebuild New Orleans right.

nola.com editorial: Welcome back, Mr. President
Anne Rice In The NYTimes: Do You Know What It Means To Lose New Orleans?

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Chemicals In Floodwater: Lead, sewage treatment plant chemicals and car and lawn runoff are some of the main contaminants of NO’s floodwater, never mind the E. coli. Once the water is cleaned, however, the long-term deleterious effects will not be on humans, but on lawns. Hey, America needs some priorities.

Entry Into Uptown: Post 676 from the nola.com Uptown forums reads, “Drove down to New Orleans arriving around 600A from Jackson Ms. Allowed thru 3 checkpoints telling guards and police I was going in to retrieve my daughter’s belongings from her apt who was a Law student at Tulane. Ended up on Airline Drive, cut across Jefferson Hwy, around River Road to Oak street. I was at the apt about five hours and guards and police coming by constantly asking what I was doing and when I was leaving. Worst problem was rotted food in the refrig and getting that cleaned out. Apt located about a 1/2 mi from Tulane had no water damage, in fact still had running water with a couple of people living in the neighborhood with generators. Police were marking houses that they had checked with stray paint to indicate no one there.”

Can’t wait to find out if the police marked my house or the plywood boards with that awful orange. Small price to pay for safety, I suppose. Also, shivers run down my spine on thinking about the ecosystem that lives and thrives in my refrigerator. Cleaning that up should be an exercise in rapture. Again, if the refrigerator is all this debacle takes from my place, so be it.

Well Worth A Read: The September 3 print issue of The Economist carries an eloquent and synoptic essay on the defensive, environmental, political and economic implications of Katrina and future Category 4-5s for our area. Oddly enough, the article doesn’t blame global warming for the hurricane as does this Boston Globe opinion.

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A Day Off: One thousand apologies for the downtime in reporting. The evening of Day 12 and most of Day 13 were spent in the company of friends, EndoKing and Tonya, in from near Santa Barbara to spend time with us and our local friends such as MojoToad and Ms. G-Lenney.

Back to NOLA.

Water Level Going Down Quickly: The water is draining and at quite the pace. However, water service is a few months off yet.

Water Draining Into Pontchartrain
Floodwater Temporarily Drained Into Lake Pontchartrain

My Mayor: Mayor Ray Nagin, on the phone with the Times Picayune from Dallas, “Analyze my ass, analyze everyone’s ass, man. Let’s put the facts on the table and talk turkey. Why was there a breakdown at the federal and state level only in Louisiana? This didn’t happen in Mississippi. That’s the question. That’s the question of the day.”

Nagin has moved his family, including a young daughter, to Dallas for the next six months. He will continue to work out of New Orleans as soon as his family’s life is set up.

FEMA: Vice Admiral Thad Allen replaces Michael Brown as the hurricane-zone FEMA head. From the US Coast Guard site,

Vice Admiral Thad W. Allen assumed duties as Chief of Staff, U.S. Coast Guard and Commanding Officer, Coast Guard Headquarters, Washington, DC in May 2002. Vice Admiral Allen is third in command of the Coast Guard. VADM Allen serves as the Coast Guard“s Transition Director for the transfer of the Coast Guard from the Department of Transportation to the Department of Homeland Security.

Those familiar with things nautical think that Allen is a good replacement. He will make progress on the ground, especially given that the Coasties were the first people who DID anything in New Orleans after the hurricane.

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Please note that this “on the ground” update is two days old and it only talks about conditions in the dry parts of the city (Quarter-Downtown-Warehouse Dist.-Garden Dist.-Uptown-some MidCity). Especially note the displays of organization and humanity during the Convention Center ordeal. Things are looking up, folks. Without any more bungling, we should be on our way back!

In a message dated 9/7/2005 8:15:38 P.M. EDT, a friend’s co-worker writes:

“Dear Folks:

“I went into downtown New Orleans for the second time today, this time I spent a lot of time driving where I could. I’m going back tomorrow. The difference from Friday [September 5] to today is stunning: the authorities have control. I felt very safe. Buses streaming into and out of the downtown area through the only route: I-10 to I-310 over the Luling Bridge to U. S. 90 to Westbank Expressway, then over the Crescent City Connection (the double span downtown bridge.) Saw very little evidence of looting.

“Floodwaters obviously receding. The Convention Center crowd: Most all of the people have been removed. Some still being picked up by buses when I left, but the difference between Friday and today was remarkable. I visited with some, and what hit me was all the people coming up to me begging me to put their names in the paper in order that their relatives would know they were alive. They had organized into various social groups, with adults taking turns sleeping while others watched the children and guarded the group from the few thugs that were causing trouble.

“THE AUTHORITIES ARE IN CONTROL. They had secured most of downtown Friday, but had total control on Saturday. No signs of looting or damaging homes in Warehouse District uptown to audubon Park. I drove around a lot. Workers are everywhere. Convoys, buses, cops, helicopters, ambulances, airplanes streaming into New Orleans. Considering here is only one way into the city, I think the response has been really good.

“My place on Julia at Camp Street: At 604 Julia Street, if the electricity and water were on, I could host a party tonight. There was no damage whatsoever to any of the Julia Row Townhouses.

St. Charles Avenue: NOT ONE LIVE OAK ON ST. CHARLES AVE. IS DOWN!!!!!!! I finally had my big cry driving down St. Charles when I realized how very little damage. There were only about 4-5 water oaks on St. Charles down all the way to Tulane. Both Tulane and Loyola look like you could hold classes tomorrow. Saw no damage to the historic St. Charles Avenue mansions.

Lack Of Damage Uptown: There was very little noticeable damage to homes in the Lower Garden District or Uptown on the streets (I went all over, going from house to house of friends, saving Heidi Quenan’s house). Now, something hit Heidi’s roof in the corner of her upstairs bedroom to cause a leak: a section of sheetrock about 4 x 6 feet had fallen, but that’s it. There was a candle still sitting on a table near the edge of her back porch. I say this by way of saying that while I was stunned – and overjoyed – by the lack of visible damage, I couldn’t see everything, of course, but I was driving a 4-wheel drive jeep and meandered as much as I could. Lots of limbs down, but my companion, Jimmy Blanchard, the artist, designer and historical archivist and I were ecstatic that most of it is superficial. Most of our trees are still there.

Red Cross Very Visible: The Red Cross was visible, assessing damage to homes. The director on, I think, State Street, told me he was very pleased with the lack of damage.

Warehouse District: There was little damage in the Warehouse District. I’ve seen more litter on the ground at Mardi Gras. As far as Julia Row is concerned, the New York Times and the Times-Picayune could have snapped those pictures they ran from the corner of Camp and Julia today.

Audubon Park: I checked out a friend’s house on Exposition on the edge of Audubon Park and it was fine. There were limbs, but very few trees down in Audubon Park. Almost all animals survived at the zoo. Talked to the exhausted but happy zoo curator.

Uptown In General: There were very isolated cases of trees down on houses, but here’s the interesting part: the trees that were down fell in between houses or across the back yards, where the vortex of the wind kicked them. I saw no major damage to homes on St. Charles.

French Quarter: Signs still hanging from shops. Very little evidence of looting anywhere that I’ve been: which is the Quarter (went down Bourbon to te 500 block, then turned back and came back out Royal; also drove around the Chartres/Decateur area near Canal Place; none of it got went), Canal to Bourbon.

Floodwater: Water obviously receded quite a bit since Friday’s visit. The water from the lake and canal stopped on Canal in between Burgundy and Bourbon. The rest of the Quarter stayed dry. Water came to 4-5 blocks lakeside of St.Charles. The water from the lake and canal stopped on Canal in between Burgundy and Bourbon. The rest of the Quarter stayed dry. Water came to 4-5 blocks lakeside of St.Charles. Went to Audubon ZooAudubon Zoo from Tchoupaltoulas to 4-5 blocks lakeside of St. Charles. The water from the lake and canal stopped on canal in between Burgundy and Bourbon. The rest of the Quarter stayed dry.

“Warehouse and almost all of Uptown stayed dry. Water came to 4-5 blocks lakeside of St.Charles. The water from the lake and canal stopped on Canal in between Burgundy and Bourbon. They sandbagged frantically in the Quarter about 20 feet lakeside of Bourbon Street when the water started rising Wednesday. Water came to 4-5 blocks lakeside of St.Charles.

Little Evidence Of Uptown Looting: Saw a couple of looted shops on Magazine near the nursing home, but that’s it. The door to Whole Foods Store was open and those night lights [were on]. Now, to be sure, in a total of about 12 hours in the city, 2 of them spent in my own buildling.

Areas I Have Visited So Far: Quarter to Conti, to Bourbon, down Royal, Chartres from 400 block to 200 block; all over Warehouse District, a bit of the Convention Center, Poydras (major damage to those very old live oaks in median while most of the fronds were still on the new palms at Harrah’s two blocks away) Not much damage to live oaks in Lafayette Park. Been down St. Charles from Canal to Tulane. State, Webster, Eleonore, Coliseum from Napoleonville upriver for 6-7 blocks. Meandered through uptown, as downed trees, limbs, powerlines, etc. blocked many streets. All the way down Tchoupitoulas; Lower Garden District, Magazine, Camp. Went to Palmer as far lakeside of St. Charles as I could go.

“What’s remarkable is the lack of major damage to this area. I know this contrasts with the misery and suffering elsewhere in the city, but the old historic New Orleans is in fine condition.

Oh, look, no more Michael Brown. So, where does that leave us? “Give me a better idiot, ” requests Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson Parish. Be careful what you wish for, Mr. Broussard.

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Maps: Check out the depth of flooding on your street with this Google Maps mod. As some neighborhoods are unrecognizable, the best use of this map is to locate the intersection in the Map window and then to switch to Katrina satellite mode. Once there, click on the specific location and a box will pop up with two pieces of information: maximum flood level and current water level. Keep checking.

As a test, I tried a friend’s home in Mid-City. What previously looked like flooding to the second floor was a max of 3.4 feet which by now has receded to 1.7 feet. Of course, even a foot of standing water in one’s home constitutes irrecoverable – after water removal, the mold, rot and overall foundation weakening take over. Gah.

Pictures: Kavita’s friend, Tully, took these great pictures of Uptown before, during and after Katrina. Once the levees broke, she left town for Baton Rouge.

Four guys from Memphis drove down to Mississippi (with guns and chainsaws!) to help clear downed trees and clean up the remains of several buildings on the Gulf Coast.

Downtown Safety: From Interdictor – “Many buildings appear to have well-armed private security forces around them. One Shell Square, for instance, has several guys patrolling around the clock. Bell South does too. These guys look a lot more professional than the Federal Police Force around the Boggs building – professional in the sense that even though they’re just as well armed, they’re not interested in bullying and intimidating anyone.”

Water Levels: The water is going down.

A couple of days ago, CNN TV reported that 60% of New Orleans is underwater. Today, they report that 40% of New Orleans is above water. Sigh.

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