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#261 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 12:57 am

Guardsmen, troopers helping patrol city streets

By James Varney
and Trymaine Lee
Staff writers


National Guard soldiers and State Police troopers rolled back into New Orleans Tuesday, less than a year after chaos unleashed by Hurricane Katrina first called them to calm an unruly city.

Mayor Ray Nagin and Police Superintendent Warren Riley said the move had been in the works since March, but the arrival of armed soldiers three days after the city was rocked by the murder of five teenagers cast an unwelcome spotlight on resurgent crime that some officials fear threatens the fragile reconstruction from the storm and its catastrophic flooding.

In a pep talk to the soldiers and troopers who gathered mid-day at the Port of New Orleans headquarters, Gov. Kathleen Blanco said as much, hammering home the point that if a criminal element gains a toehold in New Orleans the hopes of an economic recovery will dim.

“I call on you to assure that crime has no role in our recovery,” Blanco told an auditorium packed with nearly 100 Louisiana guardsmen and 50 state police troopers. “Criminals, hear me loud and hear me clearly: there is law and order in New Orleans.”
With financial assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency coming to an end and school letting out for the summer in neighborhoods where people have relocated, police are expecting an, “influx of people, not necessarily criminals,” Riley said. It is that return, not the killers capable of gunning down the five youths early Saturday morning as they were driving in Central City, that is problematic for authorities, he said. “It’s going to be a long, hot summer,” Riley warned.

With more people returning, an already thin force would find itself dangerously short-handed, Riley said. Having armed soldiers fan out on patrol in mostly deserted stretches of the city, and using the troopers to assist in neighborhoods along the Mississippi River from roughly the Industrial Canal to the Central Business District, will allow the NOPD to reassign officers to crime fighting duties in more populated areas.

The National Guard troops, whom officers noted had all volunteered for the assignment, will be concentrated in the NOPD’s 3rd, 5th and 7th Districts, Riley said, giving commanders at least 45 officers to shift to other zones. Those districts areas include the city’s worst-hit neighborhoods, including the 9th Ward, eastern New Orleans, Lakeview and Gentilly.

Guard officers said their force will swell to 300 in the near future, possibly as soon as Wednesday. In his brief remarks to the soldiers and troopers, Riley said their mission was crucial, if not as sexy as they might like.

It is NOPD officers who will handle the brunt of the city’s street crime, he said. “We’ll be in the hot spots, although I’m sure some of you would like to be,” Riley said as many soldiers in the audience chuckled.

For now, the soldiers will reside in the flood-damaged Jackson Barracks, the National Guard’s former headquarters in New Orleans, as officers work to line up hotel rooms. Tuesday afternoon, state Sen. Julie Quinn, R-Metairie announced she and her husband, hotelier F. Patrick Quinn III, would provide 750 rooms for the soldiers for as long as they are needed.

Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, spokesman for the National Guard in Louisiana, said he hopes troopers won’t be needed in the city for long, but that no one is setting a deadline.

“What we want to do is work ourselves out of a job, but we’ll stay as long as we have to,” he said.

Schneider and the other soldiers arrived in the city just before noon in a scorching heat, and parked their Humvees and other vehicles in rows in a lot across from the Convention Center. Soldiers milled about for a while, most of them carrying shotguns which, along with a sidearm, is the standard weaponry on a law enforcement detail, said Lt. Col. Jacques Thibodeaux, deputy commander of the force. The schedule of the soldiers’ patrols and roadblocks remains uncertain, but Thibodeaux said they are prepared — and indeed, are expecting — to be active 24 hours a day.

A handful of soldiers had M-16 machine guns slung over their shoulder, but that gun, which can fire a round up to a mile, isn’t the best weapon in confined areas or in close combat, soldiers said. Hopefully, no action will result, but Guard officers and Riley noted that, on patrol or at roadblocks, soldiers will have live ammunition.

“They have pull-over authority, they are locked and loaded, and they are authorized to use deadly force,” Riley said.

One step Blanco and Nagin said is pending that they hope could sharply reduce such incidents is a juvenile curfew. While the details have not been finalized, local and state government officials are all on board. Nagin said Tuesday the only holdup was, “finding the beds,” but that problem appeared solved later in the day when Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman said he would use an administrative building on Tulane Avenue to house curfew violators.

For all the insistence that the arrival of troops was long planned, the horrific weekend massacre — the city’s worst since five people were slain in a house on North Roman Street in 1995 — was clearly in people’s minds. Soldiers said they have been following the news.

“I think we’ll be a good reminder for the United States that there’s still a lot of work to be done here,” said Sgt. Carlos Rossell, a New Orleans native.

Certainly some New Orleanians living near the most recent violence welcomed the martial reinforcements.

“I think we need a little help,” said Desi Bradford, a concerned Central City resident who does everything from raise money to bury neighbors to mentoring neighborhood youth. “But I still feel like we need to take care of home first. I think the National Guard should be a supporter of the Sixth District police. They should come and reinforce, not take over. Here in the 6th, we’re trying to take care of our own.”

On a stoop just yards from where the victims of Saturday’s massacre were found sat 73-year-old Clarence Joseph. He said he welcomes anything that helps the community get a handle on the violence and the wayward children, “with no home training.”

“Nothing wrong with them guardsmen being here,” Joseph said. “Being here, protecting our state, its beautiful.”

Less certain is how photos and news clips of armed troops patrolling the streets, as they did in the first wild weeks after Katrina, will play in the national consciousness. The image could undercut efforts to nurse tourists back because it recalls the city’s darkest hours, when U.S. Army soldiers, heavily armed NOPD units, and sundry other forces from around the country walked New Orleans shattered or underwater neighborhoods, searching for trapped survivors and dealing with looters and random gunshots.

Reacting to the national headlines the Saturday killings generated, the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau issued two pages of “talking points” Tuesday to combat the notion that outlaws rule the streets. The letter notes the murders happened, “at 4:00 a.m. in the sparsely populated Central City neighborhood,” and that visitors should not be afraid.

“The murders have no bearing on any crime or safety issues in the areas of the city frequented by tourists,” the Bureau wrote.

When asked directly, both Blanco and Nagin sidestepped the question of how much harm the return of soldiers could inflict. Their concern, they said, was not with outside opinions but law and order in New Orleans. Nevertheless, their remarks acknowledged the potentially mortal blow an explosion of bloody crime would inflict on the city’s recovery.

“I’m not taking any chances,” Nagin said. “This city is open for business and is safe for tourists.”

The normally ebullient mayor appeared subdued Tuesday, both in his remarks at the Port and in an impromptu press conference with reporters where he eschewed his trademark banter. He thanked Blanco for her, “quick” reaction to his request and said the soldiers should adapt quickly to New Orleans since, “a lot of you have been here before.”

“I think it’s an issue of focus, trying to stem this tide we have right now,” the mayor said. “Once we get through to the fall, we’ll be O.K., but we’re stretching our resources a little thin right now.”

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#262 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 12:58 am

Folks in Baldwin County asked to save water

Last Update: 6/20/2006 10:09:07 PM
NBC15 Mobile



Some residents in Baldwin County are facing an ultimatum - conserve water or have their supply cut off.

For months our area has been experiencing very dry weather conditions, and the pain is now trickling into your home. That's especially true in three Baldwin County communities. Loxley's under a “voluntary” water conservation order. Things are more serious in Whitehouse Forks, where residents are under “mandatory” orders to conserve water. In Daphne, even though a voluntary order to conserve is now being lifted, that doesn't mean folks living there should turn on the sprinklers just yet.

A week ago, Daphne Utility Officials asked their customers to conserve water. It was a voluntary effort in which residents were asked not to water lawns or plants except during night time hours from midnight to five A.M. Monday the ban is lifted thanks to a strong response from Eastern Shore water customers.

Daphne Resident Carl Adams tells NBC 15’s Leon Petite: “I've watered very little, my plants, but we're hoping for rain every day. Hopefully, everybody is doing their part and I think they will.”

Although the voluntary ban there is lifted, Daphne Utilities Manager Rob McElroy is still asking people to conserve: “We saw about a half million gallons a day drop in our water usage and that's what we're looking for, is people helping us through the drought that the federal government has deemed as severe.”

It's the same story all over the county. Some communities are in worse shape than others. Officials say Baldwin County is 18 inches below normal in Rain Fall for the entire year.

In the Whitehouse Fork community of Baldwin County residents are under a mandatory water warning. Customers on that system cannot use outdoor sprinklers at anytime, nor can they use water to wash vehicles. People who fail to comply with the mandatory order will be given a written warning. Further failure to comply will result in your water being shut off. If that happens, customers must pay a $30 reconnect fee to have their water turned back on. That order, however, doesn’t apply to people with private water wells.

Here are a few tips to help you conserve…

Water your lawn in the early morning or evening to avoid evaporation.
Only run your washing machine, or dishwasher, with a full load.
And check water hoses and pipes for leaks.
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#263 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 1:05 am

A dog's life … saved from Katrina's floods

Sunday, June 18, 2006
By SACHA CHAMPION, Statesman Staff Writer
From Dexter Statesman--Missouri




Sacha Champion photo - Santa Maria, an Australian Shepherd displaced by Hurricane Katrina.

She wasn't quite sure what was going on. She knew there wasn't supposed to be water on the floor, but the home was filling quickly. As she looked toward her two friends, just as confused as she, Santa Maria suddenly felt the hands of her best friend on earth grab her.
Santa couldn't figure out why the person she loved most in the world was so frantic. She was shoving her up in the attic as quickly as possible as the water level kept rising. Santa sat in the attic with her best friend's mother, waiting for her to return. When she did, Santa was even more confused, because the two friends that had lived with her weren't with her best friend and caregiver.

What Santa Maria didn't know was that her two friends, a Jack Russell terrier and a blue-nose Pit Bull, were gone -- victims of the raging water. She also didn't know the battle that was ahead of her just to survive.

*

To meet Santa Maria today, you would never guess the horror she has been through. The lively, bouncy, beautiful Australian Shepherd now lives with Janet Guethle of Dexter, awaiting the day her best friend, her owner, can take her back.

Guethle helped to rescue 225 animals that were left homeless after hurricanes Katrina and Rita. She made several trips to Mississippi and Louisiana, loading her van full of dogs that were scheduled to die.

It was on a trip to Houma, La., near New Orleans, that Guethle would meet Santa. Many would say that the events leading up to the meeting would be fate.

"My friend, Phyllis Rice, and I volunteered at the shelter in Houma for four days," said Guethle. "But what happened when we got there was that we found out the people we were supposed to stay with were suddenly unable to have us. We didn't have any place to stay."

Then, seemingly out of nowhere, a complete stranger invited Guethle to stay with her. She handed her the keys to the apartment where she lived with only one instruction, "Don't let any of the animals out when you go in."

When Guethle walked through the door of the home, she was greeted by Santa Maria. Guethle thought to herself that someone had worked hard to train the dog, as she was extremely well mannered and knew quite a few commands. She was also a beautifully bred dog, meeting most if not all of the confirmation requirements of her breed.

But Guethle was soon to find out that the woman who had opened her home had gotten Santa from the Humane Society. The woman didn't think she would be able to keep her, her husband might not agree. On Guethle's last day in Houma, she got a call from the woman.

Could Guethle please take Santa? Her previous owner was living in a high rise in Texas and didn't want her and the woman's husband said that she had to get rid of the dog immediately. But Guethle's previous thoughts about the dog's training and breeding began to run through her mind again.

"I asked if she was sure that the owner no longer wanted the dog," said Guethle. "I asked her multiple times and she kept saying the owner didn't want her.

"But she had a scrap of paper with the owner's name and phone number on it so I asked if I could have it. I wanted to give the owner a call."

That was when Guethle learned that Santa's owner did indeed want her back and all that Santa had been through just to survive.

*

Santa and her two friends lived with their owner and her mother near the canal in New Orleans. When the flooding began, it hit quickly, leaving only time for the owner to grab her mother and Santa and shove them in the attic. When she went back for her other two companions, they were already gone.

Santa, her owner and the mother climbed onto the roof to seek shelter from the raging waters. However, as it continued to rise, there was less and less room on the roof for the three of them.

Finally, there would only be room for Santa's owner and her mother to sit side-by-side without moving on the roof. But her owner wasn't going to give up her dog. She loved her and had already lost two dogs to the hurricane. She was determined she wouldn't lose another.

The owner spotted a tree nearby. A thought entered her head. She grabbed Santa up, holding her close for just a moment. The she put Santa in the top of the tree with only one word uttered.

"Stay."

And stay Santa did. For the next 26 hours, Santa hung on to the top of a tree, awaiting rescue. As she glanced around she could see other people on their roofs, some with their dogs. A man nearby with his German Shepherd. A woman with her two Yorkshire terriers grasped firmly in her arms. To her it was all very strange, but she had her orders. She was to stay put.

What Santa didn't know what that pets weren't being taken on the helicopters offering rescue. What would her fate be?

*

After 26 hours, a new sound filled the air above the noise of the rushing water. Something like blades rotating. There was a strange machine in the air and that is where the noise was coming from. The man next to them with the German Shepherd was pulled aboard the strange machine, leaving his dog behind.

When the helicopter stopped above the roof that held Santa's owner and her mother, the mother was quickly loaded aboard. But that is when they would discover that pets weren't being rescued. They would have to leave Santa behind, like the man next door had left his dog.

But the woman with the two Yorkshire terriers wouldn't take that for an answer. She told Santa's owner to get on the helicopter with her mother and she would stay with Santa and her two dogs. They wouldn't be abandoned like so much rubbish.

There ensued an argument. Santa's owner would stay and the other woman would go. Back and forth they would each offer to stay and watch over their loved companions.

Finally, the military soldier in the helicopter would reach his limit. He had been told that the dog in the tree had stayed there for the past 26 hours, simply because her owner asked her to. Through all of the disaster and turmoil he had seen so far, something about this story tugged at his heart.

"Just get on," he said to the women. "Get the dogs and get on the helicopter."

*

Santa, her owner and her owner's mother were on the helicopter. After clinging to a tree for more than a day, Santa's nerves were shot. She wasn't sure what this machine that made so much noise was and she wasn't sure she was supposed to be out of the tree.

After all, she had been told to stay, hadn't she?

At the end of her rope, Santa began to struggle. She wanted out. She wanted to be someplace quiet and dry and with her two other friends who she hadn't seen since the water came. In short, Santa panicked.

"Santa's owner told me she had a panic attack and began flailing around the helicopter," said Guethle. "Santa's owner and the man in the military had to wrap their arms around each other and squeeze with Santa between them to keep her still.

"It was almost like they were bear-hugging each other with Santa in the middle to keep her still."

Finally, Santa would get most of her wish. They were taken off the loud machine and the ground beneath her feet was drier that any she had felt in so long. Santa's owner would make a call, trying to get them out of Louisiana for the time being.

When the car came to take them away from the devastation that used to be their home, it would be bittersweet. Santa's owner would be able to get herself and her mother to safety, but there was no room in the car for Santa. None. She would have to be left behind after all.

Santa's owner took her to the Humane Society. It was hard to leave her, but she left strict instructions that if anyone should adopt Santa, they must contact her immediately and let her know where her companion was. No exceptions.

Eventually, Santa would be taken home by the woman who offered her home to Guethle. Luckily for her, that would be the event that would save her life.

*

After talking to Santa's owner, Guethle knew she would be housing the dog. Santa's owner was a bus driver in New Orleans, and one of the first ordered to return to the city.

"They knew that without the busses, they wouldn't be able to get people to come back to the city," said Guethle. "So, she wasn't in a high-rise in Texas, she was back in New Orleans doing her job.

"But the problem was that she didn't have a permanent place to live so, she couldn't take Santa back right away," said Guethle. "So I have agreed to keep Santa with me until her owner finds a place to stay where she can have Santa back."

So, Santa has a home in Dexter until she can return to her home in New Orleans. She will do what she does best until the call comes that it is time to go home.

She will "stay."

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#264 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 1:07 am

Terrebonne Parish schools face big insurance bill

6/19/2006, 9:28 p.m. CT
The Associated Press


HOUMA, La. (AP) — Rising property insurance costs in the wake of last year's devastating hurricane season are about to take a big chunk out of the Terrebonne Parish School Board's budget.

The insurance policy on public school buildings is up for renewal in two weeks, but rising premiums after hurricanes Katrina and Rita mean it will cost a lot more than before.

The School Board maintains three policies with three different companies, which cost about $400,000 combined. The board expects to pay double that, if not more, during the fiscal year that starts July 1.

Combined, the current policies cover up to $30 million worth of losses on the parish's 41 public schools and assorted other buildings. All three expire June 30, the end of the board's fiscal year.

School officials plan to obtain coverage through as many carriers as it takes to meet the $30 million mark by the start of the new fiscal year.

"The marketplace is horrendous," said Jack Moore, the School Board's risk manager. "It's the worst it's ever been my entire career. ... There is no capacity, no ability to provide."

So far six insurance carriers have declined to give school officials quotes.

Ed Daigle, who is the board's insurance broker and works for USI Gulf Coast Insurance, said the board's biggest carrier — RSUI Indemnity Co. — won't match the coverage it has provided in years past. "They were providing $21 million of coverage of the $30 million," Daigle said.

When Terrebonne Parish government renewed its property insurance policy several months ago, premiums jumped from $917,074 in 2005 to $1.7 million for 2006. To make sure their coverage was adequate, parish officials bought coverage from 10 carriers, twice as many as the previous year.

The Lafourche Parish School Board also faced problems trying to renew its policies. "They threatened to drop us and didn't give us a full year," Lafourche schools spokesman Floyd Benoit said. "They gave us an extension while we shop around."

Lafourche schools' premiums total $1.2 million this year, a jump of 80 percent for $15 million worth of coverage. Last year's premiums totaled just under $700,000.
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#265 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:25 pm

NOPD investigates Algiers homicide; Hollygrove shooting


From staff reports
Nola.com 6/21/06


New Orleans Police are investigating the shooting death of a man whose body was found in an Algiers home around noon.

And earlier Wednesday morning, police said an unidentified man was shot at least six times in a neighborhood just off Claiborne Avenue near the Jefferson Parish line. The victim of the attack in the 8400 block of Apple Street was rushed to Elmwood Medical Center for treatment. There was no immediate word on his condition there.

In the Algiers incident, the victim was found in a townhouse in the 5300 block of Tullis Drive after neighbors called to report a foul smell, said Officer Garry Flot, ann NOPD spokesman.

The man, whose name has not been released, was found lying on the floor, with an apparent gunshot wound to the body. Emergency medical personnel pronounced him dead on the scene, Flot said.

Homicide Detective Harold Wischan Jr. is in charge of the investigation. Citizens with information that can help solve this crime are asked to call CRIMESTOPPERS at 822-1111, toll-free 1-877-903-STOP(7867).

Callers may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to the arrest and indictment of a person responsible for the crime. Callers may remain anonymous.

In the Apple Street shooting, a woman who lives near the shooting scene said the neighborhood was quiet after Hurricane Katrina but recently began reverting to what it was before the storm — a place where the sound of gunfire is an everyday thing.
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#266 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:28 pm

Armed soldiers roll in to beef up police force

THIS TIME, SOLDIERS, TROOPS TO PATROL N.O. NEIGHBORHOODS

Wednesday, June 21, 2006
By James Varney


National Guard soldiers and State Police troopers rolled back into New Orleans on Tuesday, less than a year after chaos unleashed by Hurricane Katrina first called them to calm an unruly city.

Mayor Ray Nagin and Police Superintendent Warren Riley said the move had been in the works since March, but the arrival of armed soldiers three days after the city was rocked by the killing of five teenagers cast an unwelcome spotlight on resurgent crime that some officials fear threatens the fragile reconstruction from the storm and its catastrophic flooding.

In a pep talk to the soldiers and troopers who gathered midday at Port of New Orleans headquarters, Gov. Kathleen Blanco said as much, hammering home the point that if criminals gain a toehold in New Orleans, the hopes of an economic recovery will dim.

"I call on you to assure that crime has no role in our recovery," Blanco told an auditorium packed with nearly 100 Louisiana Guard soldiers and 50 State Police. "Criminals, hear me loud and hear me clearly: There is law and order in New Orleans."

'A long, hot summer'

With financial assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency coming to an end and school letting out for the summer, police are expecting an "influx of people, not necessarily criminals," Riley said. It is that influx, he said, that is more problematic than isolated incidents of violence for authorities trying to maintain order in the city. "It's going to be a long, hot summer," Riley said.

As more people return, an already thin force could find itself dangerously short-handed, Riley said. Having armed soldiers fan out on patrol in mostly deserted stretches of the city and using state troopers to assist in neighborhoods along the Mississippi River from near the Industrial Canal to the Central Business District will allow the Police Department to reassign officers to crime-fighting duties in more-populated areas.

The National Guard soldiers, who officers noted had volunteered for the assignment, will be concentrated in the Police Department's 3rd, 5th and 7th districts, Riley said, giving commanders at least 45 officers to shift to other zones. Those districts include neighborhoods hit the worst by the storm, such as the 9th Ward, eastern New Orleans, Lakeview and Gentilly.

Guard officers said their force will swell to 300, possibly as soon as today. In his brief remarks to the soldiers and troopers, Riley said their mission is crucial, if not as sexy as they might like.

NOPD officers will handle the brunt of the city's street crime, he said. "We'll be in the hot spots, although I'm sure some of you would like to be," Riley said as many soldiers chuckled.

Serving as long as needed

For now, the soldiers will live in the flood-damaged Jackson Barracks, the National Guard's former headquarters in New Orleans, as commanders work to line up hotel rooms. Tuesday afternoon, state Sen. Julie Quinn, R-Metairie, said she and her husband, hotelier F. Patrick Quinn III, would provide 750 rooms for the soldiers for as long as they are needed.

Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, spokesman for the National Guard in Louisiana, said he hopes troopers won't be needed in the city for long, but that no one is setting a deadline.

"I think we'll be a good reminder for the United States that there's still a lot of work to be done here," said Sgt. Carlos Rossell, a New Orleans native.

Residents relieved

Some New Orleanians living near the most recent violence welcomed the martial reinforcements.

"I think we need a little help," said Desi Bradford, a Central City resident who does everything from raise money for neighbors' burials to mentor neighborhood youth. "But I still feel like we need to take care of home first. I think the National Guard should be a supporter of the 6th District police. They should come and reinforce, not take over. Here in the 6th, we're trying to take care of our own."

On a stoop just yards from where the victims of Saturday's massacre were found sat 73-year-old Clarence Joseph. He said he welcomes anything that helps the community get a handle on the violence and wayward children "with no home training."

"Nothing wrong with them Guardsmen being here," Joseph said. "Being here, protecting our state, it's beautiful."

Less certain is how photographs and news clips of armed soldiers patrolling the streets, as they did in the first wild weeks after Katrina, will play in the national consciousness. The images could undercut efforts to lure tourists back because they recall the city's darkest hours, when Army soldiers, heavily armed Police Department units and other forces from around the country walked or boated through New Orleans' shattered or underwater neighborhoods, searching for trapped survivors and dealing with looters and random gunshots.

Tourism concerns

Reacting to the national headlines generated by Saturday's killings, the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau issued two pages of "talking points" Tuesday to combat the notion that outlaws rule the streets. The letter notes that the killings happened "at 4 a.m. in the sparsely populated Central City neighborhood," and it said visitors should not be afraid.

"The murders have no bearing on any crime or safety issues in the areas of the city frequented by tourists," the bureau wrote.

Both Blanco and Nagin sidestepped the question of how much harm the return of soldiers could inflict on the city's image. Their concern, they said, was not with outside opinions but with law and order in New Orleans. Nevertheless, they acknowledged the potentially mortal blow an explosion of bloody crime could inflict on the city's recovery.

"I'm not taking any chances," Nagin said. "This city is open for business and is safe for tourists."

The normally ebullient mayor appeared subdued Tuesday, both in his remarks at the port and in an impromptu news conference at which he eschewed his trademark banter. He thanked Blanco for her "quick" reaction to his request and said the soldiers should adapt quickly to New Orleans since many of them "have been here before."

"I think it's an issue of focus, trying to stem this tide we have right now," the mayor said. "Once we get through to the fall, we'll be OK, but we're stretching our resources a little thin right now."
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#267 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:32 pm

'Triangle of death' claims another life

Bloodstains are deep on Central City blocks

Wednesday, June 21, 2006
By Michael Perlstein


In the short, brutal life of Michael Mack, there was no cavalry. People who knew him said no infusion of soldiers or cops could have saved him from a bad end.

That end came swiftly Tuesday morning. By the time 100 National Guard soldiers and 50 State Police troopers descended on violence-rattled New Orleans, Mack already was zipped up in a body bag, gunned down in a double shooting just blocks from where five teenagers were killed Saturday. Tuesday's shooting left another man clinging to life.

Mack, 22, was found dead inside a dilapidated second-story apartment at Thalia and Saratoga streets in a shooting reported by neighbors at 7:25 a.m. The second victim, Raymond Frith, 21, was listed in critical condition at a local hospital with several bullet wounds, police said.

The shooting took place half a dozen blocks from Saturday's quintuple massacre, a crime that put much of the city on razor's edge, even with Tuesday's deployment of federal and state patrols.

"It's the triangle of death right now," Mack's attorney, Gary Bizal, said of the violence-saturated pocket of Central City where the shootings took place. "I told this guy a long time ago to get out of the area. I was concerned for his safety. There was too much stuff going on around him and too much going on in the neighborhood."

Of this year's 54 murders, 14 have taken place in Central City, a triangle-shaped area bounded by Louisiana Avenue, Earhart Boulevard and St. Charles Avenue. The five victims gunned down Saturday were not suspects in any of those slayings, but they were implicated in earlier crimes, including a gun-related offense in Jefferson Parish in 2004.

Capt. Bob Bardy, commander of the 6th District where six of the city's last seven victims were killed, said that despite the ultra-violent four-day stretch in his district, crime is not spiking. In fact, it had been relatively quiet before Saturday's bloodbath, he said. Since the killings, though, Bardy said he has tried to boost the morale of his officers, urging them to fight the good fight alongside community leaders.

"I was really concerned with the emotional balance of the officers," Bardy said. "I like to see my guys do a better job than anyone else, but I understand they are going through a lot of pressure right now. I keep telling them, don't make this into what some of the media is making it out to be. It is not a spike in crime and you guys are doing a good job."

As for arresting the person responsible for Mack's killing, Bardy said homicide detectives are making progress. The Crimestoppers confidential tip-line has been humming, he said, and street informants have been helpful.

"I think we are well on our way with that one," Bardy said. "I know for a fact that we know who the (suspect) was today and there probably is a warrant being signed as we speak."

No stranger to the cops

Few people were surprised by Mack's death. Not his family. Not his attorney. Not the police.

After racking up six juvenile convictions -- including one for murder at age 13 that kept him locked up until he was 21 -- Mack returned to the streets after Hurricane Katrina and was arrested three times on drug charges, court records show.

In January, he was booked with cocaine and marijuana possession in a case in which New Orleans police were assisted by agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration. In March, he was booked with possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. In April, he was booked with distribution of prescription pills.

"He was a well-known Central City dope peddler," said local DEA Chief William Renton. "He had been on DEA radar since 1997."

After each of Mack's recent arrests, he was released after making bail, court records show. And each time, the bail amount decreased, records show: from $35,000 in January, to $10,000 March, to $5,000 in April. The details of those bail arrangements were not available Tuesday.

"The Police Department is feeding cases into the system, but the district attorney and courts aren't functioning," said Rafael Goyeneche, president of the nonprofit Metropolitan Crime Commission. "I think New Orleans is teetering right now. And the decisions that are being made about crime right now are just as important as flood protection."

Brutal blocks

Mack was a familiar -- and feared -- figure on his home turf. In 1997, he was described by prosecutors as a "one-man crime wave" after his string of preteen convictions was capped by the juvenile murder conviction. In that case, Mack was found guilty of following a couple to an apartment on Baronne Street, forcing them to their knees in a robbery, then shooting the man in the head when he didn't cough up enough money.

That 1997 murder in the 1400 block of Baronne Street was a stone's throw from where Mack was killed Tuesday. And the scene of Mack's killing is about seven blocks from the corner of Danneel and Josephine streets, where the five teens were cut down Saturday about 4 a.m.

Clarence Joseph, 73, a resident of the area for 50 years, tried to wrap his head around the violence Tuesday as he sat on one of the neighborhood's well-worn stoops.

"I'm 73 years old and ain't never known nothing to happen like that," Joseph said, removing a straw hat he had tilted over his brow. "Never known nothing like that except for in a war. Five at one time."

'We have to watch out'

The victims -- brothers Arsenio and Markee Hunter, ages 16 and 19; Warren Simeon, 17; Iraum Taylor, 19; and Reggie Dantzler, 19 -- were friends who frequented their old stomping grounds in Central City, even after they began shuffling between New Orleans and Jefferson Parish in 2004. Taylor was a cousin of the Hunters.

Police said the five ran tight, and careened together into trouble.

Lt. Mike Alwert of the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office said the five dead teens were implicated in a gun-related crime in 2004, although he said he could not elaborate because of their ages.

More recently though, detectives said they linked Simeon, the Hunter brothers and two other teens to a drive-by shooting May 1 in Jefferson Parish. The shooting was off the mark and did nothing more than shatter windows. Charges of aggravated assault and gun possession were dropped when the uninjured targets refused to talk, New Orleans police said.

Investigators are now trying to determine if those would-be victims were involved in Saturday's ambush. New Orleans Police Superintendent Warren Riley said the massacre clearly was an act of vengeance.

Whatever the case, the Rev. Toris Young, an Uptown pastor who is counseling the families of the Central City victims, said he is bracing for the cycle of violence to continue.

"Now we have to watch out for another knucklehead that is going to try and catch up with the people who killed those boys," Young said. "They'll get it in their minds that 'I'm going to get them back, that I'm going to find them and spray the whole house and everyone inside.' They'll get it in their minds that they got to die."
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#268 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:34 pm

To nip crime, New Orleans targets juveniles

6/21/2006, 4:24 p.m. CT
By CAIN BURDEAU
The Associated Press


NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Following the killings of five teenagers last weekend, city officials are racing to set up a nighttime curfew to keep children off the

The move comes as National Guard troops and state police were called in to begin patrolling the city streets and help the depleted New Orleans Police Department fight a wave of crime.

Enforcement of a curfew went by the wayside after Hurricane Katrina, but the curfew, officials say, is now urgent as summer starts and more people return to the city.

The previous mayor, Marc Morial, was credited with using a curfew in the mid-1990s to quell a rise in crime, but its enforcement dropped off after Hurricane Katrina hit on Aug. 29.

"It has not actively been enforced because the juvenile justice system has been down and there is nowhere to house these juveniles," said Sgt. Carlton Lewis, a police spokesman. "There are aggressive plans to jump-start that program again."

On Wednesday, work was underway to get one piece of that program going: A holding center for children picked up violating a curfew.

The curfew center — a big room divided with partitions where children will sit and wait for parents, or social workers — was flooded like so much else. Flood waters destroyed adjacent court buildings, police headquarters and the offices of bondsmen and lawyers.

After last weekend's killings, Gov. Kathleen Blanco urged the city to keep children off the streets and that has become a central piece of the plan to squash crime before it spoils the city's recovery. The city attorney's office on Wednesday was laying out the details of the curfew, a city spokesman said.

But some experts cautioned police to not go too far in enforcing it.

"If it were up to me, I'd want to get things back to normal, not make things different," said Melissa Sickmund, a senior researcher with the Pittsburgh-based National Center for Juvenile Justice. She said many cities, both big and small, have implemented curfews to mixed results.

David Utter, who heads the Juvenile Justice Project of Louisiana, said the move to install a curfew after the weekend shooting was misbegotten.

"Rushing to the blame-the-victim mentality seems to have little basis in the facts," he said, pointing out that only one of the five victims was, under the law, a juvenile at age 16.

Instead, the city should be channeling its resources into restoring youth programs, schools and playgrounds that were destroyed by Katrina.

Latasha Smith agreed. She's a 21-year-old getting trained at a restaurant that employs at-risk young people in Central City, the neighborhood where the weekend shooting occurred.

"Right now they don't have any programs, facilities for these kids anymore," Smith said. For example, a basketball court she used to play on is now a site for trailers housing displaced families.

The city recreation department's budget was dramatically cut because of financial woes after Katrina, but officials say they plan to restore more parks and playgrounds this summer.

Dealing with crime has become a top priority as billions of dollars are due to arrive in federal aid to New Orleans homeowners, which is expected to fuel a reconstruction boom.

At a news conference on Monday, the City Council and Mayor Ray Nagin urged quick action in opening schools after hours, starting nighttime basketball programs and doing more to fight poverty. A "crime summit" is also planned.

Meanwhile, more National Guard troops will be flowing into the city to free up the police force so officers can concentrate on hot spots. Police Superintendent Warren Riley said the outside help may free up to 100 officers.
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#269 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:37 pm

Editorial
The New Orleans Muddle


Published: June 21, 2006
New York Times Editorial Page
Printed link on NOLA.com


It has been almost 10 months since Hurricane Katrina battered the Gulf Coast, and there is still no redevelopment plan for New Orleans. Congress has passed the emergency relief bill, and President Bush has signed it into law. Billions of dollars are headed the city's way. Leaders in New Orleans and in the state capital of Baton Rouge will have only one chance to get it right. There are no more excuses for local officials, no more pointing toward Washington. It is time for southeastern Louisiana to rebuild itself.

Yet Adam Nossiter reported this week in The Times that it will be six months before a "master planning document" answers the questions foremost in the minds of residents, like which neighborhoods will return, where rebuilding will be encouraged and where returning residents will have to make do without city services. That is totally unacceptable.

In large swaths of the city, houses still sit empty, block after block. In many places, trash and flood-ruined automobiles have yet to be cleared away. These wastelands provide hideouts for criminals, the perfect breeding ground for the kind of violence that erupted over the weekend when five teenagers were shot and killed. If the city's open wounds are left to fester, it will begin to rot from the inside.

The city's police department is close to its prehurricane size, protecting a population that is less than half of what it was before the storm. Yet Mayor Ray Nagin has now felt compelled to request — and the governor has granted — a National Guard force to help keep the peace. This does not bolster our confidence that the city will be able to govern itself.

New Orleans has its own way of doing things and says it doesn't want to be told by outsiders in what size and shape it should be reborn. That is fair enough, but only if local officials are living up to their responsibilities. Right now, the people of the city are being held hostage to whims and foot-dragging, their lives on hold as they wait for their leaders to make decisions — decisions that should have been made months ago.

If there is one individual who needs to step up more than any other, it is Mayor Nagin. His city needs a leader more than a politician in this difficult time. Now that Mr. Nagin has been re-elected, it is time to start spending the political capital his victory earned him. His legacy will not rest on how many people like him, but on the effectiveness of the reconstruction and the safety and well-being of residents in the years to come.

New Orleans needs its mayor to speak difficult truths — like telling the residents of a vulnerable block that they will have to rebuild on safer ground. Right now, people don't know if or where to build their new walls. They deserve answers. They have waited long enough.
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#270 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:42 pm

Public input sought on infrastructure plan

SUN HERALD
Gulfport News


JACKSON - Gov. Haley Barbour is asking the public to participate in a plan to improve infrastructure in South Mississippi.

The governor said Tuesday a draft action plan will be published so the public can read it and make comments.

The Gulf Coast Regional Infrastructure Program Action Plan is required by the Housing and Urban Development Department to show how the state will administer $500 million in federal money to build new water and sewer systems in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.

"Water and sewer systems in the Gulf Coast region were decimated by Hurricane Katrina, causing tens of thousands of our citizens to be without these basic services. These systems must be repaired, improved and storm-proofed to ensure future hurricanes do not have the same devastating impacts," Barbour said in a press release.

"We must also provide infrastructure for new development which will occur as people move further inland. The federal government has been generous in granting substantial funds to allow for this, and we are working with local governments to provide systems to meet their needs."

The program addresses the importance of having reliable water, sewer and stormwater systems and the long-term impact it will have on South Mississippi's recovery.

It has details for developing a master plan for water, sewer and stormwater systems throughout South Mississippi and explains to HUD how funding will be administered.

The Mississippi Development Authority is posting the plan on its Web site. All comments must be submitted online by June 29 to be considered.

The action plan sprang from the Legislature's passage of the Gulf Region Water Utility Authority Act during the 2006 session. The act was a key recommendation of the governor's Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal.
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#271 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:44 pm

Tenants are crying foul

Attorney general reviews 27 cases

By PRISCILLA FRULLA
Sun Herald - Gulfport


With a shortage of affordable housing on the Mississippi Coast, some renters believe they are being taken advantage of by landlords.

Amanda Giunti of Gulfport said she and her family have been living in a home with broken windows and other conditions she believes to be unsafe. Giunti said she has had two thefts, one in which baby items were stolen right through a broken window in her 15-month-old daughter's room.

"If someone can steal diapers and shoes right out of her room, someone can steal the baby," she said.

She said the rental home has no air conditioning, has a pest problem and needs other repairs.

Her landlord, Kathy Slaughter, said it is very difficult to get workers to come do small jobs. She said she was not given notice that the air conditioner was broken until the Giuntis refused to pay last month's rent.

"It is hard to do stuff when nobody tells you what is wrong," Slaughter said.

The Giuntis are being evicted and worry they will not be able to find another affordable place to live that is large enough for the couple, their daughter and Amanda Giunti's parents. They are seeking assistance through the Attorney General's Office.

Attorney General Jim Hood said his office has 27 landlord-tenant disputes that are being reviewed.

"Several groups are concerned that renters are not getting a fair shake," Hood said.

A coalition to help settle these complaints easier and faster is in the planning stages.

Help is also available for tenants who think their rights are being violated through the Gulf Coast Fair Housing Center. Enforcement specialist Laurie Spring is available to put tenants in touch with the resources they need to ensure fair treatment. Spring can be reached at 396-4008 or (877) 399-4008.
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#272 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Wed Jun 21, 2006 10:47 pm

Reserve to get 1,000 new homes

N.O. company buys 372 acres to build on

Wednesday, June 21, 2006
By Matt Scallan


A New Orleans company has bought 372 acres near East St. John High School in Reserve and plans to build a 1,000-home subdivision.

The company, New Millennium Village, bought the land just east of East St. John High School, at the end of Jackson Avenue, from Daniel Becnel Jr. and others last week. Becnel and the company declined to disclose the purchase price.

Don Jones, an officer with New Millennium, said the group has built homes in New Orleans and in Kenner, and plans to build as many as 1,000 homes in the next four years at a cost of $400 million. The project also will include a retail component on Airline Highway, Jones said.

"We'll have everything from affordable homes for working people to million-dollar estates," Jones said.

Jones said the group is preparing its site plan for review and approval by St. John the Baptist Parish government.

Before home construction can begin, the St. John Parish Council must vote to subdivide the property, to accept the streets into the parish road system and to certify that the subdivision will not overtax the parish's utility and drainage systems.

Jones said the company will ask the parish to create a public infrastructure district that will assess homeowners for those costs.

Jones said he believes there is demand for housing in LaPlace, which has open land and was relatively undamaged by Hurricane Katrina.

"It's in a good location between New Orleans and Baton Rouge, and the substrate of the property is such that you don't need to drive pilings," he said.

Pat Sellars, a part-owner of the property, said he and Becnel insisted on having some say on what was built on the property before signing the agreement to sell.

"We put a lot of work into this on the front end because we wanted this to be a plus for the community," he said.

The project will bring in more retail space and millions in tax dollars, he said.

Sellars and the developers discussed the project with parish officials recently, but the group has not yet filed an application for development with the parish, Sellars and Jones said.

New Millennium was incorporated in 2004 and has been a small-scale builder of individual homes. But Jones said the company has added experienced subdivision developers to its staff and has investors from the Atlanta area, where company President Rebecca Duwell resides.
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#273 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:40 pm

National Guard hits the ground running

Two more shootings add to urgency of dousing blaze of N.O. crime

Thursday, June 22, 2006 --Times Picayune: NOLA.com
By Bruce Nolan and


More than 100 armed National Guard military police began patrolling several New Orleans neighborhoods Wednesday, as two shooting victims were added to the tally of street violence and city officials appeared to be readying an 11 p.m. juvenile curfew in response to the bloodshed.

Meantime, tourism officials preparing for the first major convention since Hurricane Katrina this weekend anxiously sought to manage the news, offering assurances of safety to visitors potentially unnerved by the sight of soldiers on patrol in the city.

The soldiers, who arrived Tuesday, deployed in military police cars and dull green Humvees in eastern New Orleans, the 9th Ward and Gentilly. Some 100 more were expected to arrive late Wednesday afternoon, and an additional group of 100 was to arrive today, said Lt. Col. Pete Schneider, a National Guard spokesman.

New Orleans Police Department officials have said the National Guard patrols will free up to 45 police officers who would be reassigned to the city's hot-spot crime areas, a plan that NOPD spokeswoman Bambi Hall said is to go into effect July 1, as scheduled weeks ago when police asked for the state's assistance.

Two high-level NOPD officials, however, privately confirmed that the extra police officers could be transferred into crime-ridden neighborhoods as early as this week. One of the officials said federal law enforcement agencies are urging police to send reinforcements to violent areas as soon as possible.

City Councilwoman Stacy Head said city officials hope to implement the curfew as early as Sunday, but more likely Tuesday. Curfew hours will be 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. Sunday through Thursday and 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. Friday and Saturday. A juvenile curfew was credited with curbing a runaway murder rate in the mid-1990s.

It's not over yet

Many of the soldiers walking the city's streets Wednesday picked up the same duty they performed in the weeks after Hurricane Katrina, when they helped a depleted New Orleans Police Department restore civil order in a city reeling from flood, fire and looting.

This time, however, the context was different.

Nearly 10 months after the storm, much of New Orleans is a fragile network of damaged neighborhoods and beleaguered residents engaged in a daily struggle to rebuild, freshly discouraged by a growing wave of street crime that peaked with the killing of five teenagers in Central City on Saturday.

The violence continued Wednesday, when an unidentified 29-year-old New Orleans man was shot at least six times in the 8400 block of Apple Street, in the Hollygrove neighborhood, authorities said. He was rushed to a hospital, where his condition was undetermined late Wednesday.

At about the same time, residents complaining of a foul smell summoned police to a two-story townhouse in the 5300 block of Tullis Drive in Algiers, where they found the body of a man with a gunshot wound. He remained unidentified late Wednesday.

A neighborhood woman who declined to give her name at the request of police said she heard what she thought were gunshots in the area Saturday about 9:30 p.m. The woman said neighbors started noticing a bad smell Tuesday.

"They thought it was something in their house that went bad," she said.

Asking for a little help

In Hollygrove, a woman who said she lives near the scene of Wednesday's shooting said abandoned houses in her neighborhood are being used by some returning hurricane evacuees as living quarters and places to store drugs and guns.

Illustrating the fragility of the recovery in some quarters now threatened by rising crime, she said: "Here I am trying to get my house together. Fix it up and sell it, I guess."

The woman said all her children have decided to make new post-Katrina lives in Texas, "for peace of mind for them, with their family."

Authorities said the National Guard peacekeepers are to be deployed across sparsely populated neighborhoods where property crimes are the greater risk, while the Police Department redeploys its forces to tamp down street violence in more dangerous parts of the city.

Hall, the NOPD spokeswoman, emphasized on Wednesday that Superintendent Warren Riley weeks ago asked for the National Guard presence, as well as reinforcements of 60 State Police troopers who also arrived Tuesday, to supplement the Police Department from July 1 through mid-September.

Hall said Riley asked for help on the expectation that New Orleans would receive an influx of families during the summer, partly in anticipation of a new school year and partly because FEMA rental assistance is running out for Katrina evacuees living in other cities.

The NOPD released a letter containing the request to State Police Superintendent Henry L. Whitehorn, dated June 15 -- two days before the grisly shootings of the five teenagers in Central City galvanized city and state leadership into an anti-crime counteroffensive.

Hall said National Guard soldiers were familiarizing themselves with the city, setting up logistics and coordinating with the Police Department in preparation for taking up their roles July 1.

"That's news to us," Schneider said. He said troops with loaded sidearms were on patrol Wednesday, sometimes with New Orleans police cars and sometimes not, but on the job doing police work.

Among the MPs were more than 75 members of the Guard's specially trained Special Reaction Team, in distinctive flat-topped black caps.

"SRT -- that's a nice way of saying SWAT team," said 24-year-old soldier Tara Ivankovich, standing next to a Humvee parked just off North Claiborne Avenue in the Lower 9th Ward. More than half the SRT members are police officers back in their hometowns, said Sgt. 1st Class Chad Landreneau, a police officer in Lafayette.

Earlier in the day Ivankovich said she and others had helped police officers cut off a fleeing suspect in a drug arrest, and calmed a combative patient for a team of paramedics.

Elsewhere, soldiers were patrolling, watching for trouble and meeting local residents, Landreneau said.

"They're making contact with as many people as possible. They want to know who lives here, who works here. The more residents we know, the better we can do the mission," he said.

Coordinating arrests

All the troops are fully trained in police work and are authorized to use their firearms as police would. "They can defend themselves and they can defend others," Landreneau said.

he said the Guard troops and police have worked out procedures for handling arrests in a way that will not jeopardize prosecutions months from now.

Where necessary, soldiers will make arrests in critical situations, accepting the complication that they may have to return months from now to testify in court hearings. Where possible, though, Guard units will alert police to developing situations so local officers can make arrests, making the logistics of prosecution easier.

Several soldiers, including Pfc. John Lizana, who was pulled from his Baton Rouge job as a fabricator on two hours of notice, said the city is familiar from an earlier tour of duty.

Some said they were warmly welcomed by residents. "One lady said she was glad to see us -- said they'd been waiting for us," said Lizana's partner, Staff Sgt. Elgin Miller of Alexandria.

As televised images of Miller and his colleagues were beamed across the globe, anxiety levels rose among the stewards of the city's still-struggling hospitality industry, which is preparing for a meeting of the American Library Association, New Orleans' first major post-Katrina convention.

"This is just such poor timing when we're about to welcome 26,000 delegates to the city next week," said Sandy Shilstone, chief executive of the New Orleans Tourism Marketing Corp.

"Over the past several months, the tourism industry has been doing its best to offset the negative perceptions that the city has suffered as a result of media coverage of Hurricane Katrina," Shilstone said. "Our market research has shown that one of the main concerns was about whether the city was safe, but over the past few months we saw those concerns lessening.

"With all the coverage this is getting, we'll once again have to offset all those stories."

Assurance of safety

To that end, the Metropolitan Convention & Visitors Bureau distributed hundreds of fliers in hotels reassuring tourists that only parts of the city should be considered off-limits.

The bureau told visitors that the National Guard has been assigned to "outlying damaged and sparsely populated neighborhoods," allowing the NOPD to patrol tourism areas and enhance "the already good safety record these districts enjoy."

The flier describes the recent spate of killings as "enhanced drug-related violence concentrated in a couple of isolated neighborhoods miles away" from the CBD, the French Quarter and the area around the Convention Center.

The one-page message urges visitors to walk the sidewalks of downtown -- but recommends against "venturing into areas of the city that are sparsely populated, particularly after dark."

Nagin announced his intention to reinstitute the juvenile curfew Monday during a news conference where he and City Council members said they were fed up with the rash of killings.

Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman said he is prepared to begin accepting juvenile detainees by the weekend in a center his staff is setting up inside a Mid-City administrative building.

'Ready for the curfew'

City Council President Oliver Thomas said the mayor had not discussed the curfew with him since Monday.

"The community is ready for the curfew to be enacted yesterday," Thomas said. "We're ready yesterday. We're waiting on the mayor and the (police) chief."

Thomas speculated that Nagin may have the authority to put the curfew into effect without council approval under the emergency declaration still in effect after the hurricane.

Gusman said the juvenile detention center will be housed in the same building at 2614 Tulane Ave. that was used when in 1994 he helped implement a curfew for teens while serving as chief administrative officer in former Mayor Marc Morial's administration. The City Council approved the curfew then.

The third-floor facility Gusman is setting up is equipped to accommodate more than 100 detainees, he said, adding that social workers and members of the clergy have committed to providing counseling services

Gusman said he also hopes to bring in representatives of the Orleans Parish School Board to meet with parents or guardians who arrive to pick up their children.

"The aim of a program like this is to offer something that is not a jail experience," Gusman said. "We want to make it more of an encounter with social services than with the penal system."

. . . . . . .

Anyone with information about the recent shootings is asked to call Crimestoppers at (504) 822-1111 or toll free at (877) 903-7867. Callers do not have to give their names or testify and can earn up to $2,500 for tips that lead to an indictment.

Susan Finch and Dennis Persica contributed to this report.

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#274 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:43 pm

N.O. on its toes for library event

Some see convention as a test for tourism

Thursday, June 22, 2006
By Jaquetta White


The first major test of the city's convention industry since Hurricane Katrina will be this week, as more than 18,000 members of the American Library Association stream into town for their annual conference at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.

The city's handling of this event, one of the nation's largest conventions, will go a long way toward preserving -- or diminishing -- its reputation as a premier convention destination. The city is currently on its way to surpassing 2004 convention business.

To keep the city in the convention spotlight, the Convention & Visitors Bureau is not only trying to erase images of the Convention Center as a desolate refuge for hurricane evacuees, but it also is dealing with the deployment of the National Guard to help fight crime on the heels of five murders in Central City early Saturday morning.

But city officials and meeting planners are confident the city will prove that it is open for convention business.

"This is obviously huge. I'll be surprised if the city isn't prepared to manage this beautifully," said Deborah Sexton, president and CEO of the Professional Convention Management Association. "New Orleans has always delivered a very exciting experience from the food and beverages to cultural events. I think people are looking to see if that destination still exists."

On the right foot

The library convention's significance is not lost on the local tourism industry, which spent Monday cleaning heavily trafficked areas of the French Quarter, Central Business District and Garden District, nor on Convention Center officials, who plan to greet the crowds with a refurbished building.

"This week marks the reopening of the New Orleans convention business," said Stephen Perry, president of the Metropolitan Convention & Visitors Bureau Inc. Perry said the hospitality industry has spent the past few months focused on leisure travel, small corporate meetings and planned events such as Mardi Gras and the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. "Now we are showing the world that we are completely open as far as citywide conventions," he said.

Before Hurricane Katrina wiped every convention off the books, the hospitality industry was preparing for a banner year in 2005. Convention bookings for the year were up 14 percent from 2004. The uptick signaled a rebound after several years of depressed convention business following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. The jump was expected to be even higher in 2006, Perry said. Instead, 2005 ended with more than 40 canceled events, the Convention Center was closed for business from September through March and there floated considerable uncertainty about the future.

But business is already picking up again. More conventioneers are expected in town this fall than for the same time in 2004: 84,000 this year compared with 66,500 then. The anticipated business, though, is about half of what had been planned for this year before Katrina.

A sharp eye on us

Convention industry officials predict this will be an opportunity to undo negative perceptions of the city and beef up future convention business.

Jimmie D. Fore, president and general manager of the Convention Center, said he expects 30 to 40 convention show managers to visit the city this week "to look at how we handle" the American Library Association conference. Their opinions of the city's ability to accommodate the library association could affect how many conventions the city can attract in the future

"We're under a little bit of a microscope right now," Perry said. "Many people in the trade are evaluating our ability to handle large meetings."

Among them will be the Professional Convention Management Association, whose members are meeting industry professionals. Sexton said the group will evaluate things such as whether there is appropriate staffing and service in New Orleans.

Likewise, Mark S. Andrew, chairman of the board of directors for Meeting Professionals International, said that as New Orleans continues to recover, "it is important that these types of events occur with nothing but success."

Sexton said, however, the city will be allowed a few flubs.

"If it isn't exactly to the degree and level that it was in the past, I think there will be a lot of understanding," she said. "People are generous enough to understand that as you staff up after nine months you're potentially not able to deliver flawlessly, but you are going to deliver well. But there's no question people are watching."

A whole new look

The Convention Center has spent $60 million on restoration and renovation work both inside and outside the building.

"A great deal of effort has been devoted to trying to change those things that so many millions of people saw about the building," Fore said. "It was extremely important to change the look of the building."

Changes include new carpet, paint and fixtures. The food courts reopened this week, as did a business services company located in the center.

About 30 percent of the Convention Center remains closed. Eight of the 12 halls and 99 of the 140 meeting rooms have reopened. The remaining rooms and halls are being renovated and will open in November.

Also hoping to make a stellar impression, several hospitality industry groups on Monday cleaned areas of the French Quarter, Central Business District and the Garden District as part of a campaign called "Company's Coming."

"We want to do everything we can," said Darrius Gray, 2006 president of the Greater New Orleans Hotel and Lodging Association and general manager of the Holiday Inn French Quarter Hotel. "I think this is certainly a barometer of our progress and we want to make sure that everything goes off without a hitch. This could be the impetus to get things going from a convention standpoint."

There are about 27,900 available hotel rooms in the metro area, down from 38,000 before Katrina. Several large hotels, including the Hyatt Regency, the Fairmont and the Ritz-Carlton, have not reopened. Many of the hotels that have reopened are doing so with newly renovated rooms, having taken the downturn in business post-Katrina as an opportunity to make repairs, Gray said.

"I think for the most part the hotels have been spruced up," Gray said. And restaurants that normally are closed on Sunday will be open. "We just want every one of our customers to know how much we appreciate their business and that you can come to New Orleans."

Crime is a big issue

It will be harder to spruce up the city's recent image as a haven for crime.

Leslie Burger, president-elect of the American Library Association, said some members "expressed concern" about continuing with the convention.

"The issue related to crime and safety has been an issue all along," Burger said. "That certainly brought the issue to the forefront."

The group posted information from the city on its Web site to assure members that New Orleans was safe, she said. Burger added that while there have been cancellations since then, she doesn't know whether any were related to fears about safety.

Perry is careful to make the point that the additional protection from the National Guard and State Police is a good thing. It does not mean the city is overrun with crime, but that officials are working to prevent that from becoming the case.

The visitors bureau is addressing the recent events with fliers passed out at local hotels. The page-long letter tells visitors that historic areas of town are safe and that the National Guard has been called in to patrol outlying damaged and sparsely populated areas. It also recommends that visitors walk in the French Quarter, Warehouse District, CBD and Garden District.

"Fighting crime is good business," Perry said. "But we have to be careful to manage the message that we are attacking drug-related violence and enhancing the safety aspect of the tourist visit to the city."
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#275 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:48 pm

Historic church burns down in Lower Garden district

NOLA.com update 6/22/06

A historic church burned completely in a five-alarm fire that began early this morning in the Lower Garden district, but no injuries have been reported, the New Orleans Fire Department said.

The fire reduced Coliseum Place Baptist Church, at 1376 Camp St., to ruins. The church, a remarkable brick building that dates back to 1854, sat in historic Coliseum Square but has had no utilities since 2004, firefighters said.

Officials said they received the first call about the fire at 1:53 a.m. and were at the scene in four minutes. They upgraded their response to a five-alarm within 15 minutes to prevent the blaze from extending to nearby homes and a school across the street.

A total of 82 firefighters and 27 units had the fire under control by 3:25 a.m. Some firefighters were still working the scene at 11 a.m., using a water cannon to pour water in the smoldering ruins.

The entire interior of the church was destroyed, and some portions of its exterior walls have started to crumble. Firefighters had not been able to work inside the structure because of the danger of walls collapsing.

They have not determined whether anyone was inside when the fire started.

"It's a total loss," said Ken Chisholm, a supervisor with the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which routinely responds to large fires to investigate for possible arson.

Chisholm said he did not believe firefighters had had troubles with water pressure, a factor that as of late has hindered response to many fires.

The point of origin and cause of the fire are under investigation.
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#276 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:57 pm

Rebuilding? Abita Springs wants to know

By Bruce Hamilton
St. Tammany bureau June 22, 2006


The town of Abita Springs wants to know what repair plans residents of storm-damaged homes have, and the mayor plans to send out letters requesting a written response with a timeline.

The mayor also indicated trailers may be wearing out their welcome. He said residents soon may be asked to remove them by the end of the year or explain why they need to keep them on their properties.

The moves signal the town’s intention to return, as much as possible, to its pre-hurricane state — and in some cases fix pre-existing problems. If the letters don’t prod property owners toward repair, they may find themselves facing fines or other strict enforcement of regulations.

“If I’m not getting good responses or no responses, then we might have to play hardball,” Mayor Louis Fitzmorris said. He brought up the issue at Tuesday night’s meeting of the Board of Aldermen, and part of the discussion focused on trailers.

Mobile homes were not permitted in town before Hurricane Katrina, with a few grandfathered exceptions, but town officials granted a temporary waiver to house people whose homes were damaged, including out-of-town relatives.

But the town’s accommodating stance has been exploited, the mayor and aldermen said. At the meeting, Fitzmorris mentioned one example of a property owner who is seeking a 70-foot trailer on a lot whose allegedly moldy rental house wasn’t inhabited before Katrina.

“We have got to put out the word that this isn’t forever,” Fitzmorris said. “It can’t be forever.” He suggested setting a deadline of Jan. 1, 2007, for trailers to be removed, and giving residents a chance to plead their cases for an extension.

The mayor and aldermen took no official action on trailers. But they agreed to send out letters to the owners of storm-damaged properties, including vacant lots whose dangling or leaning trees pose a hazard to their neighbors.

The affected property owners will be expected to indicate their plans and timeline for repair and obtain permits for the necessary repairs. “We can’t just allow people to let their properties deteriorate,” Alderwoman Regina Benton said.

The mayor and aldermen passed an ordinance earlier this year that gives Fitzmorris the authority to condemn homes whose damage is deemed dangerous. The measure allowed the town to participate in a federally sponsored demolition and debris-removal program.

But Fitzmorris has said very few homes need demolition, and the town has so far relied on residents to request that assistance.
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#277 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:58 pm

Madisonville mayor beaten during robbery

By Richard Boyd
St. Tammany bureau


Longtime Madisonville Mayor Peter Gitz was beaten and robbed Wednesday night as he was closing his restaurant, authorities said Thursday.

Gitz, 71, mayor of the river town for 30 years, remained hospitalized Thursday afternoon at St. Tammany Parish Hospital in Covington. He was hit in the head from behind with a blunt instrument, receiving a wound that required 14 metal pins to close. Gitz also suffered an eye socket injury and a mouth injury, authorities said.

Sheriff Jack Strain, who said he has turned over full resources of his agency to assist the tiny Madisonville Police Department, said during a news conference Thursday that authorities do not have a suspect but believe they are seeking a single assailant.

Gitz was attacked from behind in a darkened area between the rear door of Badeaux’s Drive In, the restaurant he has owned for 30 years, and a small shed about 30 feet away, Police Chief Charlie Biggers said. As Gitz prepared to open the shed, which he uses as an office and where he counts receipts each night, he was hit from behind.

The suspect got away with the mayor’s wallet and several credit cards, Strain said. He did not say if anything else was stolen.

As he lay bleeding on the ground, Gitz used a cellphone to call 911.

Sheriff’s Office dogs picked up a scent but lost it about a block away on Pine Street, where investigators believe the suspect got away in a vehicle, Strain said.
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#278 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 3:59 pm

Free house demolitions to continue in St. Bernard Parish

NOLA.com update 6/22/06

Free house demolitions are expected to resume in the coming days in St. Bernard Parish after an agreement was reached Thursday on how the debris from the demolished homes will be handled.

The free demolitions were halted amidst concerns by state and federal regulatory agencies over how the volunteer groups were sorting and handling hazardous household wastes - such as fluorescent light bulbs and freon from air conditioning systems - during the demolitions.

Officials from the state Department of Environmental Quality and the federal Environmental Protection Agency attended the St. Bernard Parish Council’s meeting in Chalmette Thursday to discuss the issue with Robert McKee, leader of the Christian Contractors Association. The Christain Contractors Association, a national nonprofit group, has demolished hundreds of homes in St. Bernard Parish at no cost to the parish or homeowners.

A government contractor, financed by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, is also demolishing homes in the parish.

The volunteer group has agreed to make an inventory, which would be available to the state and federal government, of the various wastes pulled from the homes it demolishes.

FEMA officials said they need such an accounting in order to reimburse government contractors for removing the debris once the volunteer groups push it to the curb.
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#279 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 4:00 pm

Body found near Metairie railroad tracks

Thursday, June 22

The body of a man was discovered on the elevated railroad trestle over Airline Drive at Causeway Boulevard Thursday morning, officials said.

Jefferson Parish sheriff's office invesitgators and coroner's officials remained at the scene of the incident after 9 a.m. The initial call to the sheriff's office was received sometime before 8 a.m.

There was no immediate information available on the cause of the death
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#280 Postby Audrey2Katrina » Thu Jun 22, 2006 4:04 pm

GCN Update

Image

GCN Recovery News Report

This report will constantly be updated as information becomes available
Updated 6/22/06 6:52 AM




Demolition of the First Baptist Church in Gulfport has begun. The church was destroyed by Katrina's storm surge and practically became the focus of the national media's attention regarding the damages in that city. The church and the other buildings of the complex will be rebuilt at another location, but not on the beach. The property on the beach highway is up for sale.

Governor Haley Barbour is encouraging the public to participate in development of a plan to improve water and sewer services Damaged by Katrina in Mississippi's six southernmost counties. The plan details how the state will administer $500 million in federal grants for building new water and sewer infrastructure in the Gulf Region after Hurricane Katrina.

"Water and sewer systems in the Gulf Coast region were decimated by Hurricane Katrina, causing tens of thousands of our citizens to be without these basic services. These systems must be repaired, improved and storm-proofed to ensure future hurricanes do not have the same devastating impacts," Governor Barbour said. "We must also provide infrastructure for new development which will occur as people move further inland. The federal government has been generous in granting substantial funds to allow for this, and we are working with local governments to provide systems to meet their needs."
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