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cranston36
01-14-2006, 12:31 PM
Notes on Visiting the New Orleans Disaster Area 2005

1. Going to the Zoo

___________ I traveled down to the Audobon Zoo on a Sunday._ It was November 27th, 2005.
___________ The zoo was to be opened for the weekend for free.
___________ It had been opened earlier in the month but not many people had attended.
___________ There was a big write-up in all the newspapers and it was covered on television and on the radio.
___________ Tens of thousands of people attended the zoo that day.
___________ It was hard to tell where everyone came from but it seemed to me that most of them were from surrounding towns rather than from the city._ There aren’t many people left in New Orleans at this time, you see.
___________ The first thing I noticed as I approached the zoo entrance were the military vehicles._ There was a green camouflaged armored car and a desert-tan armored car._ The soldiers were lounging in the seats._ One was standing facing the approaching crowd._ He was sporting wrap around sun glasses and had an M-16 slung carelessly across his belly.
___________ I didn’t see them myself but my wife told me later that closer in to the gate the zoo had hired professional huggers._ It seems that during the first day the zoo was open people attended the zoo and wept openly before entering the zoo._
___________ In order to comfort these people the huggers would approach them and provide them the physical comfort of a human hug.
___________ Hugs were the last thing on my mind as I skirted the heavily armed vehicles and avoided looking at the soldiers leafing through magazines and casually eyeing the crowd that pressed into the gates.
___________ I noticed that the entire crowd was moving through just one gate even though zoo personnel stood before and motioned to two other gates._ I walked over to one of the empty gates and was given a map.
___________ I turned to watch as the people flooded into the zoo through the one gate._ Moving carefully and in single file they ignored the repeated pleas and gestures of the zoo personnel directing them to one of the alternative gates which were within just of few feet of the bottleneck they had unconsciously decided to mob.
___________ I looked down at the map and the first thing I noticed were the areas marked off as closed or under repair._ I decided to just wing it instead of making a planned foray and dived into the stream of humanity fighting its way through the magic gate.
___________ I found myself in front of the flamingos._ They were particularly animated and made guttural sounds as they fished through the water and pushed against each other trying to find enough space to stand.
___________ The crowd swelled around the flamingo enclosure as they themselves attempted to figure out what to do next._ They searched bags, wiped noses, tied shoes, looked for restrooms, read maps, children asked for drinks, pushed against other children and did all the things children do in crowded places.
___________ It occurred to me that the space between the flamingos and the people shrank and that they were milling about together in a confused swirl of birds and humans._ I wouldn’t have been surprised at that point if a flamingo had walked up to me and asked me directions to the elephant fountain.
___________ For myself, I walked off and headed towards the elephant fountain.
___________ It had been cleaned up._ It didn’t look damaged at all._ It was clean and beautiful as always._ The water was crystalline and the coins people had thrown in sparkled at the bottom._ It was a pleasant scene.
___________ I looked around to see which animals I would visit first.
___________ I noticed one building off to my left had been destroyed._ The doors and windows were closed up with plywood and wrapped with blue plastic.
___________ To my right another building likewise had been shut down but it was not in such a terrible state of disrepair as the first one.
___________ Directly in front of me I saw the carousel turning in the sunlight.
___________ I looked to my right and decided on visiting the elephants and lions and tigers.
___________ The zoo keepers, however,_ had one elephant out doing tricks for the crowd._ The people applauded after each trick and moved closer to see more._ As for me, I couldn’t see anything._ There were too many people._ All I could see was the top of the elephant’s head and its wide shoulders.
___________ I moved on to the carousel and watched as families bought tickets and climbed on their favorite animals._ They rode round and round and were quickly escorted off._ The ritual having been fulfilled._ The rides seemed shorter than I remembered but there were a lot of people.
___________ The sun was shining and the carousel was in gorgeous working order._ The music piped out as it spun round and round and the children were laughing and singing to each other._ It was a gay and wonderful sight.
___________ I walked off in search of more animals.
___________ I approached an area that had once housed several hundred water fowl, turtles and played host to a number of wild local birds and squirrels._ It was a small lake that had been adorned with water plants, exotic flowers and strong trees._ There was a wooden walkway used to cross the water and a large gazebo at the center to rest at and throw food to the ducks.
___________ Most of the lake was stripped bare._ Many trees lay on their sides and some broken stumps were still in sight._ Most of the birds were gone._ There was a skeleton crew of mallards and wood ducks cruising the eager crowd and unable to eat all the food being thrust upon them.
___________ One turtle made his presence known and spent most of the time suspended just below the murky surface._ The water was covered with a light sheen of what appeared to some sort of oil and gave off the putrid smell of decay and swamp gas that one associates with stagnant water.
___________ A young child looked up at me with dismay as his mother rolled him past in a stroller._ The wood on the walkway had been warped – not much – but enough to make a trip on a stroller over it into a kind of small torture._ He let out a mournful wail as he passed that sounded something like this, ‘St-o-o-op-p-p-p-p!’
___________ His mother seemed intent on avoiding further contact with the malingering odor and moved on without slowing.
___________ I moved on and noticed several cages empty of their inhabitants._ I stopped along with about 50 other patrons at the jaguar cage and watched the lone male cat pace back and forth.
___________ The zookeepers had announced through the media that the animals missed visitors but the jaguar seemed intent on getting out of that cage as soon as possible._ He had been at his pacing for some time and had worn down a path at the bottom of the cage._ Out of a reasonably large cage he confined himself to about 20 percent of it.
___________ I didn’t see the female or cubs that had been born there the year before.
___________ Moving on I wandered into the area dedicated to Louisiana wildlife._
___________ The raccoons were sleeping in the trees.
___________ There is a creature called the Nutria that was introduced to Louisiana some time ago._ It was brought in from south America to be raised on farms as a fur bearing animal._ During a past hurricane some of them had been blown out into the swamps and survived._ Since that time their numbers have increased exponentially and they are now considered a pest though they provide a welcome addition to the diet of the local alligators.
___________ They look like giant rats and have bright orange teeth.
___________ Some people think they are cute and some people think they really look like rats.
___________ The day I visited the zoo they were all clustered together and some of them were showing their bright orange teeth._ Sometimes I think they look cute but that day they looked like a pile of giant rats.
___________ The alligators lay out in the sun._ They were covered with a fine layer of sand and dust mixed with duck weed._ In the open on their little zoo beach they were practically invisible to the untrained eye even though some of them are over 10 feet long.
___________ The restaurant area was open but the souvenir stand was not.
___________ There was also a building that housed baby animals in the past but that, likewise, was closed.
___________ A gray and a red fox lay sleeping in the sun.
___________ I then walked to the aviary and found many of the birds missing or listless._ In the larger aviary which is housed in a building most of the birds sat watching the passerby without moving much.
___________ A 5 foot long iguana lay in his cage._ His green head clashed with his orange body and he turned to look at me with interest as I was the only one to stop and actually look at him._ I suppose he looked back in politeness.
___________ At the anteaters enclosure I noticed he too had begun a pacing habit like that of the jaguar._ He had already run a rut in his glass cage and looked before him with a glassy gaze._ Each time he passed the door leading into his cage he stopped and looked at it with longing before continuing on his long, small journey.
___________ I crossed the green whose mixture of mud and grass squished beneath my feet and noted long lines at the hot dog and Roman Candy (taffy) stands.
___________ The emu cage had been slightly damaged in that the wooden slats that had been used to hide the chain link fence had been blown away._ The emu watched closely as I walked by and I got some very good photos of the birds.
___________ As I was walking out I stopped to look at the golden tamarinds and the other monkeys that had been housed with them._ I turned to leave and saw two soldiers standing there._ Their M-16’s were hanging behind them at about waist level._ They seemed unconcerned in the hot air as children and young mothers passed by them._ The heavily armed soldiers quietly ate their ice cream and waited for the monkeys to try something funny.
___________ I decided to leave and made my way out of the zoo into the parking lot.
___________ As I was approaching my car I noticed that repairs had already begun on the pool and private clubhouse that is attached to the zoo._ You see, the Audobon Zoo is also a club.
___________ Across the street from the zoo there is a large golf course._ That had already been meticulously repaired and was already pressed into use._ I saw players out on the course hitting the ball around and driving around in their golf carts.
___________ I reflected on this as I got into my van._ The American Zoo Association donated millions of dollars from member zoos to restore the Audobon Zoo._ I wonder how much went to work in the zoo and how much was used to restore the golf course.
___________ Creative bookkeeping will probably take care of any problems donors would have in the future.
___________ During my drive down St. Charles Avenue I noticed that many houses along a block might not have much damage, if any, at all._ Then, scattered amongst them, there would be one house that was thoroughly destroyed._ The roof caved in, the windows smashed, the porch collapsed._ Right next door, however, not a scratch.
___________ All along the streets to and from the zoo trash and debris were piled high on the sidewalks and in the yards and on the streets._ Trash collection was to be free for some time._ Homeowners needed only to dump the material on the street for pickup.
___________ They did so and a stream of debris was already making its way to the drains.
___________ I noticed that houses that appeared to have been built in the late 1970’s, 80’s and 90’s had been particularly battered._ The older homes – some of them in excess of 100 years old – had slight if any damage._ On most of them not even the stained glass windows had been damaged though I did see one with missing panes.
___________ They sure don’t make houses like they used to.
___________ My trip to the zoo was interesting._ I found large parts of the city to be empty._ I found the golf course to have been a priority at the zoo._ I found most of the zoo in disrepair.__
___________

2. Downtown
___________
I headed downtown.
___________ I went to visit Jackson Square and Saint Louis Cathedral.
___________ According to people that have known New Orleans their whole life downtown was nearly deserted._ They referred to it as a ghost town._ To me it seemed like a Sunday morning in any big town but it was Monday morning and New Orleans is a big city.
___________ The people I came across for the most part did not have smiles on their faces._ They walked with a blank expression or with an angry grimace.
___________ The downtown area had been largely spared by the storm._ Saint Louis Cathedral stood above the square and its spires continued to look down on the statue of Andrew Jackson displayed at the center of Jackson Square.
___________ The park itself was locked._ There was no one in it._ One homeless man spent his time wandering around the locked fence eating a hot dog and avoiding eye contact.
___________ Four or five tourists strolled up and down in front of the shops clustered alongside the square._ The shops themselves were in beautiful order._ Their wares were displayed in tasteful window settings._ Activity, though, was at a minimum.
___________ Daily mass, normally attended by a large number of people, was sparsely populated.
___________ The streets leading to and from Jackson Square were likewise empty._ Few people walked or moved in the windows of the buildings around the area._ Some construction workers tripped over themselves as they attempted to carry materials into the historical museum but other than that there was very little activity.
___________ Near the bars and voodoo shops just around the corner, where posters of skulls and drug use are displayed, police gathered for a conference._ Several states had sent state police to help patrol the streets in New Orleans following the storm._ Many of them have reported observing abuse by the New Orleans Police Department on citizens._ They were having a meeting that day to discuss what they had seen and also, perhaps, to figure out what it was they were doing in town as there was seemingly nothing and no one to police.
___________ In what may be a relief to some many of the more unsavory denizens of New Orleans have at least temporarily been driven out.
___________ For a while New Orleans, though populated primarily by ghosts now, is once again an American city and open for possibility._ The clinging and wicked underbelly formed of sexual perverts, drug dealers, cheating bartenders and dangerous characters has been cleansed._ For how long it will last is anyone’s guess.
___________ The president of the Port of New Orleans has already essentially declared that the Port doesn’t need the city and is independent of it._ Many of the docks and piers were spared in the storms._ He is claiming that the city never contributed much to the port and he seems to believe that it can survive without the city.
___________ We will have to see how that works out, however._ 2005 has seen near record low water levels on the Mississippi._ Much of the barge traffic has been slowed or stopped due to low water._ The rails have been disrupted as management of the railcars has been bungled and ageing tracks cause further slowdowns.
___________ The city itself remains quiet._ Like an empty vessel._ Will it be refilled with the refuse that was driven from it or will it be reborn again?_ New Orleans has been destroyed and rebuilt several times._ Hopefully this time the new city will regain her place in the world of business and trade.
___________ When you look at the old city and the center of town you can see the grandeur and the power of the place._ When you look at a place like ‘The Voodoo Queen’s Shoppe’ or some of the rotting bars in the red light district you have to wonder if the owners of the buildings are serious about business or are just working themselves into an early grave.
___________ ___________
3. The Garden district

In the Garden District like the area around the zoo one house on a street might be destroyed and the rest might have nothing wrong with them._ Most of the houses in the Garden District, however, had nothing wrong with them at all.
Ann Rice owns at least one home in the area and perhaps more.
Some are owned by rock stars, movies stars or professional athletes._ The rich and the powerful make their home in the Garden District and it shows.
Huge live oaks arc over the street.
Piles of debris from the storm are mixed with piles of debris from remodeling jobs and landscaping work going on in houses being restored to some former level of glory or updated to today’s tastes.
Ann Rice reportedly bought the Saint Elizabeth school and is gutting it in order to turn it into condominiums.
Not everyone in New Orleans is suffering.
As State Police officers from around the nation tour the downtown area and local police and vigilantes stand guard over piles of trash and destruction on the outskirts the New Orleans Police Department is out in force in the Garden District.
4. The 9th Ward

___________ The first thing I noticed about the 9th Ward was that it didn’t look too much different from some areas I had been in around New York._ Specifically in the Bronx, some parts of Brooklyn and patches of Queens.
___________ The only difference appeared to be that the houses were more brightly painted.
___________ Flood damage was clear throughout the 9th Ward but unlike the Garden District and some other parts of town many of the residents have not been allowed back in to do any work.
___________ Whereas other parts of town can take advantage of free trash removal no one is moving anything in the 9th Ward.
___________ Another problem in that particular area is that most of the houses are rented anyway and they have absentee landlords._ Many of the buildings are what is known as ‘shotgun shacks’._ That is they are a string of rooms and the front door is lined up with the back door._ If all doors are open you can see clear through the house.
___________ One such house was being renovated by members of a historical group._ Other houses are being left to sit in the sun waiting for someone to come and clear them out.
___________ The thing about those houses is that many of them are very old._ Some are just as old as the houses in the Garden District._ They have been flooded before and withstood other calamities._ Most of them can be repaired and restored in a fairly short amount of time.
___________ The sheet rock needs to be removed along with the insulation.
___________ The sheet rock will need to be reinstalled along with the insulation.
___________ After testing the electrical and plumbing most of the houses could be fit for living in a couple of weeks and allow for decorating after that.
___________ The problems are money and ownership.
___________ Many of the people that lived there have no cash and cannot buy the materials they need to rebuild._ They also do not own the property and what sense would there be to rebuild a home for an absentee landlord?
___________ In the 9th Ward FEMA has brought in trailers and hooked them up to electricity and water and sewer._ They have also built chain link fences around them and put barbed wire on top.
___________ The Mayor has told the people there are no trailers.
___________ He has also been trying to put trailers in public parks but the City Council has been giving him a hassle because they don’t want to tear down any playgrounds.
___________ There aren’t any children there right now but that hasn’t impacted their argument.

DrewM
01-15-2006, 08:52 PM
You could actually do the 'touristy' visit to New Orleans and hardly be aware of the devastation. The French quarter is untouched and as busy as ever.

But...you go out into the city & it's very strange. Some areas look perfectly normal and others are deserted, months after the storm there are still areas with no electricity. Traffic lights replaced with stop signs.

Driving thru the city blocks at night is very surreal. Total darkness, trashed cars in the street and then the next block - christmas lights & it looks like everything is normal.

Specific areas are very much destroyed. Lakeview was a very nice area, expensive place to live & that whole area is totally destroyed. No electricity & nobody living there - block after block after block of ruined houses - doors hanging off hinges. Desolate at night & in the day dusty with FEMA trucks scraping up debris.

Other areas like the 9th ward & St Bernard parish are to screwed for words - these areas will go back to marshland - there is no possible way these areas will be recovered.

Then 7 miles out of downtown in Metairie (where I live) it is packed with people the roads are jammed. Lots of houses flooded (mine included) but house ownership is very high & people are fixing their houses. We moved back into our house thanksgiving, but there is only 1 other family back in their house on my street. Street after street is filled with FEMA trailers. It's quite surreal really.

Bush has visted New Orleans several times now, but not once has he toured the devastated areas. The feeling down here is the US has moved on and doesn't care about New Orleans anymore. They say 3/4 of the people here are clinically depressed. Not me, but I can imagine the number is true.

Walking into a flooded (flooded with sewage) house that has been closed up in the searing heat for a few weeks is something that I would not wish upon anyone. It is the most disgusting thing you ever want to see. It doesn't look like your house anymore. When we first came back for a few days to tear out the carpets this was like the wild west. Pump action shotgun & handguns were needed for peace of mind. Strange to feel unsafe in your own neighborhood in the US. We probably were totally safe, we had been prepped by CNN to expect the worst.

LionelHutz
01-15-2006, 09:23 PM
Did you rehab the house yourself, did you manage to get first dibs on a contractor, or is it still a complete, but somewhat disinfected, mess?

DrewM
01-15-2006, 09:33 PM
I rehabbed the house myself. 6 weeks of 16 hrs a day. A friend of mine moved to Houston and his house didn't flood - we stayed there & my mum came over from the UK to watch our son in the day.

Getting contractors is difficult because there are so many destroyed houses. Also contractors are charging jacked up prices - many of them are not even qualified. That is why I did the work myself. Our house is totally complete, actually looks better than it did before the storm & we have all new furniture. Even got a 50 inch plasma to hang over the fireplace. For us, although a major hassle, in the end it has worked out ok. For others it continues to be a holy nightmare.

All the drywall had to be stripped out of the house, floors, kitchen, bathrooms torn out - the house became a shell of stud walls. All the studs had to be disinfected & scrubbed.

Our pool sat with sewage in it for over a month. It was disgusting - covered with flies, black water. It was pumped out & cleaned but it's still all stained - needs to be resurfaced.

I have a 600sqft recording studio in my garden & that is a different story - that is a mess. It's been dehumidifying for a few months but still smells moldy - tearing that all out is a non starter I may as well bulldoze the building. There's 30K$ down the drain.

Imagineer
01-15-2006, 11:04 PM
Drew, I want you to know that many of us do care. We wonder how we can help from so far away. Have you got any suggestions for action that would help?

DrewM
01-16-2006, 12:03 AM
The best way anybody can help is to email or write their congressmen / senators and say you expect them to keep a focus on New Orleans. Make no bones about it New Orleans is an American city that is on the verge of being lost.

The news down here talks about Congress having "Katrina Fatigue" and not being very interested anymore.

The key is new levees should be funded - the city will never recover without that because nobody will invest. The current Levees were "designed" to withstand Cat3. Originally Katrina was called a Cat4 at landfall, but has now been downgraded to actually being a Cat3 storm. The levees didn't stand up to design & in reality Congress flooded New Orleans because they never funded the levees correctly, them plus the Corps of Engineers for doing a shoddy construction job.

It's now time for Congress to fund the repair, a large sum, but peanuts in comparision to what we spend in Iraq. About 5 billion a year for 10 years needs to be spent (5 billion is about 2 weeks of the cost of operations in Iraq - an operation supposedly to protect Americans, well Levee's in New Orleans will definately protect Americans). What is happening - FEMA just gave Louisana a bill for it's share of relief & the bill is absurd - the state has a 1 billion shortfall due to lost taxes and FEMA sends the state a bill for 3 billion $

Actually - If Louisiana was allowed to get it's share of oil revenues that other states get then Louisiana could easily fund all the restoration & would not need to go cap in hand to the feds.

sedan
01-16-2006, 01:16 AM
Originally posted by DrewM
The best way anybody can help is to email or write their congressmen / senators and say you expect them to keep a focus on New Orleans. Make no bones about it New Orleans is an American city that is on the verge of being lost.An easy way to get their addresses is to go to: http://dir.yahoo.com/Government/U_S__Government/Legislative_Branch/Congressional_Email_Addresses/.