By Adam Mossiter, Associated Press Writer
Areas of New Orleans Reopen to Residents
More areas of New Orleans that escaped flooding from Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita will be formally reopened starting Thursday, Mayor
Ray Nagin said.
The areas include the French Quarter, the Central Business district,
and Uptown with its historic Garden District. Business owners will be
allowed in on Thursday, and residents on Friday.
"The re-entry started Monday and is going very well -- exceedingly
well," Nagin told legislators at a hearing Wednesday at the state
capitol. "Everything you hoped to happen is happening. Algiers is
alive and well and breathing."
On Monday, Nagin opened the Algiers neighborhood, which has electricity,
telephones and clean water.
Nagin said checkpoints where officers stop people will be pulled back
Thursday so that only areas that were flooded will be off limits.
Homes in those areas were heavily flooded and most are likely beyond
repair.
If all goes well, as of Oct. 5 only the Lower Ninth Ward, which was hit
especially hard by the flooding, will be cordoned off, Nagin said.
Electricity has been restored to some dry parts of the city, but the water
is not yet drinkable. The mayor disagreed with the head of the state's
Health Department about the condition of the city's water, insisting
residents could now wash in it, though they shouldn't drink it.
"The two things that are absolutely necessary to ensure public health
-- clean drinking water and proper sewage systems -- simply are not
available in the east bank area of New Orleans at this time," said
Dr. Fred Cerise, secretary for the state Department of Health and
Hospitals.
"People who re-enter the city may be exposed to diseases such as
E. coli, salmonella or diarrhea illness if they do not allow time for
the necessary inspections to ensure public health and safety," Cerise
said.
Many residents of the city have returned ahead of Nagin's official
timeline, and the mayor appeared eager Wednesday to get more of them
back.
Nagin complained that state opposition was feeding a misperception
about New Orleans, saying: "We're fighting this national impression
that we're tainted, we're not ready."
Yet a handout from the mayor's office to returning motorists struck a
more cautious tone than Nagin himself. Police and National Guardsmen
handed out notices to each arriving vehicle which described the
sorry state of affairs:
"You are entering the city of New Orleans at your own risk," it reads,
before going on to detail potential health hazards from water, soil
and air, and advising residents to bring in food and drinking water,
batteries and other needed items. Returning motorists were advised to
"drive slowly and carefully and be observant to any road obstructions
which might block the way; do not drive through water where any
utility line (electric or telephone) is laying in the street. Do not
touch or try to remove such wires. Stay away from them."
Nagin also noted that telephone service was still 'mostly
non-existent' in much of the city, and where it existed, service was
'spotty' at best. People who are aquainted with the specifics of
telephony said what that meant was that corrosion had damaged much
equipment and excessive water from Rita and Katrina caused a lot of
'crosstalk' and noisy lines, in addition to 'traffic jams' on fewer
than normal circuits; frequent disconnects, etc. Bell officals told
Associated Press that lines were being restored 'on a daily basis'.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.
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