Another Year Later, New Orleans Still Waiting

With little evidence of progress in the city's 17 designated recovery areas, residents grow ever more frustrated with local officials.

1 minute read

April 6, 2008, 5:00 AM PDT

By Christian Madera @http://www.twitter.com/cpmadera


"In March 2007, city officials finally unveiled their plan to redevelop New Orleans and begin to move out of the post-Hurricane Katrina morass. It was billed as the plan to end all plans, with Paris-like streetscape renderings and promises of parks, playgrounds and "cranes on the skyline" within months.

But a year after a celebratory City Hall kickoff, there have been no cranes and no Parisian boulevards. A modest paved walking path behind a derelict old market building is held up as a marquee accomplishment of the yet-to-be-realized plan.

There has been nothing to signal a transformation in the sea of blight and abandonment that still defines much of the city. Weary and bewildered residents, forced to bring back the hard-hit city on their own, have searched the plan's 17 "target recovery zones" for any sign that the city's promises should not be consigned to the municipal filing cabinet, along with their predecessors. On their one-year anniversary, the designated "zones" have hardly budged.

"To my knowledge, I don't think they've done anything to any of them," said Cynthia Nolan, standing near a still-padlocked, derelict library in the once-flooded Broadmoor section, which is in the plan."

Friday, April 4, 2008 in The New York Times

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