NEW ORLEANS – The sound of power saws and wood chippers filled parts of New Orleans on Friday as the French Quarter and other neighborhoods that were spared the worst of Hurricane Katrina were officially reopened to residents, a month after the storm hit.
Along St. Charles Avenue, its famous streetcars still idled, Maury Strong and her husband were elated to return home and find they had electricity.
“I came back to air conditioning and CNN, so I’m happy. The fridge is on, the beer is cold,” she said. “I’ve been sobbing back in California for two or three weeks. I thought it was going to be much worse.”
Despite the misgivings of state and federal authorities, Mayor Ray Nagin threw open the French Quarter and the Uptown section as part of an aggressive plan to get the city back on its feet. Algiers, a neighborhood across the Mississippi River from the French Quarter, reopened to residents on Monday.
Altogether, the neighborhoods account for about one-third of New Orleans’ half-million residents. Most of the reopened areas have electricity, but only Algiers has drinkable water.
Serious hazards remain because of bacteria-laden floodwaters, a lack of clean water and a sewage system that has not been fully repaired. The stench of garbage piled up in some areas is overpowering, and stretches of the city are pitch-black at night.
Some residents came back only to pack and leave.
“We’re moving out of this stinking city,” Billy Tassin snarled as he loaded his daughter’s belongings into a truck, a day after finding his home fouled with knee-deep mud. “They can finishing destroying it and burning it down without us.”
“This is my home. I will never leave New Orleans,” said Virginia Darmstadter, 75, who has lived in the Uptown section’s Garden District for 21 years and left her husband in a Houston nursing home to check on their home. The house had no electricity, and had water and mold. The family planned to return to Houston after cleaning up a few things.
“As soon as we get electricity and my husband is strong enough to come back, believe me, I’ll be back,” Darmstadter said. “I’ve lived long enough to know that life is a wave; you move up and down. When you are down, you have to muster the wherewithal to face it.”
Katrina’s death toll in Louisiana rose to 932 on Friday, the state health department said, while Mississippi’s toll climbed to 221 after a body was found under a collapsed motel.
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