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New Orleans Voters Pick Leader to Oversee Rebuilding (Election Results Live Thread!!)
AP, Fox News, Yahoo ^ | May 20, 2006

Posted on 05/20/2006 5:32:19 PM PDT by HHKrepublican_2

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To: kabar

Mitch Landrieu was the Dep Gov? Did he give that up to run for Mayor?


381 posted on 05/20/2006 10:26:41 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: marajade
***Did he give that up to run for Mayor?***

Think he kept the Lt. Gov. spot.

382 posted on 05/20/2006 10:30:52 PM PDT by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: BigSkyFreeper


I hope you were able to hear him "thanking President Bush."


383 posted on 05/20/2006 10:52:25 PM PDT by onyx (Deport the trolls --- send them back to DU)
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To: onyx
I hope you were able to hear him "thanking President Bush."

Did he thank President Bush for warning NOLA of Katrina and sending federal assistance that sat in Alabama because Blanco wouldn't let them in?

I don't like democrats, I don't trust democrats, and Nagin is a democrat.

He's the slimiest of the slime. He spent more time blaming Bush for the disaster, hightailed his family to Dallas, and told the people of NOLA, "you're on your own".

He's a friggen creep.

384 posted on 05/20/2006 11:12:13 PM PDT by BigSkyFreeper (There is no alternative to the GOP except varying degrees of insanity.)
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To: BigSkyFreeper

I bet those buses were running full speed to get those people to the elections!


385 posted on 05/20/2006 11:20:28 PM PDT by m3d1um
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To: BigSkyFreeper

His opponent was Landreui's brother.
Truthfully, I prefer Nagin, the known entity.


386 posted on 05/20/2006 11:27:16 PM PDT by onyx (Deport the trolls --- send them back to DU)
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To: onyx

I will admit I was glad to see Mary's idiot brother concede to defeat.


387 posted on 05/20/2006 11:34:14 PM PDT by BigSkyFreeper (There is no alternative to the GOP except varying degrees of insanity.)
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To: BigSkyFreeper

I missed it. I was working (busy).

I'm about ready to call this one a night.
GOOD to see you.


388 posted on 05/20/2006 11:35:47 PM PDT by onyx (Deport the trolls --- send them back to DU)
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To: onyx
Yeah, I'm about ready to call it a day too. Always GOOD to see you as well.

As you've probably already knew, I've been enjoying my new widescreen HDTV set.

389 posted on 05/20/2006 11:39:09 PM PDT by BigSkyFreeper (There is no alternative to the GOP except varying degrees of insanity.)
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To: cajun scpo

HEre is an interview. I like her. At least she sounds like she has got ideas
In District B, incumbent Renee Gill-Pratt faces a tight run-off against lawyer, Uptown resident, and political newcomer Stacy Head. Gill-Pratt and Head finished nearly even in April voting and no clear leader has emerged as May 20th draws closer. Like the future of New Orleans, the City Council seat for District B remains up for grabs. I met Ms. Head at her Prytania Street campaign headquarters to discuss both of these things.
A Louisiana native and long-time New Orleans resident, Head stated her decision to run was motivated by “anger, frustration, and hope; the same things everyone else is feeling.” She feels the city “has been heading in the wrong direction for a long time” and is ignoring, even after the storm, the “tremendous untapped potential” of District B. When asked for examples of this potential, Head quickly ticked off a list of assets already in place: universities (Tulane, Loyola, Xavier), hospitals, the riverfront and ports, the Warehouse District, and the CBD.

Interestingly, she also named blighted housing and abandoned businesses as assets. The potential for housing and business development in District B make it “the most important district in the city,” Head states. A successful District B functions as an economic engine for the entire city, Head believes, lessening New Orleans’ dependence on the now-questionable tourism industry.

“Housing trumps everything,” she said. We discussed the current stock of city-owned blighted homes. I asked for numbers. Head expressed her desire for the same information. “You can’t get those numbers anymore,” she said. “You used to be able to but now I can’t find them and no one will give them to me.” According to older estimates, Head stated the city now owns at least 10,000 blighted homes.

I blinked at the number. If half were lost in the flood, I thought, that left 5,000 potential homes sitting around collecting dust, or worse. “Theoretically,” I said, “the city could put thousands of homes on the market tomorrow.” Head stated that it’s not quite that simple, but, “yes, theoretically, it’s possible to return a large number of homes to the market quickly.”

Head, in fact, has been through the process herself. She has purchased and “returned to commerce” nine formerly blighted homes in Uptown. She said her experience taught her that “private investment in the housing market through the city is needlessly difficult,” and that although there are aid programs for investors as well as home-buyers, those programs are “so badly disorganized they discourage investment.” The investors are out there. “There are a lot of people on the outside (of the city) who are bullish” about New Orleans’ future, Head insists. “I’d like to bring some of that optimism to the city,” she said.

As Head expounded on her housing plan (tax incentives, insurance and mortgage assistance) I realized that in addition to her experience, she is a relentless researcher, and (though maybe I’m not fit to judge) she seems to know everything about buying, fixing, and selling a house. “I don’t know everything,” she said, “but I’m a quick learner, and I can make myself an expert on what I need to know.” I believed her. But I also struggled to get a read on what she really had in mind for the future, selling off the city to outside money and turning us into Atlanta or Houston, or truly addressing the absurdity of thousands of homes rotting away while thousands of New Orleanians wait to come home. So I decided to ask.

That’s where the city government comes in, she stated. It’s not the city’s job to “play landlord,” she said, but to simultaneously aid and regulate the market. “You can’t have people getting priced out of their own neighborhoods,” she said, citing the Magazine corridor and the Irish Channel as danger zones for that situation. She mentioned again the numerous city, state, and federal home-owner programs designed to help the working poor and lower-middle class that, due to mismanagement, are ineffectual.

“So,” I said, “I’m living in Atlanta and I want to buy a city-owned house, fix it up and move home. How do I find out about what help I can get?”

“You can’t,” she said. “That’s the problem.”

Head also named “the working-almost poor, the cop, the teacher with a stay at home spouse and a kid” as an “almost completely neglected” part of the constituency. “There are mechanisms in place to help people,” she said, “but the mechanisms don’t function.”

Her housing plan, according to Head, is a way to generate investment in the city while addressing the housing crisis. In addition, returning homes to the market is an effective way to combat crime. “Blighted houses are comfortable spots for drug dealers,” she said, “and because of this, blighted housing is the number one problem for Sixth District police officers.” When I asked how she knew this, she replied it’s what cops in the Sixth District have told her. She pointed out that while crime discourages home ownership, the reverse is also true. “The first thing you work on,” she said, “is housing.”

The second thing, for Head, would be business investment in neglected commercial corridors such as Claiborne Avenue. “It’s a high traffic area that connects three universities and a lot of neighborhoods, plus it has access to the interstate,” she said. Though wary of the term “big box,” Head insisted there is a place, and a need, for Target and the Gap on Claiborne Avenue.

I mentioned that she might meet some resistance to turning Claiborne Avenue into Veterans Boulevard. “People who hate the big box,” she said, “still, even if they won’t admit it, shop at those places.” She encouraged me to take a drive along the avenue. “All the boxes are there already,” she said, “we need to put something in them.” There are too few places in the district, she said, for people with families to shop and so those people, and their money, head for Vets. “All those tax dollars that go to Jefferson Parish right now, I want them for us,” she said.

Investment from national businesses, she added, would come with mandatory community involvement, such as the development of retiree-friendly neighborhoods with affordable housing and ready access to public transportation and medical facilities.

Demanding community service from huge corporate retailers sounded very familiar to me, but Head got to the Uptown Wal-Mart question before I did. It was a good idea that went wrong, she said. The city extracted promises from Wal-Mart and then “let them do whatever the hell they wanted.” To the threat of that happening again, she said, “there are ways to defend against that.”

One of the best ways to defend against repeating past mistakes and to prevent retarding future progress, according to Head, is to get Renee Gill-Pratt out of office. Head insists she will bring a “level of professionalism” to the office that is currently lacking. When asked for an example, Head said “for one, (Gill-Pratt’s) campaign literature has false statements.” To back up the charge, she produced a Gill-Pratt campaign mailer listing numerous endorsements. Several of the named parties, Head told me, had not endorsed Gill-Pratt at all. Head had spoken to two of them personally (one an executive from quasi-public utility Bell South, another a prominent local shipping magnate) and both said they had nothing against Gill-Pratt but that they never publicly endorsed her re-election.

On the subject of Gill-Pratt’s long-standing relationship with embattled congressman Bill Jefferson, Head was more demure. “I think,” she said, “the company you keep says a lot about you.”

Head mentioned Gill-Pratt has accused her of being a “criticizing outsider,” a charge Head readily accepts. Her time as a business lawyer, Head states, has provided her a vast knowledge of tax, insurance, investment, and zoning laws that will be essential in the rebuilding. This knowledge, she says, is more valuable than “a decade and a half of politics.” Head sees her outsider status as an advantage when it comes to dealing with the mayor, be it Landrieu or Nagin. “I have no real relationship with either of them. I shook hands with Mitch twice and sat next to Ray in church once.” Citing the often contentious dealings between the mayor’s office and the City Council, Head prides herself on “bringing no baggage” to the relationship.

Our interview ended when she announced she had to prepare, thoroughly, I’m sure, for a candidates forum. I noticed then how little actual baggage she carried: car keys and a cell phone. During the interview she consulted no notes, looked nothing up. I was, in fact, embarrassed when several times she had to stop talking so I could catch up on my note-taking and consult my questions. I’d hate to face her across the negotiating table, and soon enough we’ll know whether Stacy Head makes her next informed, impassioned argument in the boardroom or as a member of the City Council.

Bill Loehfelm is a regular correspondent for NOLAFugees.com.


390 posted on 05/20/2006 11:56:05 PM PDT by catholicfreeper (White Chocalate is Nagin liciouses Geaux Nagin)
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To: HHKrepublican_2

New Orleans election is voting for the same old garbage.


391 posted on 05/21/2006 12:00:01 AM PDT by Ptarmigan (Ptarmigans will rise again!)
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To: catholicfreeper

I didn't read the whole post, sorry, too late at night - but I did read a quote by someone that said they didn't want anyone who would turn NOLA "into Houston or Atlanta."

Well, I could think of a whole lot worse cities to turn into--but believe me, NOLA will never be in that same league!

What that really tells me is what they think of Houston - and why they so readily agreed to have the evacuees bused over here. Now we know, as if we didn't before. Thanks bunches, NOLAns - we'll try to remember the favor.


392 posted on 05/21/2006 12:11:34 AM PDT by Rte66
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To: HHKrepublican_2

Dost mine ears deceive me? Did Nagin *really* get reelected? Bwahahaha. Thank God. I was so worried for a second that old what's his face would beat him out. As long as there's going to be a worthless liberal jackass running New Orleans, it should at least be the one who carries the most entertainment value. I was trying to explain that to my mom, and she was like "But WHY would they vote for him? Why??" And I guess it's because they, like all of us, want our dream of a chocolate New Orleans realized. Could we get he and Howard Dean to take their comedy routine on the road? I'd pay to see that.


393 posted on 05/21/2006 12:14:35 AM PDT by Jessica24
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To: Rte66
What that really tells me is what they think of Houston - and why they so readily agreed to have the evacuees bused over here. Now we know, as if we didn't before. Thanks bunches, NOLAns - we'll try to remember the favor.

Right? That remark infuriates me. How 'bout this, New Orleans? WE don't want your criminal element we kindly took in to turn OUR city into another seedy, corrupt, gang-infested New Orleans.

We extended such generosity to them last summer and then to make matters worse, we gave 'em Reggie Bush for the Saints. How absolutely GALLING!

394 posted on 05/21/2006 12:15:51 AM PDT by Allegra (My Tagline is Humblegunner Approved)
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To: battlegearboat

ping


395 posted on 05/21/2006 12:37:28 AM PDT by AnimalLover ( ((Are there special rules and regulations for the big guys?)))
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To: Allegra; Rte66

First Everyone calm down. First That is a reporters thought that actually just writes a blog. Furthermore , I know its late but this isnt a slam on Dallas or Houston at all. The concern here is that "outside money" doesnt take these areas she is mentioning and outprcing them outside the market of the average New Orleans citizen. What she is advocating is pretty innovative. Again its not a slam. Folks remember the surburbs are full. New Orleans is bordered by a Lake a Swamp areas and the Gulf. So unlike Dallas and Houston where People have some more choices where to live, NOLA has to make sure that the development is smart and meets all the needs of folks in that pretty diverse district. Again this is not a slam at all on Houston and Dallas. THis is reference to the particular needs of certain part of the city where a "Dallas" or "Houston" like solution wouldnt work. Again no one is slaming yall.


396 posted on 05/21/2006 12:43:50 AM PDT by catholicfreeper (White Chocalate is Nagin liciouses Geaux Nagin)
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To: catholicfreeper
First of all, I'm perfectly calm.

Secondly, it's not late where I am; it's lunchtime.

I was home in Houston last year when Katrina hit and did some volunteer work at the Astrodome with the evacuees. Made a lot of friends.

I have never been prouder of my city than I was during its response to Katrina.

'Nuff said.

397 posted on 05/21/2006 12:47:15 AM PDT by Allegra (My Tagline is Humblegunner Approved)
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To: Allegra

Thank you for your volunteering. Most Louisiana citizens I know are very grateful for your service. Houston and Dallas did a tremendous job


398 posted on 05/21/2006 12:50:12 AM PDT by catholicfreeper (White Chocalate is Nagin liciouses Geaux Nagin)
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To: Jessica24

I know its hard to understand for folks outside the NOLA area but many conservatives voted for Nagin this time and thats what got him the edge. He was the Republican and conservative's guy last time. Much of MItch's vote in fact came from white Liberal areas of New Orleans. The Republican front runner in the primary endorsed Nagin. Nagin many feel was the best choice of the two. He is the most conservative also. Furthermore, many conservatives feel they can trust and work with Nagin versus Landrieu.

Also as a part of this a very liberal Democratic family might have had nail driven in their coffin tonight. This has national implication since Landrieu's Sister comes up for re election for the US Senate in 2008. Not many Black Democratic mayors would stand up and say at his Victory celebration ""I want to thank you Mr. President... we are probably the most vilified politicians in this country... I want to thank you for fulfilling your promise..." and then to proceed in the next breath to in clever way to slam a Dem Governor. There is more to Nagin than meets the eye.


399 posted on 05/21/2006 1:09:08 AM PDT by catholicfreeper (White Chocalate is Nagin liciouses Geaux Nagin)
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To: BigSkyFreeper

I agree.


400 posted on 05/21/2006 3:03:58 AM PDT by Recovering Ex-hippie (Illegal Aliens....STFU!)
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