NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 29, 2005
New Orleans Progresses, Slowly
One Month After Katrina, Unmistakable Signs Of Progress Emerge
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Play CBS Video Video New Orleans Strives To Survive Sharyn Alfonsi meets a New Orleans man who refuses to leave his home and instead has started a garden. Meanwhile, Mayor Ray Nagin remains confident that residents can come back soon.
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Video New Refinery Sites Sought The devastating effects of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita on the oil industry have officials searching for safer sites to refine oil, Anthony Mason reports.
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Video Rita's Wrath Still Felt Small Louisiana and Texas towns hit by Hurricane Rita still lack electricity and drinking water. The storm also uprooted graves, adding one more indignity for the victims, Lee Cowan reports.
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While going through her mother's home destroyed by hurricane Katrina's flooding, Debbie Maduall takes a moment in Saint Bernard Parish outside New Orleans, Tuesday. (AP)
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Dogs wander the deserted streets of the Ninth Ward district of New Orleans Wednesday. The area is nearly dried out for the second time since Hurricane Katrina devastated the area a month ago. (AP)
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Photo Essay Katrina: New Orleans A major U.S. city struggles with the devastation wrought by the deadly storm.
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Photo Essay New Orleans Photos A gallery of images that illustrate the far-reaching impact of Hurricane Katrina on a major American city
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News Tools How To Help Organizations you may contact to give aid to the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
"Oh yeah, we're going to have a helluva time," he says, and plenty of other business owners and residents agree with him.
One month after Hurricane Katrina smashed ashore and swamped 80 percent of New Orleans, there are unmistakable signs of progress.
The electricity is back on in key business districts. A few restaurants are open with limited menus. Gasoline and groceries are available in neighboring communities. Alongside the National Guard Humvees and police cruisers, garbage trucks and vans rumble through town on their way to cleanup and repair jobs.
Streets where corpses floated are nearly dry and cleared of most garbage, and despite new flooding brought last weekend by Hurricane Rita, the Army Corps of Engineers' pumping and repair work has removed nearly all of the water.
"I think we're making progress," a pleased Mayor Ray Nagin said.
The mayor said more areas of the city that escaped flooding, including the French Quarter and the Garden District, will be formally reopened starting Thursday. Business owners will be allowed in first, and then residents on Friday, although many have returned ahead of his timeline.
But CBS News correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi reports that much of New Orleans is still in shambles (video). Businesses are still trying to clean up and reopen, but there is too much trash and no one to pick it up. Hospitals are still closed and far from sterile.
In the city's impoverished Ninth Ward, for example, the neighborhood is all but deserted, with block after block of waterlogged homes and ruined cars. One of the hottest businesses around was St. Claude Used Tires, where a burly, shirtless Joseph Peters patched hundreds of tires punctured by roofing nails and other storm debris.
"I was one of the bad boys who wouldn't leave," he said with a smile. "Now they appreciate me being here."
Even those predicting a Big Easy comeback steer clear of timetables.
"We've never seen this kind of catastrophe before in the United States," said Coast Guard Capt. Tom Atkin, chief of staff for Vice Adm. Thad Allen, the federal official directing the Katrina relief effort. "Katrina had us early, but we're starting to build momentum. It's been an immense challenge. The parishes and the city face a ton of issues."
There are still some 5,000 federal military and 4,000 National Guardsmen in the city, and a long-term presence seems likely. The beleaguered Police Department, whose chief abruptly resigned Tuesday, plans to investigate about 250 of its 1,750 officers for leaving their posts in the first few days after the storm.
There are other immediate problems:
The vast majority of the city remains without power, drinkable water or reliable communications. While the return of lights to the French Quarter was hailed this week, Entergy Corp. says only about 17 percent of the city has power.
There are major health and safety concerns, including gas leaks, mold and structural damage in flooded homes, and toxic sludge left behind by the floodwaters.
©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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