New Orleans: One Year Later
Mayor Ray Nagin Talks About Efforts To Bring The Crescent City Back To Life
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Play CBS Video Video Ray Nagin On '60 Minutes' CBS News National correspondent Byron Pitts speaks with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin about his city's recovery. Watch the full interview on "60 Minutes" Sunday, Aug. 27, at 7 p.m. EDT.
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Video Pitts' Reporter's Notebook Only On The Web: Byron Pitts talks about his upcoming "60 Minutes" report on reconstruction efforts in New Orleans. Is Mayor Ray Nagin the right man for the job?
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Video Ray Nagin's New Orleans Tour New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin showed CBS News' Byron Pitts the Lower Ninth Ward one year after Hurricane Katrina ravaged the city. He also made some eye-opening comments.
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Mayor Ray Nagin knocks on the wall of one of the restored levees in New Orleans. (CBS)
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Interactive After The Storm The road to recovery for the people and places along the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast.
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Special Report Gulf Coast Disaster Complete coverage of the effects of Hurricane Katrina on the Gulf Coast, including anniversary coverage.
Another sign that things are not close to normal in New Orleans: the presence of the National Guard. Nagin called them in this summer to deal with a sharp rise in murders. At the earliest, those 300 Guardsmen won't be leaving until the end of the year.
"We've had some very … high-profile events … as far as … multiple murders that have happened. So it's very … it's unnerved the community in a big way," Nagin says. "But all the crime statistics that we look at on a per capita basis are down with the exception of the rising murder rate."
"That's a big one, though," Pitts notes.
"It's a huge one," Nagin says.
"Right? I mean … if people don't feel safe in New Orleans … tourism is your bread and butter," Pitts says.
"Rarely is there an issue with a tourist. This is happening in the inner city, where most tourists don't go," Nagin says. "And it's basically turf battles, primarily over drug activity."
"New Orleans is a violent city. I’m gonna say this: If I could deputize King Kong and Godzilla, I’d do it tomorrow." Thomas says. "And people would be uncomfortable watching King Kong and Godzilla walk around the streets, right. But if they can fight these thugs and stop crime while we're rebuilding, I'm gonna put a blue uniform on them."
This struggle with crime is happening with half the city's population still displaced. The half that hasn't come back is mostly poor and predominantly black.
Before Katrina, nearly 13,000 residents lived in public housing projects. Some of those projects are going to be torn down and replaced. That will take at least three years.
So a city that was once 67 percent minority faces a change in color and culture.
The mayor insists he's committed to preserving New Orleans’ diversity.
"What I do have a problem with is some entrenched interests that are looking and salivating over certain sections of the city," Nagin says. "And want to say to me as Mayor, 'Mr. Mayor we want you to tell people they can't go back there. Because we have some development ideas that we want to push.' I don't think that's right."
Nagin claims he's looking out for the poor, yet he's made more progress lining up developments that appear to cater to the rich.
One example of one of those developments?
"Trump Towers," Nagin says. "We're gonna have a Trump International Tower in the city of New Orleans - a 68-story condominium. High, high-end … definitely will happen."
"I think you're looking at basically a town that will be a playground for the rich for the next 40 years," says LSU's Moore. "Around the perimeter of the city, what you'll find are private luxury condos, million-dollar mansions. This will be probably the Las Vegas of the south."
And the old New Orleans?
"The old … all gone, completely," Moore says. "The culture's completely gone."
That charge may be extreme, but Jim Carvin has similar concerns. He's been political advisor to every winning mayor in the Big Easy since 1969 - including Nagin.
"We're talking as though blacks and whites are all the same," Carvin says. "In this city, they're not."
He points to one of the symbols of society, the debutante balls last December, just four months after Katrina. While the city's black social clubs cancelled their events largely because of diminished ranks, most of the white clubs held theirs as planned.
"With all the catastrophe, the debutante parties went on," Carvin says. "They didn't miss a beat. Every day you picked up the paper and there was the debutante ball, as though there had never been a Katrina. That’s why the white establishment looked at the exodus of the black community, or a large segment of the black community, and said, 'We could make this a white city again.'"
"I look at the post-Katrina piece as a game of musical chairs. The music is going, everybody's dancing, everybody's having a good time," says Moore, who is black. "Once the music gets turned off, the white folk have a place to sit down, a place to sleep, a place for their children to go to school. We're going back to a trailer."
Nagin insists all are welcome in the new New Orleans. But for now, one year later, that remains a dream deferred.
Discouraged by the slow recovery, many have taken matters into their own hands -taking back what they lost.
At least $15 billion in federal aid has been set aside to rebuild the Crescent City, but very little has been delivered.
Just give us money, Nagin says, and give me more time.
"We’ve got some challenges. This is pioneering work," Nagin says. "This is not for the faint of heart."
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Produced by Reid Collins Jr. and Jenny Dubin.


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See all 30 Commentsused to transport probably thousands of people out of Katrina%u2019s path. Personally, I think that every time Ray Nagin opens his mouth, he sticks his foot in it %u2013 either making a disrespectful, misinformed, or simply an insensitive statement. The people in those towers weren%u2019t given a warning, there was no one on the television at the %u201C National Terrorist Center %u201C explaining that they shouldn%u2019t go to work, because Arabs were going to blow up the towers %u2013 let%u2019s be real here, there is no comparison. Ray Nagin, along with Kanye West are probably the two most ignorant people to EVER comment on the issue in New Orleans; I hope they try to hold their tongue, and think next time they speak %u2013 both were born without a filter. On the brink of having to prepare for the first storm of this season for us [Miami], I%u2019ve taken a moment to write what I feel, and think about this whole Katrina issue; Miami survived Andrew, we rebuilt the city, and it%u2019s become one of the biggest city in the United States. Take it from us you%u2019ll weather the storm, just make sure you have the right people to lead you along the path towards a better, and brighter day. Good lick.
In regards to the "masks, comment" Mobile is the home of Mardi Gras, and I can attest, as a black female, that the masks have nothing to do with the KKK for mardi gras. The hoods do! You are supposed to wear a mask, not a hood! What the "f" was that about? I was a member of a Mardi Gras society and it is just a tradition of royalty and carnivale to wear the masks. I have never seen hoods at a debutante ball before but New Orleans has changed what Mardi Gras is supposed to be about completely anyway! It's about family fun, moonpies, and feasting before Lent. It's not supposed to be about *** on balconies, and drunks stumbling from corner to corner! New Orleans is a tourist city, for mostly college students or socialites. I visit to get my beignets once a year and I get the heck outta there. I visited there last month, and I realized quickly that New Orleans will never be the same. It's just horrible what happened there and along the ENTIRE gulf Coast. Maybe its a good thing New Orleans isn't coming back to life any time soon.
I may not agree with Ray Nagin but I respect that he speaks his mind, whether it's to the president or a misguided journalist, at least he's honest with himself (and with the public) to a certain degree and that doesn't happen very often to any degree.
In the end Nagin did a great job and kept his cool, had Pitts taken a different approach, it may have ended differently. In the end the objective was successful; we're still talking about it...
We do not always like the message, so we pick apart the way the messenger delivers it. So chill baby. What, did he just call me a baby.
I can't say for sure if Ray Nagin is or is not a good mayor, the folks in NO re-elected him so that means he must be doing simething right. I do think it would have been better for 60 minutes to more clearly express how difficult it is to clean up the city - that you can't just go throw away people's property without their permission, that it takes a ton of money and YES, wealthy investors to rebuild the city. I think everyone would be surprised that many wealthy people were once poor - and that they are incredibly genererous with their money.
Did anyone notice the society page and the men wearing white hoods? 60 minutes needs to do a story on that.
Becase Mayor Nagin asserted himself and didn't let Byron Pitts ask ignorant questions with out anykind of reply he is wrong??? Yet, the media can pick at him all day...Come on. Get a grip. It HAS been FIVE years since 9/11.
These are POOR people who can't get back to their areas to collect memories and valuables. Look at the ENTIRE picture before you sit back and DECIDE YOU have ALL the answers, as YOU Always DO...and then decide to spoon feed us your (UN)common sense.
The reporter was so so obviously gunning for Nagin before the first camera rolled, and he conducted the entire interview with a VERY condescending tone.
What happened to JOURNALISM? This was a personality piece, and by someone who obviously did not have any civil respect for the subject.
Where is the reporting on what REALLY caused New Orleans to drown?
The Army Corps built the levees improperly - THAT is the story, and they happened to break on Ray Nagin's watch.
And the real continuing story is how much corruption and gouging is happening RIGHT NOW, but no, let's focus on when Ray Nagin ordered the city evacuated, even though he ordered an evacuation AT ALL is what is historic.
The shameless use of the "hole in the ground" quotation as a promotional device also belies the intent of this piece - to make Ray Nagin look bad, period.
As far as Nagin's provocative statements go, as far as I can tell, those are the only times anyone seems to listen. So I say, good for you Ray Nagin - keep fighting the good fight!
That "hole in the ground" as you called it was not only the site of two of the largest buildings in the world, but housed beneath it a massive transportation hub, and power and phone connections which serviced areas far from the site. No excuses have been made, because none needed to be made, the city of New York can and should be proud of the way they handled 9/11 and the recovery.
You can take no credit at all for the rebuilding of the levys, the Army Corps of Engineers did that. Katrina did not come out of a clear blue sky, the planes that hit the WTC did. Do yourself and New Orleans a favor, keep you mouth closed and get to work, your constituents deserve better than what you have given them. The people of New York don't need to hear your ignorant comments, you could learn a lot from the way they handled things.
3. Permission from homeowners to clean up, a year later? are you kidding, the WTC is private property, government has the responsibility to clean up unsafe conditions, automobiles and private property were removed from the streets of New York in days and weeks, not months.
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