New Orleans Residents Come Home To Outages
More Than 1 Million Homes, Businesses In Gustav-Struck Gulf Coast Still Without Power
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New Orleans resident Josh Rogers gathers his belongings after being dropped off in the Fench Quarter of New Olreans on one of what is believed to be one of the first buses to return evacuees to the city in New Orleans, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2008. (AP Photo/Bill Haber)
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Traffic comes to stop on the Interstate 10 freeway over Lake Pontchartain between New Orleans and in Slidell, La., Wednesday Sept. 3, 2008, as residents of New Orleans return home after Hurricane Gustav swept through the city. (AP Photo/Kevork Djansezian)
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The interior of a destroyed home is exposed in Cocodrie, La., on Sept. 2, 2008 after Hurricane Gustav came storming through the region on Monday, making landfall at Cocodrie. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)
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National Guard run a check point on Interstate 10, in Slidell, La., Sept. 2, 2008. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
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Casey Domangue walks through the water surrounding the home of his cousin Darrell Domangue while cleaning up after Hurricane Gustav stormed through Chauvin, La., on Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2008. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)
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Play CBS Video Video Eye To Eye: New Orleans Katie Couric talks with New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin about improved security precautions for Hurricane Gustav and the politics of it all.
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Video Three Storms Approach U.S. Nearly one million Louisiana residents are without power and officials say it will take weeks to restore electricity. Meanwhile, three new storms approach the U.S. coast. Randall Pinkston reports.
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Video Gustav Aftermath Delays Return More than one million homes are without power in Louisiana, the worst utility damage since Katrina. And, New Orleans is deemed unsafe for returns. Randall Pinkston reports.
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Interactive Gustav Photos, maps and video on the latest storm to hit the Gulf Coast
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Photo Essay Back On The Bayou Stream of traffic lines up to return to storm-stricken Gulf Coast.
As residents returned Wednesday, President George W. Bush returned to the site of one his presidency's biggest failures to show that the government had turned a corner since its bungled response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Faced with traffic backups on paths into the city, Mayor Ray Nagin gave up checking identification badges and automobile placards designed to keep residents out until early Thursday. Those who returned said if the city was safe enough for repair crews and health care workers, it was safe enough for them, too.
"People need to get home, need to get their houses straight and get back to work," said George Johnson, who used back roads to sneak into the city. "They want to keep you out of your own property. That's just not right."
But once back at home, many people had no power and no idea when it might return. Outages were widespread across Louisiana and thousands more lost power in parts of Mississippi and Arkansas.
"There is no excuse for the delay. We absolutely need to quicken the pace at which power is restored," Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said.
Even as the region sought a return to normalcy, there were fresh reminders that the 2008 hurricane season is far from over.
In the Caribbean, Tropical Storm Hanna pounded flood-plagued Haiti and was blamed for at least 61 deaths. It was tentatively predicted to hit the U.S.'s east coast somewhere along South Carolina and North Carolina. A hurricane storm watch was issued Thursday for part of the area.
A hurricane watch means hurricane conditions are possible within 36 hours.
Farther out to sea, Hurricane Ike spun westward across the Atlantic as a Category 4 on a scale of 1 to 5, and could arrive in the Bahamas on Sunday. Tropical Storm Josephine followed, behind Ike.
In Louisiana, restoring power was critical to reopening schools, businesses and neighborhoods. Without electricity, gas stations could not pump fuel and hospitals were running out of fuel for generators.
Some places never lost power, including the Superdome, where the Saints, the city's professional American football team, planned to open their regular season Sunday.
In nearby Jefferson Parish, which also reopened Wednesday, officials reported that most sewage-treatment stations were out of service because there was no power. The parish urged residents not to flush toilets, wash clothes or dishes, or even take showers out of concern that the system might backup and send sewage flowing in home and businesses.
After touring an emergency center and flooded-out farmland, Bush praised the government response to Gustav as "excellent," but he urged utility companies in neighboring states to send extra manpower to Louisiana if they could spare it.
"One of the key things that needs to happen is that they've got to get electricity up here in Louisiana," Bush said.
The administration's swift reaction was a significant change from its response three years ago to Katrina, a far more devastating storm. Roughly 1,600 people in the Gulf Coast area were killed and the White House was harshly criticized for its botched response.
To residents who lived through Katrina, that failure was still fresh.
"What do I care if Bush is visiting? I'm still trying to get my house back together from Katrina," housekeeper Flora Raymond said. "This time things went better, but we still need help from the last time."
In the days before Gustav arrived, nearly 2 million people were evacuated from the Louisiana coast. Eighteen deaths were attributed to the storm in the United States, several of them occurring during cleanup after it had passed. The storm killed 94 during its march through the Caribbean.
Nearly 80,000 people remained in shelters in Louisiana and surrounding states. An estimated 18,000 people fled from New Orleans on buses and trains arranged by the state and federal governments.
Nagin said Wednesday night that he hoped the process of returning the city's evacuated residents would begin Friday and most would return by the end of the weekend, depending on weather, roads and rail conditions.
Inside the shelters, the days of living on cots with strangers on all sides was taking a toll. At a church in Montgomery, Alabama, an argument in a parking lot between two sisters over the gas money needed to return to New Orleans erupted into a fight that ended with slashed tires, a punch in the face and an arrest.
Five people were also arrested Wednesday in only the second case of attempted looting in New Orleans since the city emptied. Worried about potential looting of vacant properties, Nagin said the city would maintain its dusk-to-dawn curfew indefinitely.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Breathe it in.
No power means the poor idiots will have unprotected s e x. Women who already have more kids than they can afford will get pregnant & give birth to another mouth they have to struggle to feed.
What else are Beulah & Tre to do? Other than make the beast with two backs. Can''t watch TV or read. Sorry. I forgot they don''t know how to read anything more than what''s on the side of a bucket of KFC. I guess they can always hit the streets & sell some drugs.
Get the power restored NOW! No more babies!
Posted by deacon20081
I wouldn''t bet my money on that.
No power, no TV, no Hot Water unless you heated it up on the wood stove. It was a fantastic life experience, it was my place and I chose to live there.
Perhaps after going without for awhile the folks complaining in NO will start to appreciate what they do have.
Posted by sasi1 at 09:49 PM : Sep 04, 2008
I''m not sure what planet you live on. However, I live in Oklahoma City and was without power for 8 days last winter (due to the ice storm) and I DID complain. Especially with the logic NOG&E used in restoring power.
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For what it costs us for Bush to zip around the country in Air Force 1, we could just about rebuild NO.
Posted by acadian9 at 04:41 PM : Sep 04, 2008
You can''t? Why not? The helpless masses from N.O. want things! You better drop what you''re doing and get it, NOW!
People of New Orleans keep your bags packed there are 4 more hurricanes on the way towards the USA and IKE is packin a punch right now and is a Cat 4
- by mklee06 September 4, 2008 6:19 PM EDT
- People are never happy. The response to Gustav was a major improvement over Katrina yet people are complaining about not being able to get back into their homes quick enough. Then after returning to their homes, after being told to wait a little longer, they are upset that they have no power. If residents are so unhappy with the outcome everytime a hurricane hits Louisiana, then might I suggest they just move. This isn''t the last hurricane by far and it won''t be the last time their lives are turned upside down. The government can only do so much to minimize the damages of a hurricane. Be thankful for the positive changes in response to Gustav, try to be a little patient, and if all else fails leave permanently. If you don''t want to move, then please accept that hurricanes are natural disasters that you will have to deal with and as a result, your lives will be profoundly disrupted and you will be greatly inconvenienced.
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