Traffic Study to Look at French Quarter Flows

Hmmm. Certainly seems useful to do a traffic study, but I wonder if they can also specifically spend some time monitoring truck traffic in certain quadrants, like the part of Chartres between Toulouse and the Square where the added restaurants seem to be taking their toll on that streetscape.
I also wonder if the city will ever undertake a study of flagrant garbage bin scofflaws, meaning those who leave their dumpsters out 24/7 and/or block constantly sidewalks with them or rarely clean the area in which they sit?

Traffic Study to Look at French Quarter Flows | NOLA DEFENDER.

VCPORA, New Orleans city attorney spar over Bourbon Street noise ordinance

If you can’t tell, the lawyers are in control now. That is rarely the right path to end up with common sense solutions:

VCPORA, New Orleans city attorney spar over Bourbon Street noise ordinance | NOLA.com.

And thanks to The Lens for adding this link to more information on decibel levels and to an explanation at the TeePee as to how noise does not increase linearly but exponentially. “For instance, sound at 80 decibels is actually twice as loud as those at 70 decibels, just as 60 decibels would be half as loud as 70, and 90 decibels would be four times as loud as 70.”
Link to sound levels

Artist colony in our midst

I think there is a lot to be discovered about self organization, itinerant communities, illegal and informal activities and much more from the Jackson Square community. There is much good and maybe some bad to this place no doubt, and the more that city officials, police and nearby businesses and residents understand it and specifically understand how the space works (or doesn’t) with new groups taking control at different times of day and events, the better.
Jackson Square artists

Easter Parades 2014

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Fringe 2014: November 29 – 23
The New Orleans Fringe announces the call for submissions for performing groups for the seventh annual Fringe Theater Festival. The Fringe welcomes virtually any type of theater performance – the wilder and the weirder, the better!

“We particularly encourage original works or innovative adaptations. Categories include: cabaret, circus arts, comedy, dance, drama, improvisational, immersive experience, interdisciplinary, live documentary, multimedia, musical theater, poetry, puppetry, storytelling, burlesque, sideshow, spoken word, variety and other creative madness.”

nofringe

“UnfairBnB” from Antigravity Magazine

I disagree with the writers’ stance that airbnb is the chief cause of rentals to be unavailable to residents. As someone who believes in the informal economy, I have used it quite often in my travels. Almost all of the airbnb places where I have stayed have been people’s homes with an extra set of rooms for guests or a mother-in-law house. Many of the folks have raised kids who are now off at college and want to share their home still and so I have met some wonderful people and felt safer being in a neighborhood than staying in a large corporate hotel often found in a industrial park without access to local business or any where to walk after the work day is over. And as someone who has been a renter in this city for over 30 years, it is my contention that it ain’t airbnb that has stopped rent controls or that reduces the number of rentals for residents, but the corporate infrastructure that encourages profiteering on home flipping or corporate rentals without any management oversight, as well as the inability of the city or state to enact a post-disaster punishment for those who delay their repairs for no reason except that they own too much or refuse to pay for good repairmen to get it all done right in a reasonable time. Let me be clear-I am not identifying those folks who STILL wait for payments or are fighting bureaucracy, or have been ripped off by unsavory workers as the problem because the system is also weighted against them to work in favor of those connected and ruthless profiteers. Also, slumlords or invisible homeowners who abuse airbnb.com probably abused Craiglist, or the TeePee classifieds, or any other short or long term term rental situation that has benefited other neighborhoods or visitors who want to be good citizens and keep their property kept up and rented. Outlawing airbnb.com is not the answer; the answer is more likely direct action among citizens on rental property rules and protecting renters rights along with good homeowners rights. Too many short term rentals in one block IS wrong, but is not the stem issue, I believe.
The writers’ assertion that the bike lane along Esplanade is a white stripe of divide is so foolish that is shows that the basis of the article is far-fetched, and badly researched. The percentage of New Orleanians that do not have regular access to automobiles has always been a large number (over 25% before the federal levee breaks) and for anyone who gets around before the sun is entirely up will see more working men using those lanes than porkpie wearing hipsters. As one commenter points out, the complete streets approach to adding the lanes is based on adding the chosen and researched lanes when the streets are repaired. That St. Claude was outfitted before Esplanade and that these lanes act as a traffic calming device for regular people to cross the streets or to check for a bus are important points of which the writers seem unaware.
Honestly, the issue with short term rentals is one that should be discussed in each neighborhood but to identify neighborhood associations as the savior that the city has not been is as foolish as his bike lane bashing; My opinion is that these organizations are often protectionist home owner associations and do almost nothing for renters. I left a longer comment at the end of his article and would recommend that folks peruse some of the thoughtful comments left by others on there as well.

UnfairBnB: What Unlicensed Short-Term Rentals Mean for New Orleans – Antigravity Magazine.

An elegy for George

One of the lovely people who, when you saw him, made you feel the French Quarter was still a haven for artists and souls that could not really exist other places. Sharon Litwin gives a sweet snapshot of him in the link below.

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An elegy for George | NolaVie – Life and Culture in New Orleans.