Leigh Anne Tuohy, Racism, and the White Saviour Complex

I think of how freely I was allowed to move about as a white teenager in New Orleans, and how different the situation is for African American kids. I smoked, was grungy, and then like now, had a problem with making eye contact yet I used to play basketball at the little red schoolhouse after dark without anyone saying anything; can you imagine what would have happened if I was not white?

Source: Leigh Anne Tuohy, Racism, and the White Saviour Complex

Confederate Stories

here’s my new conversation starter about the Confederate monuments around town. If you want to honor Civil War history, then (as befits the victors),  for the Lee statue, insert Grant; for the J. Davis one, Lincoln; for PGT Beauregard, Gen. Lovell or Butler. In fact, the history that would be appropriate would be to only have the victor depicted with information about the war and the losers left to a plaque, and would then offer true Civil War history to the future generations…That is my argument; explaining the history of a failed insurrection (of which New Orleans was in for all of 16 months or so of its 300 year history) was not the point of those statues, but rather meant as a defiance of the order of the victors to integrate, and as a way to tell this new tall tale of the “Lost Cause.” The Davis statue, in particular is in that camp as it was put up in the 1900s (I hope no one is arguing for the Battle of Liberty Place Monument to remain). I believe anyone who argues for these to stay as they are is arguing for a false narrative of triumph and encouraging that long ago generation’s view of subjugation of their neighbors. Still, I’d like them to remain in the city, in an appropriate place with other symbols of previous times available to all to see and understand. History is not erased but with the removal of false idols, is also no longer appropriated and altered as it is presently.

When people scornfully use the argument that those who want this change want to deny history, I reply that it is those who argue for the losers of the war to be depicted who are the ones denying history. Yes, let’s absolutely depict the  history of our horrific Civil War, but do it truthfully and with respect to ALL of our people and our (at times, shameful) history. If you truly want to have our history on display, then get actively involved in finding innovative and respectful ways to match the complicated details of it.

Square deal or not?

Lower Pontalba hikes its rents

 

Lower Pontalba rent increases
Current 2016 2017
Monthly Monthly Monthly Full increase
Tenant Name Address Rent Rent Rent
Stephen Rue & Doug Melancon 503 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,375 $3,165 $3,954 66%
Louellen & Darryl Berger 509 St. Ann $2,200 $2,475 $2,749 25%
Jack & Pat Holden 511 St. Ann, 2nd floor $1,850 $2,698 $3,547 92%
Ricky & Lynna Caples 511 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,370 $2,877 $3,384 43%
Louis Sahuc 515 St. Ann, 2nd floor $1,850 $2,702 $3,555 92%
Charles & Kathy Cole 515 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,000 $2,692 $3,384 69%
Hugh Lambert & Ben Skillman 519 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,000 $2,790 $3,580 79%
Jim Brown III 519 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,755 $3,070 $3,384 23%
Constantine Georges 527 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,000 $2,786 $3,572 79%
James & Lillian Maurin 527 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,370 $2,877 $3,384 43%
Steve & Cindy Hogan 531 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,540 $3,072 $3,605 42%
Kevin & Haydee Mackey 531 St. Ann, 3rd floor $1,950 $2,638 $3,326 71%
Gary & Pat Boue 535 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,250 $2,902 $3,555 58%
Michael & Krista Dumas 535 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,755 $3,066 $3,376 23%
Bill & Carolyn Oliver 539 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,320 $2,962 $3,605 55%
Donald & Beth Woolridge 539 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,225 $2,805 $3,384 52%
Carol Riddle & Ira Middleberg 541 St. Ann $2,200 $2,475 $2,749 25%
Brandon & Daphne Berger 543 St. Ann, 2nd floor $2,525 $3,588 $4,651 84%
Christian Creed 543 St. Ann, 3rd floor $2,500 $3,013 $3,527 41%
John Morrissey 806 Chartres, 3rd floor $2,280 $2,394 $2,509 10%
Carol Lewis & Anita Harris 810 Chartres, 2nd floor $1,865 $2,312 $2,759 48%
Patrick McNulty 810 Chartres, 3rd floor $1,780 $2,144 $2,509 41%
Gina Smith 807 Decatur, 2nd floor $1,925 $2,365 $2,805 46%
John Ryan Lafaye 807 Decatur, 3rd floor $1,650 $2,187 $2,723 65%
Douglas Ahlers 811 Decatur, 2nd floor $1,925 $2,365 $2,805 46%
Ken & Faye LeBlanc 811 Decatur, 3rd floor $1,780 $2,277 $2,773 56%

Tear that wall down

Here’s a link to a story about when highways are removed from inner cities:
http://gizmodo.com/6-freeway-demolitions-that-changed-their-cities-forever-1548314937

This is an issue at the forefront in New Orleans because of the ramps to the Claiborne Expressway built in the 1960s, need to be repaired soon. “An option that’s been tossed around for awhile is to remove the overpass, restore a former tree-lined boulevard there and let traffic run along it and surrounding streets.”

It may be important to remember both the spur that was never built:

220px-New_Orleans_Riverfront_Expressway_Octopus

 

And the expressway that was:

images.duckduckgo

And what Claiborne used to look like:
images.duckduckgo
As long as we’re on this story again, I am always surprised by how many freethinkers still trot out the erroneous story of how the win to not build the Riverfront spur in the Quarter in the 1960s led to the Claiborne Expressway. Simply not true.

In any case, it’s time to focus on the positive benefits of taking down the Claiborne Expressway and make sure that more negative developments are not put in its place.

NOPD shuts down Royal Street pedestrian mall after Paris attacks 

I wondered what had happened; and as someone who lives around the corner from the Royal St. mall, I think it’s a shame and not necessary. Some people might think this is a non-issue, but when closed, Royal was its own human-scaled village and added “eyes on the street” for 9-10 hours per day. That shutting this down as somehow being touted as being about safety is an example of policing that is not community based. The best precedent is probably the emergence of those massive streets in suburbs and newer cities put into place during the Cold War to allow militarized emergency vehicles ever more space but did not make us any safer.

(Update: the NOPD backed down the next day, but let’s stay vigilant folks!)

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Photographer Roy Guste’s joyous image of Royal Street activity during one of the many festivals that the Quarter hosts. Even in this crowded festival image (activity that is duplicated on streets across the city regularly) emergency vehicles can access these short blocks any number of ways.

Source: NOPD shuts down Royal Street pedestrian mall after Paris attacks | NOLA.com

 

 

Over-The-Rhine And Through The French Quarter

(This post is from a few years back, but as new developments, planning changes and streetcars come online in both cities, I thought I’d repost it.)

As I roamed the streets of Cincinnati’s historic downtown neighborhood Over-The-Rhine this week and read Michael Morgan’s excellent book on the brewery history of OTR, I noted the many similarities to the French Quarter, as well as some instructive differences.
About the same physical size, both are adjacent to skyscraper-filled downtowns, they each have notable repositories of pre-Civil War historical buildings with richly designed churches and lots of gentrification aches and pains.
In the mid-1800s, OTR had 45,000 (mostly German) residents, twice the population as the French Quarter at its most crowded (in the 1920s), when it was full of old family Creoles and Sicilians. That OTR number is staggering, as any pre-war photo of the FQ shows families crammed into small apartments with laundry stretched across the courtyards.  Interestingly, the 2010 Census counted the OTR residents at around 7,000 which is still about twice that of the current French Quarter population (3, 888 in the 2010 Census).

——-

Both are home to their city’s remaining public markets, although Cincinnati’s Findlay Market is already well on its way to a renaissance of local food and friendly festival-type space. Popular restaurants, wine, and wheatgrass bars are filling the retail spots nearby in Cinci, and indoors you can shop the redesigned space alongside locals for meat, produce, and baked goods. A real farmers market operates in the open shed a few days each week and attracts some of the premier direct marketing farms to town.
Of course, the French Market has retail galore, with Cafe Du Monde still operating there near to newer tenants like the local artists’ cooperative Dutch Alley. Local food or farm goods are not available and the French Market’s daily flea market at its Barracks end has largely defined the unfavorable public perception of the French Market for the last 30 years.

Some other thoughts:
The French Quarter has, as its center, Bourbon Street, which is both its greatest street and its guiltiest pleasure. Random violence, prostitution, and hustling have had as much of a spot there as jazz, seafood joints, and burlesque. Even though upper Bourbon is full of girlie bar barkers and “huge ass” drinks, by the middle blocks, it flowers as the center of the city’s vibrant gay bar population and then becomes a quiet, mostly residential area from St. Philip to Esplanade with residential hotels, B&Bs, and services like a postal outlet, a laundromat, and a deli.
The energetic and conflicted span of Bourbon is certainly a production center of noise and crime but also one of entrepreneurial and neighborly zeal. That zeal spreads into the surrounding blocks and as it does, changes slightly to match the grander Royal and Chartres and the less ostentatious Dauphine and Burgundy. It is important to note that it is not newly arrived entrepreneurs or even up and coming developers that carve their empire here; most of these business people are those that arrived at least a generation or two earlier or have a much less culturally edgy plan for their businesses. The newly arrived and hipster-style businesses that are busy buying up the entire Bywater and MidCity corridor might even be repelled from the French Quarter because of Bourbon Street!

For OTR, Vine Street seems like its middle, even though Main Street two blocks parallel is also a contender. Yet, the mix is less successful at this stage, and attracting the numbers and diversity of visitors and locals that Bourbon does is unlikely, -although not that a Bourbon Street vibe is its likely aim.

The OTR area is currently a study in opposites: shiny restaurants and offices at street level with trendy names and flyers of upcoming events taped to the windows with other blocks with fronts boarded up with vines climbing the back without windows or walls. In the early part of the day, the streets are full of African-American residents constantly going in and out of the few convenience stores or the Kroger grocery store. When a white person enters one of these outlets, some tension is apparent in the sudden stoppage of conversation. Groups populate the corners and man stoops all day and into the evening on the streets with outlets that cater to their needs.

Before 10 am, parking meters are widely available but, by midday, young urbanites on bikes and in smart cars and by evening thirty-somethings and older take the last few open spots on the street for dinner or to hear the music.

Parking

Parking is always difficult in the French Quarter and many New Orleanians never venture there because of complicated parking rules and traffic snarls. Pedestrians and bicyclists are regular users of the Quarter and must be encouraged even more to reduce pollution and issues of noise and damage from too many buses and large trucks. The small streets make walking deeply enjoyable. Permanent bike parking is being added by the city in spots that are regularly used as illegal parking spaces; this increases the places to park a bike safely and reduces the traffic issue when parked cars block lines of sight or crosswalks.

The OTR parking was getting tricky while I was there, and signs about not leaving any valuables in sight had begun to pop up throughout the neighborhood (in the Quarter we just assume you know that crime will follow any opportunity). Still, my local friends still felt it was possible to drive down to OTR and park on the street at a meter for a quick shop visit;  the parking lot at Washington Park seemed like a good alternative, especially for a market visit, although I have always found parking in the lot or on the street outside of Findlay when popping in for a market visit.

 

Gentrification/Development

OTR still has not rid itself of all of its diversity. The French Quarter, however,  squeezed the last African-American families and working-class neighbors from its edges by the late 1990s and diversity remain only in the work areas when every 8-10 hours the shift changes bring another set of workers, their rides and their buddies to hang on the streets for the next round.

-Another difference is the presence in OTR of the entity, the Cincinnati Center City Development Corporation, commonly known as 3CDC. Their work is clearly spelled out on their website: to assist in redesigning the historic city center and to act as a development force and management of public space and events which allows the city government to step away from that directly. They are known for their work in public spaces including the recently redesigned Washington Park and Fountain Square (and still produce their events), the land banking of properties to reduce the loss of the historic buildings in OTR when necessary, and acting as a commercial developer throughout the OTR. More recently they also began building and managing residential properties, some to include affordable housing.
Scuttlebutt picked up here and there tells me that I could easily find detractors of 3CDC and its leadership, but partly because of its intensive work in safeguarding and revitalizing downtown living and working, there is at least agreement among most Cincinnatians as to the importance of the OTR to the city’s future. The divide seemed wide between development advocates and those that work on behalf of the homeless and the low-income residential community, but the agreements must be hammered out as clearly development will not be stopped and the at-risk population remains (for now). For the French Quarter, I’d rather have this sort of entity than the hodgepodge of private developers bullying a city government without the skills to design or lead these integrated projects.

Crime

Crime remains an issue in both areas. Recent months have seen an uptick of armed robberies in the French Quarter, and although the streets of OTR are considered generally safer than before, you are constantly reminded to be careful and to take items out of your car before leaving. From a WCPO story:
“Between January 1 and July 21 of 2013, there were 494 total serious crimes reported in Over-the-Rhine to Cincinnati police: Three homicides, three rapes, 90 robberies, 46 aggravated assaults, 69 burglaries, 261 thefts and 22 auto thefts. Between January 1 and July 21 of 2012, there were 472 total serious crimes reported to police, according to the Cincinnati Police Department.”
While from a New Orleans realtor site (as real crime stats are not easy to find for New Orleans):
“French Quarter has 62% more property crime than New Orleans and is 199% above the nation’s average. French Quarter, has 109% more personal crime than New Orleans and when compared to that of United States, French Quarter is 547% above the national average.”

Streetcars

Another parallel: Streetcars. Late in 2013, popular Cincinnati Councilperson and Vice Mayor Roxanne Qualls was defeated in her bid for mayor by voters in the outlying areas of the city who instead picked a wealthy anti-streetcar candidate. It seemed to signal the voters’ displeasure with the upcoming downtown streetcar, although anti-rail initiatives had been voted down twice. In the days after the election, OTR activists were able to rally support once again to successfully continue the construction of the streetcar over the objections of the incoming mayor and anti-rail council members. Many believe it is vital to connecting OTR (and the Findlay Market) to the other nearby areas and to serve as an invitation for businesses searching for their next storefront.
That issue follows the ebb and flow of streetcars in New Orleans: the first new streetcar installed in the city in a half-century was put alongside the Mississippi River in the French Quarter in the 1990s, accompanied by jeers and hoots of cronyism and finger-pointing. Who needs a streetcar to go 25 blocks? Yet, that streetcar begat the popular Canal Streetcar which gets a rider all the way to City Park and close to the edge of town which then begat the Loyola Streetcar which allows people to go to Union Station, the Superdome, City Hall from Canal Street, and that little line then begat the St.Claude Streetcar.

As I head back to my own historic place and leave the Cincinnati version, I hope I can convince FQ activists and city officials to look at OTR’s work and use it to discuss the issues of gentrification, preservation versus new retail, socioeconomic diversity, renter rights, homeowner rights and so on.

 

2018 article in Food and Wine about OTR

Findlay Market20140708-070404.jpg

OTR has the largest collection of Italianate architecture in the U.S. 20140708-070414.jpg

Main Street business20140708-070433.jpg

side street trees20140708-070516.jpg

old and new side by side20140708-080528.jpg

OTR mural20140708-081600.jpg

Parking meter hike outrage

Advocates of the parking meter hike claim that it will reduce vehicle congestion. As someone who lives and works in the French Quarter, I notice that taxis, delivery vans, motorcyclists, pedicabs, and freight trucks frequently cause most of the downtown traffic delays. Even if the parking meter hike encourages customers and tourists to ditch their cars, taxicabs and Uber drivers are likely to replace those vehicles, fish for new passengers and jam the streets again. Cabs always go where riders and fares are, and the parking meter hike will simply replace one type of congestion with another.

City Hall claims that the parking meter hike is not about money and is more of a public safety initiative to get traffic moving. There are at least three more important priorities for City Hall that would boost road safety more effectively. First, oversized buses and trucks continue to rumble through the narrow streets of the French Quarter, endangering sidewalks, streets, buildings, cars and bystanders. Second, businesses often put trash cans and dumpsters on the public right of way illegally, forcing pedestrians to walk on the street and hazardously share the road with automobiles. Lastly, aggressive panhandlers frequently block sidewalks, harass passers-by and clog intersections.

Finally, the new parking rules are alleged to be “good for business.” Parking lots would reap the biggest windfall from the parking meter hike. Remarkably, the hike would make operating a private parking facility — either as a surface parking lot or a garage with multiple levels of parking — more profitable, and it would slow down the conversion of parking lots to residential and mixed uses. Everyone can agree that New Orleans benefits when parking facilities are replaced with new high-rises full of families and offices. When public parking fees are increased, private parking lot operators benefit for free and can artificially raise prices because the baseline price of their product — parking — has just been increased.

The cost of enforcing the new parking policy is estimated at $1 million. That is $1 million of public funds that would be diverted away from schools, police and emergency rooms. Hiring extra meter maids would do nothing to alleviate the terrifying robberies, rapes, and murders that seemingly occur everyday. The city claims that economists and experts were consulted to craft the new parking rules; why not ask the working people of New Orleans first?

William Khan

Business Owner

http://www.theneworleansadvocate.com/opinion/14011982-123/letters-parking-meter-hike-in