Letter to Councilperson Palmer

I would like weigh in on the ordinance to ban pedestrians in Jackson
Square between 1 am and 5 am. As someone who grew up in the Quarter
and often walked home from my second shift job after 1 am, having the
“eyes on the street” in the Square made that the safest route home.
I also recently lived on Saint Ann for a year a half a block from the
square and often saw tourists make their way there to get their
bearings late at night. The “regulars” who are there actually reduce
the opportunity for petty crimes.
I am SURE that shutting down the square is a bad move for safety. I
also know that it takes about 45 minutes for the cleaners to power
wash the square and that they do it around 6 am.
I appreciate the way that your office has shown leadership and a
thoughtful approach to representing your district. Most of the time, I
am fully behind your initiatives, but this one is misguided at best,
and at worst, is pandering to the few residents that want to believe
they live on a residential street, rather than the public square that
it truly is.
There are ways to restrict loud activity (if that is what you mean to
target) and ways to reduce, well whatever this is designed to reduce
without creating a safety vacuum.
How do you penalize staff working late who might be standing outside
of their door, or someone using the light to check a map? Who are
these people that must be removed for 4 hours anyway? How will this
assist the city in building a more vibrant future?
Please reconsider.

Bike Rally

WHO DAT? WHO DAT? Who dat say they want COMPLETE STREETS? WHO DAT?

Bike rally today at Decatur at the river to protest the city’s unwillingness to listen to public input. The idea is to strongly ask (okay, demand) a bike lane and other traffic calming engineering for one of the busiest walking and biking streets in the entire South.

Decatur repaving project fails to include bike or turning lanes | NolaVie – Life and Culture in New Orleans

We need people to show up to this Tuesday (November 20) and show the city that residents are serious about complete streets. If we cannot get traffic calming measures in the French Quarter where tens of thousands of walking and biking residents and tourists use the streets daily, then we have no chance at moving the bureaucrats to add it to the rest of our city streets.
Bicyclists and pedestrians are like butterflies in a city’s system: early indicators of a vibrant, healthy area. If they are not present, you can bet that bad city signs such as petty criminals, traffic scofflaws and litterbugs are in control. Please meet across from Washington Park (the inner park of Jackson Square) from 3-5 pm Tuesday for a Complete Streets Rally.

Cycling New Orleans: Decatur repaving project fails to include bike or turning lanes | NolaVie – Life and Culture in New Orleans.

AND
Sign the petition too!

what lies beneath

with all of the infernal racket and mess that the Superbowl construction has brought to the old quarter, there are some benefits to it. As I walked to my mother’s house last week, I noticed that St. Louis has been revealed as a flagstone-covered street under that 20th century goop. Lovely bones…

What lies beneath the asphalt of many of the French Quarter streets…

Fringe is near…

The brilliant Fringe Festival has begun on the corner of Dauphine and Press. And although it is not in the Quarter, it’s near and so what’s it to you if I review it here? (Sorry – cocktail hour has been delayed; someone’s a little frayed…)
At that corner, you’ll find the Free-For-All Tent and Fringe headquarters, but to see the over 60 collective artistic expressions known as Fringe, you’ll need to be mobile and able to read a map. The venues for performances that run the gamut from the smutty to the sublime are held in lovely or maybe lowdown places throughout downtown. Running through the weekend, get thee to Press and get your tickets to as many performances as you can stand. Bring a flask, an extra jacket and maybe a flashlight (advice from an annual fester) and expect to be dazzled.

What the hell is Fringe
Schedule

Designs for living the New Orleans life

JUST in time for the holidays (I’m sure that’s a coincidence!) French Quarter resident Ellen Macomber’s newest creations are available. The girl of many talents has now added these gorgeous blankets to her list of artistic creations, which as many know, include her one of a kind paintings on architectural pieces (see one hanging at Mona Lisa Pizza on Royal and many hanging at Still Perkin’ uptown), her My Louisiana postcard and coloring book which is one of my favorite gifts to give when I travel, and some other fashion stuff that is beyond me but that my stylish friends tell me is “fab” (that’s an Ellen word too by the way..)
Listen, this young woman is putting some great art out there and you should too by gifting it for the holidays, whether the Santa one or as the thank you gift to your Mardi Gras parade route home away from home…

Ellen Macomber’s new Louisiana blankets are dry and ready to ship!

http://www.ellenmacomber.com

www.ellenmacomber.com.

Jazz drummer, popular WWOZ radio host Bob French dies

Bob French, drummer, bandleader and radio host – a direct link to the very beginnings of jazz, has passed away. For those of us that had the pleasure of meeting him, we will remember that cantankerous New Orleanian always, with love and respect.
Mr. French, YOU kept the groove alive. Thank you.

Jazz drummer, popular WWOZ radio host Bob French dies | wwltv.com New Orleans.