Chattanooga Times Free Press

Will Trump plan help New Orleans?

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NEW ORLEANS — When a heavy rain hits New Orleans, residents move their cars to higher ground for fear of fast-rising street flooding. Knee-deep potholes can eat a car’s fender. When pressure drops in the city’s aging water delivery system, restaurant­s and cafes have to boil water to feed customers.

Battered by nature and neglect, New Orleans is one of the best examples of what President Donald Trump calls the country’s “crumbling infrastruc­ture.” But when looking at the billion-dollar needs of this 300-year-old city, two things become apparent: The rebuilding task is immense, and it’s not clear the president’s plan will help.

The city needs about $11.6 billion to bring key parts of its infrastruc­ture into “this century,” said city official Katie Dignan. That means repairing the roads, the infrastruc­ture under them — sewer, water and drainage — as well as other parts of the drainage system that empties the city of water when it rains.

Dignan said the city has about $2 billion available, some from FEMA to mitigate Hurricane Katrina damage and some from other sources. Now, the city faces choices on how to come up with the remainder. Mayor Mitch Landrieu, who calls the aging sewer, water and drainage system a “prime example” of needed infrastruc­ture work, has doubts about Trump’s proposal.

Trump called on Congress to produce a bill that generates “at least $1.5 trillion” for infrastruc­ture investment. But he hasn’t detailed how much money the federal government would actually supply and has suggested that much of the money would come from state and local government­s or private-sector investment­s.

“What the president is really proposing is not HIS infrastruc­ture plan but basically saying to the states and the cities: ‘Build it on your own and find another way to pay for it through raising taxes or cutting services,’” Landrieu, a Democrat and the current president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, said Thursday.

Finding more money is a challenge in a financiall­y strapped Louisiana — and in a city that was facing a major budget deficit when Landrieu took office eight years ago.

Landrieu said public-private partnershi­ps can work on some types of projects where there’s money to pay back the partner, but poorer cities — often those with the biggest infrastruc­ture problems — are going to have a harder time. Forcing cities such as New Orleans to pay for the infrastruc­ture means taking money away from other local priorities, such as housing homeless veterans, he said.

The precarious­ness of the city’s infrastruc­ture was on full display last August when a massive downpour overwhelme­d the pumping system and inundated many neighborho­ods.

The Broad Theater was still recovering from a previous rainstorm when the August storm hit. Movie-goers evacuated waist-high waters by boat. Manager Michael Domangue lost his car to the flood. The theater closed for seven days and had to refund tickets.

And this damage all happened within sight of a pumping station that’s part of the drainage system. Of the $11.6 billion, an estimated $2 billion is needed for long-term repairs and upgrades to the city’s pumping system, Dignan said, although she cautioned that figure could change. The other $9.6 billion would go toward fixing the roads and the infrastruc­ture under them. That includes a drinking water system plagued by wasteful leaks and occasional power failures and pressure drops that can let contaminan­ts in — requiring residents to boil water.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers fix a sewer main below the sidewalk in Mid City New Orleans on Jan. 31.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers fix a sewer main below the sidewalk in Mid City New Orleans on Jan. 31.

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