Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Tandem floats banned in New Orleans

2 paradegoer­s killed within days

- By Meryl Kornfield

The deaths of two paradegoer­s at this year’s Mardi Gras in New Orleans cast a pall over the raucous festivitie­s and spurred the city to demand an 11th-hour change to tandem floats — multiple parade floats pulled by a single tractor.

Each float must be driven by its own tractor for the remainder of the 2020 Carnival season, officials announced after a man, whose name has not been released by police, was struck and killed by a tandem float Saturday night.

The news of his death came just days after Geraldine Carmouche, 58, was crushed by a tandem float. The New Orleans resident was trying to cross to the other side of the parade on Wednesday when she tripped over the hitch connecting two floats, witnesses told a local news station.

And on Sunday, WDSUTV in New Orleans reported a person fell off the lower level of a float and was taken to a hospital, where the person was listed in stable condition.

The all-female Mystic Krewe of Nyx, one of several social clubs that leads procession­s with elaborate floats during the week, was passing Ms. Carmouche when she was struck. Accounts differ on whether Ms. Carmouche was trying to cross to see her cousin, who is a part of the krewe, or pick up beads from the ground.

Both deaths occurred amid the festivitie­s and shocked witnesses. The parades both nights were canceled after the deaths.

Local news reporter Jonah M. Gilmore, who was at the scene of Saturday’s death, tweeted a video of the flashing, gaudy float surrounded by first responders and a concerned crowd. Sirens echoed in the distance.

“I can’t wrap my head around witnessing this. Like man, the screams, seeing CPR performed on his body and seeing them finally drape that sheet,” Mr. Gilmore tweeted. “I never imagined I would witness something so horrific.”

In a tweet late Saturday night, Mayor LaToya Cantrell called the deaths at the height of Carnival celebratio­ns “an unimaginab­le burden to bear” for the city.

“While we must wait for the results of the investigat­ion, we both mourn the loss of life during what is supposed to be our time to celebrate our life and culture here, and continue to be mindful of all safety practices during the Carnival season,” Ms. Cantrell said in a statement. “Please exercise caution during parades and elsewhere on the streets.”

Ms. Cantrell said the city would continue enforcing standards regarding where crowds can stand.

The float that killed the man during the Endymion parade on Saturday was the same one that killed a person in 2008, the last such incident involving a tandem float. A rider was getting off a three-part float when it lurched forward and struck him, the Associated Press reported.

The most recent fatality related to a single float was in 2009, when a 23-year-old rider fell from a float and was run over by it in a suburb of Lafayette, La.

At last year’s Mardi Gras, a car hit nine people and killed two bicyclists near the parade route.

The Krewe of Bacchus, which is one of the largest to take part in Mardi Gras, expressed its condolence­s to the family of the man via a statement by Clark Brennan, the krewe’s captain, to The Washington Post. Kern Studios, the production company that makes the krewe’s floats, will make modificati­ons to comply with the tandemfloa­t ban, Mr. Brennan said.

“The Krewe of Bacchus will roll as usual,” he said.

Parades in New Orleans are scheduled to continue until Fat Tuesday, which is the traditiona­l culminatio­n of the annual celebratio­n.

 ?? Max Becherer/The Advocate via Associated Press ?? A police officer works the scene where a man was hit and killed on Saturday by a float in the Krewe of Endymion parade in the runup to Mardi Gras in New Orleans.
Max Becherer/The Advocate via Associated Press A police officer works the scene where a man was hit and killed on Saturday by a float in the Krewe of Endymion parade in the runup to Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

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