The Mercury News

Revelry in city comes to a screeching halt

- By Kevin Mcgill Associated Press reporter Rebecca Santana in New Orleans contribute­d to this report.

NEW ORLEANS » A week ago, revelers jammed bars in the French Quarter and New Orleans’ Irish Channel neighborho­od ahead of St. Patrick’s Day while hotels, taverns and restaurant­s looked ahead to what is usually a lucrative festival season.

Now, the party is suddenly and decisively over. Coronaviru­s dread has settled uncomforta­bly over this most social of cities, where public gatherings are banned and 10 of Louisiana’s 16 COVID-19 deaths had been recorded as of Saturday.

While Gov. John Bel Edwards openly worries that the state’s ability to deliver health care could be overwhelme­d in another week, the metro area has become one of the nation’s hot spots for the virus, home to the vast majority of the nearly 600 infected statewide.

Two new testing centers for the disease closed within hours of opening Friday, having run through the day’s first allocation­s of tests.

“Laissez les bon temps rouler” (“Let the good times roll”) has given way to a new municipal maxim: “Wash your hands.” The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival is postponed until fall. Other events are canceled. Bars are closed.

Restaurant­s — the ones that stay open — struggle with takeout- or deliveryon­ly operations.

“It really came to a screeching halt,” Philip Moseley said of business at Blue Oak BBQ, which he co-owns with Ronnie Evans. They have added phone lines to handle takeout business, but have laid off about half of their roughly 50 staffers.

Celebrated hometown chef and restaurate­ur Frank Brigsten told his

Facebook followers Friday that, for now, he was shutting down the restaurant that bears his name in New Orleans’ Carrollton neighborho­od.

Tourists are still around, said Evangeline Turner, who went to pick up a last paycheck this week on Bourbon Street.

“A tourist asked me where they should go,” she said. “I told them everything’s closed.”

Turner has now lost both her jobs — bartending at a restaurant in New Orleans’ Mid City neighborho­od, and acting as a “master of ceremonies” at a Bourbon Street bar.

“I worked two jobs because I had to,” said Turner, who is wondering how she’ll pay the rent and buy the insulin she needs to deal with her diabetes.

Turner noted a certain irony. She said Bourbon Street hospitalit­y workers think a source of the city’s infections might be one of the vital tourism industry’s biggest draws, the citywide pre-lenten Carnival celebratio­ns that culminated on Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, which fell on Feb. 25. Tourists from around the country and the world filled the streets. “There’s no way that can’t be a reason,” she said.

Whether Mardi Gras crowds were a factor in the disease’s spread in Louisiana cannot be proven, but the celebratio­n would be a likely breeding ground for a highly contagious virus like the one that causes COVID-19, said Dr. Richard Oberhelman. He is the chairman of the Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences at Tulane University’s School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine.

“People are really packed close together, especially for some of the big parades in the downtown section and really all along the route. There are a lot of opportunit­ies for close contact and transmissi­on,” Oberhelman said.

“During Mardi Gras, people were not thinking about social distancing or hand washing,” Oberhelman added.

The vast majority of people recover within weeks after catching the virus, and for most people, it causes only mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. But for older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause severe illness requiring hospitaliz­ation. Five of those who have died in New Orleans lived at an upscale retirement home.

Restaurate­urs aren’t giving up. Six restaurant­s have joined to promote a “curbside fish fry” at their locations across the city, offering seafood-focused meals curbside and to go every Friday during Lent. Some of the money raised in the project, organized by local seafood supplier Craig Borges, will go to the Louisiana Hospitalit­y Foundation, which helps people who work in the industry.

And the Louisiana Restaurant Associatio­n, working with local marketing and public relations companies, has launched a website connecting restaurant­s with customers seeking takeout or delivered food.

Moseley’s restaurant planned to do its part Saturday with a drive-thru service where hospitalit­y workers can get a pork sandwich, beer and chips for free.

“It’s pretty stressful,” Moseley said of losing his staff. “You feel for everyone on your team and you spend so much time with these people. I talk to these people more than I talk to my wife

“We’re all in it together, all trying to figure out the puzzle: How can we succeed in this?”

 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Bourbon Street, which is normally bustling with tourists and revelers in the French Quarter of New Orleans, was deserted on Thursday as bars and clubs were shuttered.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Bourbon Street, which is normally bustling with tourists and revelers in the French Quarter of New Orleans, was deserted on Thursday as bars and clubs were shuttered.
 ??  ?? Bourbon Street was a sea of humanity on Mardi Gras on Feb. 25, but the coronaviru­s scare has halted the party.
Bourbon Street was a sea of humanity on Mardi Gras on Feb. 25, but the coronaviru­s scare has halted the party.

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