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Showing posts with label Resident's Rant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resident's Rant. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Calculate your potential property tax increases

Use this handy dandy calculator from The Lens to calculate what your taxes will be
if Mayor Mitch gets his wish to raise our property taxes. 

Use the Assessor's Website if you need to check what your value your property is currently assessed. (And while you're at it make sure that it says you have a homestead exemption if your property is owner occupied!)

Please note that it looks like the proposal for JUST Fire & Police is 20 mills total, 10 mills each.
Oh and these 20 mills are JUST for Fire & Police.   Go ahead .... now....
Use the handy dandy calculator

Shocked? Probably. But not surprised, right?

When so many neighborhoods were jumping on the "Security District" bandwagon, 
NorthWest Carrollton did our research and decided against requesting one for our area.
WHY?  
Well for one we have a number of fixed income older neighbors and they were against it.
*and* 
We believe that taxes for NOPD should come from and be used for the benefit of the WHOLE city.   

Crime doesn't conveniently stop at neighborhood boundaries.
Neither do Police Districts.

The "I got mine" Security District approach may randomly and rarely benefit a few or give a false sense of security to the neighborhood willing to tax themselves extra but if there aren't enough sufficiently paid police on duty.... it won't matter much.

What I am wondering is just how much of an increase in our property taxes can we take before the boom that New Orleans is seeing begins to bust.









Sunday, February 2, 2014

2014 District A results

Looks like folks think that Susan Guidry could do a better job of representing West Carrollton-Leonidas. 

Take a look at the article on Uptown Messenger >>>
http://uptownmessenger.com/2014/02/guidry-expanded-her-support-in-re-election-bid-analysis-shows/

Thanks Brian Denzer!

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Tour Bus almost takes out fire hydrant

On the evening of June 4th, 2013 this New Orleans Tour Bus
was parked on Claiborne, one block from the Rock 'N Bowl.
It then turned on to Pritchard Place and then on to Dublin.
As you can see from the bus's white tail lights in the photo,
it is backing up because it could not make the turn.

It is also VERY close to taking out the fire hydrant.

This bus is too big for the neighborhood. 

We're asking City Council Representatives to determine next steps to ensure that buses
(and trucks!) this size stay on the larger streets like Earhart and Carrollton and Claiborne.
IMAG0296

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Budweiser Truck on sidewalk

Commercial Vehichle Parks on sidewalk in 2900 Block of Leonidas Bud Commercial Vehicle frequently parking on Sidewalk on Leonidas IMAG2299 Perhaps we should call the company who owns the truck?

Must be the same person with a new job.
This is the truck that used to park on the sidewalk in the same place. IMAG1974

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Commercial Vehicle Parks on Sidewalk

This truck consistently parks on the sidewalk on Apple @ Dublin. Now it has a Mississippi Plate IMAG2564 Before it had a Texas Plate IMAG2308

Monday, February 4, 2013

Guns don't kill people, Bullets do.

Let's take a step back look at this logically.

Gun's don't kill people, bullets do.
Without bullets a gun is just a fancy stick.

If
I have to provide my drivers license to get over the counter cold & sinus medication for my family to in order protect society from the possibility that this cold & sinus medication could potentially be used to convert Pseudoephedrine into methamphetamine;
Then
Why shouldn't people who buy bullets need to provide their drivers license to protect the society from being killed with bullets?

Forget the NRA. Stop arguing over the 2nd amendment and the right to bear arms. Stop talking about GUN control.

The US sells Pseudoephedrine only in pharmacies and Louisiana requires the purchaser to provide their Drivers License. This is done for a substance that can only cause harm in society if a rather arduous (and stinky) process is used to converted it to crystal meth.
So why not sell ammunition at registered locations (the equivalent of pharmacies) and require a Drivers License to buy the ammunition.  All someone with a bullet has to do is put it in the gun; no processing required.  And we know BULLETS KILL PEOPLE.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

8200 Pritchard Place - something not quite right

We've been contacted a number of times on this property at 8200 Pritchard Place.

Something appears to be not quite right. 

Why does a residential property need a recently placed (without a permit) door with an ENTRANCE sign on it?
8300 Pritchard Place

And WHY are there so frequently old cabs parked and sometimes left to side on the side of the house on Dublin Street?
IMAG2311-1

And what kind of death trap is this stairway? Dangerous @ 8200 Pritchard
IMAG2358

We have requested that Safety & Permits take a look at 8200 Pritchard Place and tell us if it is complaint with the Zoning and Codes that apply to our little neighborhood.
We'll see what they say.

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Attempted break-in @ 9AM on Carrollton

There are an attempted break-in
on October 24th in the 2700 block of Carrollton (across from Lafayette School)
at 9AM in the morning, in broad daylight.
with cars parked in the driveway of the house (indicating people were probably home),
neighbors home next door,
kids acroos the street at Lafayette School
AND 1 adult and 2 small children in the house.

After hearing the sound of broken glass, the adult and children came downstairs to check things out and found the perp standing on the brick wall shared with the neighbors breaking the window with a brick.

The adult ran upstairs, pushed the panic alarm, locked herself in the closet with the children and called 911.
 
This was NOT the backyard, NOT out of sight. This was the driveay with all the traffic of Carrollton Avenue flowing by, pedestrians & cars.
 
It was brazen and in its brazenesss all the more scary.
 
So very often the victims are blamed somehow for the crime.  They should have been more diligent, more aware, more alert, more prepared.  What more could these victims have done? 
 
Too often there is too little followup.  This is not to say that the NOPD can quickly catch every criminal after the act. BUT at the very least those of us who participate in Neighborhood Watch activity should be TOLD when this kind of activity is taking place in our neighborhoods.   On this event we have not heard (except from the victims) a peep. And that is sad. Sad and unacceptable.  IF we are all in this together then we are all in this together. Otherwise we are either a perp or a vic.
 

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Pothole Killer: Missing in Action????

 Below is a photo of the rare Pothole Killer taken on September 10, 2012
As I understand it the Pothole Killer covers specific parts of its natural range based on day of the week. District A - Monday, District B - Tuesday.....

As we have very large CRATERS in the 2800 block of Dante and as this photo was taken in the 2900 block of Dante, we were hopeful that since the environment is so rich in the 2900 & 2800 blocks of Dante that the Pothole Killer would return.

But alas it has not.  The Pothole Killer did not even kill the Pothole over which the photo shows it hovering.

So we are sending communications to the City which will include a link to this picture and see if we can entice the Pothole Killer back to NorthWest Carrollton.

IMAG2064

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Corps at it again.... what she said...

Source
http://www.nola.com/opinions/index.ssf/2012/09/be_transparent_on_riverfront_g.html

For thousands of New Orleanians, going to the Fly and the area Uptown along the levee (the "unofficial dog park") is a daily part of our lives and an integral part of what we love about living here.
 
Since your story broke about the Army Corps of Engineers closing this area for up to two years in order to raise the levee by 2 feet, many of us have been worried about what that will mean to the families, kids, ball players, nature lovers and animal lovers who use and love this beautiful little slice of New Orleans.
 
We respectfully ask that the corps make this process transparent and answer our questions: What will the project entail? Can and will they do the work in phases so that residents can continue to have at least limited access to sections, rather than fencing off the entire area at once?

Will they in fact be cutting down all the glorious old trees that line the low-lying area along the levee? What will the final transformation look like, and will it be returned to us to use and enjoy as before?

If the corps is not willing to answer these questions, we ask that our representatives demand a town hall style meeting.

We appreciate the need for greater flood protection, but given the corps' record of "one size fits all" solutions that often times has caused unnecessary and unintended harm, we ask that if there is a way of accomplishing the required goals while limiting the damage to the environment and residents' quality of life, that is the approach that should be taken.

Karen Howard
New Orleans

Friday, June 15, 2012

Save the Times Picayune.... Sign the Petition

Click  here to sign the petition to Save the Times Picayune.

A great city deserves a great newpaper
and we've had one of the best for too long to lose it now.

Add your name to list of those who want Newhouse to know that
New Orleans isn't like other cities
and that a newspaper with loyal readership deserves 7 day a week delivery.

This isn't a choice of newpaper or online.
It's a choice between quality news and drivel.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Rock 'n Bowl Tailgate party to support daily newspaper


Supporters of The Times-Picayune and its employees will gather in the parking lot at Rock 'n' Bowl in Mid-City Monday, June 4 at 4 p.m. "to send a message," according to organizer Anne Rolfes. "It is a gathering to deliver the news to [parent company] Newhouse that we want our paper every day."

The event, which Rolfes says will be a tailgate with live music, is to be held the day that T-P employees will begin to find out whether they will lose or keep their jobs.
The announcement of the rally said a coordinated cancellation plan — of both newspaper subscriptions and advertising — will be discussed as a possible way to get the attention of Advance Publications."

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Times Picayune and Voting with Dollars

Dear owners of the Times Picayune and The Lens.

It seems The Times Picayune thinks of me more as a product to be sold than as a consumer of information, that they are more interested in selling advertising than they are in providing news content.  In this business model reporters are simply overhead and the news I think I am buying is merely the delivery method for the advertising.

This is why print media are "failing".

I support NPR because I want the highest quality journalism I can find.  The decision the Times Picayune has made caused me to realize that I have the same option for Local News.  I want to support journalists who provide the product I really want and not simply a delivery method for advertising owned by people who are far, far from New Orleans.  So unless and until the TP changes their decision, I'm voting with my dollars.  The Lens will now get the same financial support from me that I formerly gave the Times Picayune. Oh and no more gift subscriptions for others either, so the TP isn't just loosing one delivery address. 

I still think that the Times Picayune is a great loss to New Orleans.  We have too many people who don't have the capacity to "consume" online news.   I still think that a tangible newspaper that can be waved about and pointed to and read without the need for electricity is valuable.   I also think that award winning journalism on disappearance of our coastline or recent reporting on the inner workings of our prison system is important to put in front of New Orleanians.  I want to continue to know what Jarvis DeBerry thinks.  I want to see who James Gill is poking with his rapier wit.  I want to see where Stephanie Bruno has walked this week.  I want to be aware of the offerings and the rhythms of the city, good and bad.  I want to be comforted in knowing that Bob Marshall and Mark Schleifstein are doing their best to keep us aware of the desperate state of our coastline.  I want to sample the opinions of others without having to wade through all the hateful trash that shows up in the comments on Nola.com.

But to the owners of the Times Picayune I am just a consumer of advertising. They don't value me as anything more than something to be offered to their real customers. And they don't value the journalists who provide the wrapper for this advertising and this is why they will eventually fail, in print and online.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Simple Pleasure and the Times Picayune


All week I work either in front of a computer screen or in collaboration with people who either want something from me and my team or who need to be told and cajoled to follow required corporate practices.

I know technology. My house has Wi-Fi and broadband. We have cable and Roku. We have smartphones and Facebook accounts and then there is Flickr and blogging. We're solidly in the technical age.

But we LIVE in New Orleans, in a city that has always been so far behind it's ahead. We, New Orleanians, relish the simple pleasures: A good cup of coffee or a Sazerac on our patios and porches. The sounds of the calliope or the whistles of trains. We compare the song cycle offerings of our neighborhood mockingbirds. (Ours does Blue Jays, Cardinals, Thrushes, 1 house alarm and 3 different car alarms and the beep-beep associated with locking and unlocking cars and every once in a while lets loose with a unique only in NorthWest Carrollton repartee. But I digress.) We talk about what's growing in our gardens and share plants and seeds and the bounty. We wander to the Art Market and Hollygrove Market & Farm for local offerings of Art and Food. We have a bowling alley that offers live music for crying out loud.

I know how to get to news using technology. But as a New Orleanian I don't want that to be the primary way I get my daily news. At the end of a work day I want to settle into the my patio or couch with a Sazerac or a glass of ice tea and flip the tangible, not virtual, pages of my daily city newspaper. I want to take a look at the silly horoscope and see how many stars the day I just lived had and reconcile that with what actually happened. If it's Friday I want to see what the Lagniappe says is happening in town so I can plan just how ambitious I'll be in taking part in the many festivities or where I can go to avoid them. Or on a weekend I want to spread the paper on the dining room table and wander from the kitchen with a cup of coffee and imbibe slowly but steadily though all the sections. I may do left over dishes in between a section or start a load of laundry or decide to water plants on the patio. But what is lovely and unique about this newsprint newspaper experience is that I while I can take my time and wander from thing to thing, I know when I'm done with all the sections so I feel sated and complete.

With a 75% penetration rate (am I the only one who thinks that's a awful way to talk about the people who pay for the privilege to read the paper?) I'm obviously not alone.

This forced move to digital is not the reason why the TP has so many (compared to other markets) faithful subscribers. What we are paying for is the simple pleasure of unplugging to get our news, to take it slow, to be contemplative, to see a well written story by someone who lives in and knows our city that we might not see or even want to experience if we were to limit ourselves to what we know and like online.

This forced move is all about profits for out of town owners who are greedy and out of touch with the people they serve and on whom their longer term success is dependent. New Orleans knows something about how to be unique and successful. It seems this is something that the Newhouse folks seem to be completely unable to grasp. So instead they are leaping over the digital cliff, leaving behind the town and the advertisers that are willing ready and able to continue to pay the bill for the simple pleasure of reading news in newsprint form.

Rant by Rightandwrong May 26, 2012 at 4:31AM

Day 3 of the war against Newhouse to Save the Picayune.
 
Please read the comment below originally posted on Nola.com.  It is deserving of it's own "page".

Rightandwrong May 26, 2012 at 4:31AM
Dear NOLA Media Group/nola.com/Times-Picayune:

... From a native New Orleanian, life long hard copy paper subscriber, and avid online reader:

1) For a digitally focused company, you have botched your first new product, the new nola.com web site/home page/portal beyond belief. Stop offering your critics navigation advice, your problems are much deeper than that. No one in the area likes it, it is dead on arrival. The old web site, even with its problems, was a thousand times better than this new offering.

2) Your new President/Publisher is finished. He just doesn't know it yet. a) He got scooped by two other products, both DIGITAL. One out of town (the New York Times!?!), and the other local (Gambit!?!). So much for timeliness. b) He botched the announcement. Really, you guys couldn't have done a better job than that? c) He completely mishandled the employees, and some management, and it was widely reported. New Orleans does not easily forget things like this. d) He ticked off Anne Milling. Yes, she is only one person, but a very smart person who also has a darn good feel for the city. For the moment, she is more upset with you than with FEMA or the Corps of Engineers. Think about that.

3) Yes, you guys are more reviled, at least for the moment, than either the Corps of Engineers or FEMA, and not just by locals. Have you paid attention to the reaction across the nation? Your corporate owners are fast becoming pariahs in the industry. Try putting that on your resume.

4) You have humiliated us. The largest city in the country without a daily newspaper? People begging the Baton Rouge Advocate (the Advocate!?!) to enter your market, our City, to give us the news? New Orleanians begging Tom Benson (!!!) to buy the paper? How outrageously ironic!

5) You have, or shortly will have, divided us into the digitally capable, and those who are not. More than just the haves, and have nots, you have seriously upset our senior citizens. You probably don't care, but often a community or society is judged by how it treats its older members. Try explaining to them what it is that you are about to do.

6) You should be ashamed. For all of the above.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Ho Zone...What she said

Times Picayune Opinion by Betty DeCell
Soon I will have been a resident/property owner in the French Quarter for 50 years. The joys of living in this beautiful, historic district are quite wonderful. I would not choose to live any other place in the world.
However, over the years I have observed the tensions between commerce and historic preservation.
Crime, we all agree, we do not want. Otherwise, our interests rarely coincide. Commercial interests think in terms of present day profits. Residents/property owners think in terms of maintaining buildings and preserving a quality of life that will make our neighborhood attractive to residents and tourists for generations to come.
In my opinion individuals devoted to preservation have saved what we have today. Commercial interests have profited from our efforts.
What we need now is enlightened planning for the future. Bigger and bigger crowds every weekend will destroy the French Quarter. Rather than promoting more and more and more tourists, we should be thinking of how we can spread them around to more of our interesting neighborhoods. We should be trying to resolve the problems of traffic, parking, noise, littering. I am very troubled on crowded weekends to see bumper-to- bumper traffic headed in all directions when we might have need for a fire truck or an EM vehicle.
No to the proposed hospitality district being considered by the Legislature.
Betty DeCell
New Orleans

And thanks to Karen Cater Peterson for working with J.P Morrell and others to modify the bill and stand behind representational as opposed to nominated government.

If anyone can explain why New Orleans decisions need to be taken to and managed out of Baton Rouge.... we're listening. It seems this happens when there is a power play in motion.


Thursday, March 15, 2012

Tulane Stadium .... Larger than the New Orleans Arena

This is not in NorthWest Carrollton BUT it could very well influence traffic in the area. Take a listen to the story on Fox8 

And if you are so inclined Sign the Petition opposing it.

Below is why the petition creators are concerned. Bold emphasis mine.
"Building a 30,000-seat stadium in the heart of a vibrant, historic residential neighborhood will have a significant adverse impact on the lives of homeowners and families throughout the Uptown community.
First, the stadium is too big for the proposed space. Tulane has built several buildings where the old stadium used to stand, making it necessary to locate the new stadium less than 40 feet from the back door of neighboring homes. It would literally cast a huge shadow on the surrounding neighborhoods and forever change the residential Uptown community.
Second, it will cause major disruptions throughout the year. Tulane promotes that it will keep the proposed stadium very busy with a wide variety of high-traffic events, ranging from college and High School football games to concerts and graduations. The traffic for these events will create a “box” around the area, making it nearly impossible to get in or out of our neighborhoods throughout the year. Garbage and food delivery trucks, buses and other activity before and after stadium events would add to the traffic and noise.
For context, the stadium would seat 30,000. That's 12,000 more fans than the New Orleans Arena, with none of the supporting parking, transportation infrastructure or retail amenities. It's worth noting that, even with ample surrounding parking, the Arena has traffic issues before and after events…and it’s in a business district equipped for high traffic levels.
We rebuilt our homes, our neighborhoods, our city and our lives after Katrina and we just want to protect our quality of life and honor the social contract we made with our city. We ask Tulane to be a good neighbor and find another location that better suits the stadium’s size and infrastructure needs. Don’t squeeze it into the middle of an established residential neighborhood."

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Coming to Palmer Park...

Really do we *need* this around all the time to remind us that we may need to leave our city?  I don't think so. But as long as someone else is paying for it....

See article below from the Times Picayune

Sculpture will dot 17 spots for hurricane bus pickup.
Michelle Krupa - Times Picayune - March 8, 2012

After city officials decided there was no safe place in New Orleans to shelter residents during a major hurricane, they created a bus system to shuttle evacuees from 17 neighborhood pickup spots to the Union Passenger Terminal, where residents could board charter buses to state-designated shelters.
wave-douglas-kornfeld.jpgView full size
'Wave' by Douglas Kornfeld will serve as an icon at mustering points where people will gather for transportation out of New Orleans in case of an emergency.
But when Hurricane Gustav blew through in 2008, many complained they didn't know where to catch the free ride.
Starting this year, finding the pickup locations, dubbed EvacuSpots, should be far less confounding thanks to the installation of identical, 12-foot sculptures at sites citywide.

The pieces, made of white stainless steel tubes, resemble a three-dimensional stick figure with its left arm raised above its O-shaped head as if hailing a cab or bus.
Dubbed "Wave" by Cambridge, Mass., artist Douglas Kornfeld, the sculpture recently was selected through a national competition sponsored by the Arts Council of New Orleans and the group Evacuteer.org, which recruits volunteers -- mostly young adults -- to help manage the public evacuation program before they leave town themselves.
"I wanted something that would gather your attention but wouldn't be scary," Kornfeld said by phone this week. "I know EvacuSpots is about the terrible event of evacuation in an emergency, but I also wanted it to have the spirit of New Orleans.
"Everyone is so friendly. Everyone is so smiley," he said. "You have this Southern gentility and hospitality, and I think a waving motion speaks to that."

'Meet me there, Mister'
Since winning the public art contest, Kornfeld added that he's been told his figure calls to mind a Carnival reveler reaching up for a strand of beads.
"I said, 'Oh, my God! We have to put a hook on the end of these so people can throw beads at it,'" he said.
The artist will earn $200,000 -- about three-quarters of it already in hand -- to complete 16 figures for installation at pickup points including Palmer Park in Carrollton and the Arthur Mondy Center in Algiers.
One "flagship figure," rising 18 feet into the air, also is expected to be erected in "a very prominent location," though the site hasn't been chosen yet, he said.
The Arts Council will seek approval from the city's Design Advisory and Planning Advisory committees before installing the sculptures, said Morgana King, the organization's director of public art.

Evacuteer founder Robert Fogarty, who has nicknamed Kornfeld's figure the "Meet me there, Mister," hatched the public art concept as a way to spread the word about the City-Assisted Evacuation Plan.

"How do we a prepare a city for something that doesn't enter your consciousness every day and typically not until it is an immediate threat?" he said recently in an email.

'We're signed out'
By positioning the sculptures near existing bus stops that double as evacuation pickup points, Fogarty hopes those who may need the service will have seen the sculptures hundreds of times before the next hurricane.
But why not just enlarge or brighten the rectangular signs that currently designate the evacuation pick-up spots?
"We're signed out, as society goes," Fogarty said. "These 17 pickup points are too important to get lost in our collective clutter.
"People may think the waving guys are beautiful, and other may think they're ugly," he said. "In either scenario, they at least remember where it was -- and that's what matters."

For now, Fogarty is focused on raising the final $50,000 to complete the project.
The Arts Council's Percent for Art Program, which under city law receives 1 percent of eligible capital bonds sold by the city, has committed $100,000 to the effort, with the remaining money coming from the local architecture firm of Eskew+Dumez+Ripple and some 500 online donors.
Kornfeld said he will begin work in coming weeks.
"I think once we get going, that last piece of the puzzle will fall into place."
At least a few sculptures are expected to be in place by the June 1 start of hurricane season, organizers said.

Storm-proofed sculptures
Massive machines that cut and bend metal will craft the pieces, Kornfeld said, adding that he hopes to contract with a fabricator in the New Orleans area "to keep the money in the community."
As for their height and girth, Kornfeld said he's not worried that his pieces will founder in the very hurricanes they aim to help residents escape.
"There will be a gigantic piece of concrete underground that will be supporting this," he said. "These will not be susceptible to hurricane winds. These will be one of the last things standing."
"Wave" becomes the latest in a long series of public art projects in Kornfeld's portfolio.
Among them is a 2006 installation outside the St. Petersburg Judicial Center in St. Petersburg, Fla. Titled "Face the Jury," it comprises 13 oversize red steel chairs scattered over a half-acre site, a dozen that represent the diverse members of a jury and one for the defendant.
Another, the 2010 "Who are You?" exhibit at the Indiana State University Art Gallery, features giant versions of the international symbol for male painted on the walls surrounding urinals. A nearby ladies' room features vinyl decals of the iconic female symbol on vanity mirrors.
Michelle Krupa can be reached at mkrupa@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3312.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

New Traffic Cameras


11 new locations
"Almost all new cameras are in school zones
The threshold for receiving a ticket during school hours in a school zone will remain 26 mph.
map-Traffic cameras-TP-March-2012

"City officials also plan to bump up by 10 mph the speed limit along Jackson Avenue between Magazine Street and St. Charles Avenue, where the city's second-busiest camera snared roughly 25,000 motorists last year. The camera accounted for about one-tenth of the camera-generated tickets issued by the city last year.
The new speed limit of 35 mph -- which was previously in place on the divided portion of Jackson before neighbors had it lowered -- will match that of most other divided streets in the city."
The is change above is appropriate. Consistency is important and this camera was nothing more than a speed trap.

BUT this is NOT...
"The administration plans to boost the threshold for receiving a ticket by 4 mph, except during school hours, meaning a driver has to be going at least 10 mph over the speed limit to trigger the camera."
The cameras on Carrollton at Earhart and I-10 have made a positive difference in speed and safety at these locations.  Changing the upper limit will allow folks to start speeding again. Leave it where it is. This makes up for the fact that over time people learn and change their behavoirs.
As the article says:
"Figures supplied by the city show that speeding violations have declined by more than 90 percent at most locations where cameras were installed in 2008."
"The new threshold for speeding violations will decrease the number of tickets the city issues, though officials could not provide exact data on how precipitous the drop will be. But data collected in traffic studies for the 11 new cameras suggest that roughly two-thirds of speeders are going between 6 mph and 10 mph over the posted limit." 
If the city is going to generate revenue why NOT have it be for breaking the law?

The rules on Paying Tickets are going to change too.
"Almost two-thirds of the people who receive camera-generated tickets from the city pay their fines, the remaining one-third don't, creating resentment among the compliant payers."
"Officials are also promising to target more aggressively the roughly one-third of ticket recipients who don't pay, ..."
"The city will first send dunning letters, and then sue, to collect the debts of all non-payers who owe at least $500 in speeding fines, he said. That group, as of September, numbered at least 16,000."

So LOOK for those PHOTO ENFORCED Signs and SLOW DOWN!!!

"The free ride enjoyed by city employees who rack up fines in city cars is also over, Kopplin said. In the future, city employees' tickets may be waived only when the employee is responding to an emergency, Kopplin said. Those who don't pay fines will face discipline."

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Don't just blame the victim... find the root cause

New Orleans murder rate is not just an issue of "bad" people with "bad" manners killing each other.
There is something under this driving the action.

Fear and murder is being used as a weapon on our culture society and the question should be: Who is benefiting??

The NOPD can't just keep blaming the victims. Yes it is true that no stone can be left unturned as NOPD works to solve murders and this includes the victim's history. BUT there has to be more to the murder rate. And a PR policy that appears blames the victim won't get to root cause for the increase in New Orleans murder rate.

Consider signing the petition:
https://www.change.org/petitions/city-of-new-orleans-end-the-practice-and-policy-of-releasing-homicide-victims-arrest-records