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Iˈtərnitē is an ARPG group centered around your character, a now-deceased individual, trying to figure out how to traverse the mysterious, labyrinth-esque setting they have woken up in. When the receptionist calls you over, she seems all too eager to tell you about three mysterious bosses in the room next door. She promises you they are here to help you to attain your goal, but her cryptic speech says otherwise.Sounds fun enough. Obviously horror themed stories dip into some grim territory, but as long as everything is handled respectfully, the game seemed like it would be harmless.
Being a world that connects the living and the dead, the Waiting Room houses souls who have yet or cannot, move on. Plainly put, it is a hub for souls waiting for judgment. Yet, as previously mentioned, some souls have found themselves unable to move on from the Waiting Room for many years. Some are unsure as to why while others are unable due to the nature of their deaths.
All you know is that having died you now must choose a boss to follow and traverse The Waiting Room, a seemingly endless office building full of various doors with destinations unknown. However, some are locked and closely guarded, preventing you from heading through them-- just yet. What could lie beyond these doors? Can you and your newfound friends figure out the Waiting Room’s secrets? Or will you be stuck here for the rest of your undead life?
A boss of the Waiting Room. Having died in 1720 in New Orleans, Baptiste was the victim of a racially fueled hate crime in which he was beaten to death. His charm and the diligence put forth with his work allowed him to move quickly up the ranks in the Waiting Room.Which is...questionable, but there are plenty of well-done fictional characters who have been the victims of hate crimes. Allegedly. I can’t name any, but I’m willing to believe that it’s possible. (Please don’t start sending me examples).
Baptiste was a "medicine man" and slavery just ended but still People didn't like the change. Baptiste being a free cocky man, started to elope with a governors daughter, at a humble home.This was from August 6 and was enough to upset some of the players. And then by August 15 Mo0gs had backtracked.
Baptiste was hanged at the governors home. They tossed his body in a unmarked grave along with his "satanic" practices and works.
They say, the governor locked his daughter away because she was corrupted
I can change Baptiste's background if it offends anyone :) I don't mind!! but I just wanna say he wasnt lynched at all! I vaguely wrote about his background but I rather focus on his future now being a boss!For the record...a black man being hung due to having a relationship with a white woman is a textbook lynching. So regardless of your take on the rest of this, saying he wasn’t lynched after describing a lynching is a blatant lie.
I'm happy to work with y'all
NOLA Public Schools (NOLA-PS) announced the cancellation of all distance learning and in-person classes for Friday, Oct. 30, due to ongoing power outages across New Orleans and to give our students, families, teachers and staff time to assess the aftermath of Hurricane Zeta.
This decision includes the closure of NOLA-PS central offices and the cancellation of food services for families on Friday as well.
Superintendent Dr. Henderson Lewis, Jr. and his team are working with schools to determine the conditions of all facilities and plan any necessary recovery efforts.
The NOLA-PS team will consider the progress of Entergy to restore power, the needs of our school community, and the availability of city services to guide the appropriate timeline for a concerted return to in-person and distance learning for students at all grade levels. Schools and families can expect an update Sunday, Nov. 1, regarding the plan for classes next week.
Due to area power outages caused by Hurricane Zeta, all Jefferson Parish public schools and administration buildings will be closed tomorrow, Friday, October 30. All school and district activities and events are cancelled.
All St. Tammany Parish Public Schools and offices will remain closed Friday, Oct. 30 due to storm damage and power outages in our community. They plan to reopen schools Monday if electricity is restored and it is safe to do so. The district is continuing to work in close coordination with emergency preparedness officials to make decisions about closures. Updates and information will be provided, if needed, through social media, robocall, and app notification.
With wide-spread power outages throughout our parish, St. Bernard Parish public schools will remain closed tomorrow, Friday, October 30. The school system will remain in close contact with Entergy and parish government officials over the weekend and will provide an update regarding schools reopening by Sunday afternoon.
Belle Chasse Academy will be closed on Friday.
Due to widespread power outages across the district, all schools and offices of the Lafourche Parish School Board will remain closed tomorrow, Friday, October 30, 2020. All virtual learning will be canceled as well.
The tl;dr infographic is available here. Can't read it? If you haven't opened your fridge or freezer since the power went out: 4 Hours in the fridge; 24 hours in a half filled freezer and 48 hours in a full filled freezer. Those are your time frames per the CDC.
- Never taste food to determine if it is safe to eat. When in doubt, throw it out.
- Throw out perishable food in your refrigerator (meat, fish, cut fruits and vegetables, eggs, milk, and leftovers) after 4 hours without power or a cold source like dry ice. Throw out any food with an unusual odor, color, or texture.
- Check temperatures of food kept in coolers or your refrigerator with an added cold source. Throw out food above 40°
- If you have an appliance thermometer in your freezer, check to see if it is still at 40 °F or below.
- You can safely refreeze or cook thawed frozen food that still contains ice crystals or is at 40 °F or below.
As of 10/29 @ 12pm, here if your official notice from the SWBNO:
"Water purification operations were not interrupted and water pressure did not drop below 20psi. Therefore, your water is safe to drink."
The SWBNO is encouraging individuals to use less water leaving our homes.
St. Tammany is currently under a boil water advisory for 30 neighborhoods.
Officials haven't declared any mandatory evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Jefferson Parish
St. Bernard Parish
- Mandatory evacuation for campers, RVs and boats in Grand Isle starting at 11 a.m. Monday.
- A mandatory evacuation for the town of Jean Lafitte, Lower Lafitte, Crown Point and Barataria starting at 6am on Wednesday.
Officials haven't declared any mandatory evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Plaquemines Parish
Officials haven't declared any mandatory evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.St. Tammany Parish
Officials haven't declared any mandatory evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Terrebone Parish
Due to the potential of 2-4 feet of storm surge outside of the Terrebonne Levee and Conservation District Morganza to the Gulf Levee System and the coastal areas of Terrebonne Parish by Hurricane Delta, Parish President Gordon Dove and Terrebonne Parish Sheriff Tim Soignet are calling for a mandatory evacuation of Zone 1 of Terrebonne Parish, effective at 10 a.m. Starting 10/28, ALL residents living in manufactured homes in Zone 2, which includes the communities of Lower Dularge, Dulac, Chauvin, Montegut and Pointe Aux Chene are under a mandatory evacuation.Voluntary Evacuations (As of 10/28):
Voluntary evacuation for areas outside levees that include Venetian Isles, Lake Catherine and Irish Bayou starting at 6 p.m. Tuesday.Jefferson Parish
St. Bernard ParishA voluntary evacuation is in effect for the town of Jean Lafitte, Lower Lafitte, Crown Point and Barataria and will go into effect at 4pm on Tuesday.This has become a mandatory evacuation.
Officials haven't declared any voluntary evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Plaquemines Parish
Effective 8 a.m., Wednesday, October 28, 2020 Voluntary Evacuation will be ordered for the following areas:St. Tammany Parish
- The entire East Bank of Plaquemines Parish
- West Bank of Plaquemines Parish from Phillips 66 Alliance Refinery to Venice.
Officials haven't declared any voluntary evacuations in this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Terrebone Parish
A voluntary evacuation of ONLY the Pointe-aux-Chenes area of Zone 2 effective at 10 a.m.
Jefferson Parish
- Public Schools will do virtual learning Wednesday and Thursday.
- Catholic Schools will do virtual learning Wednesday.
- University of Holy Cross (Closed Wednesday, TBA Thursday)
- University of New Orleans (All classes will be online starting Wednesday)
- St. Katharine Drexel Prep will do virtual learning Wednesday
- SUNO will do virtual learning Wednesday
- Delgado closed Wednesday no virtual learning either (whoa!)
- Loyola will do virtual classes Wednesday. Thursday TBD.
- NOCCA will close at 1 pm Wednesday, reopen at 1 pm Thursday
- St. Katharine Drexel Prep will do virtual learning Wednesday
St. Bernard Parish
- Jefferson Parish schools to do virtual learning Wednesday, Thursday classes are cancelled.
- Catholic schools will do virtual learning Wednesday
- Concordia Lutheran (Closed Wednesday)
- Ridgewood Prep closed Wednesday
Plaquemines Parish
- St. Bernard Parish public schools will do virtual learning on Wednesday
- Nunez Community College will do virtual learning Wednesday
St. Tammany Parish
- Plaquemines Parish public schools will do virtual learning until further notice
- St. Tammany Parish public schools will be closed Wednesday (Rare Storm Day!)
- Northshore Technical Community College will do virtual learning Wednesday
- St. Margaret Mary Catholic will conduct virtual learning Wednesday
In preparation for expected impacts of Hurricane Zeta, the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority will suspend all bus, streetcar, and ferry services beginning at noon on Wednesday, October 28th. All transit operations will remain suspended until further notice and until it is deemed safe for service to resume.
In partnership with the New Orleans City Council, the City of New Orleans will provide sandbags on Tuesday, Oct. 27 from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. (or until supplies last) at the following locations:Jefferson Parish
- Arthur Monday Center, 1111 Newton St.
- Dryades YMCA, 2220 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd.
- Saint Maria Goretti Church, 7300 Crowder Blvd.
- NOFD Engine 8, Desire and Law Streets
Officials haven't provided any update for this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.St. Bernard Parish
Officials haven't provided any update for this parish yet. Stay tuned for updates.Plaquemines Parish
Starting today, October 27, 2020, at 12 PM Noon parish-wide sandbag locations will be open. See below for sandbag locations. Residents should bring their own shovels.10 bags max. Bags will be provided. :St. Tammany Parish
- Plaquemines Parish Government Complex, PROWM Building (333 F. Edward Hebert Blvd, Belle Chasse, LA 70037)
- Port Sulphur YMCA, 278 Civic Drive, Port Sulphur, LA 70083
- Buras YMCA, 36342 Hwy 11, Buras, LA 70041
- Boothville Area across from Boothville-Venice Elementary School
- Davant Community Center, 15577 Hwy 15, Braithwaite, LA 70040
- Braithwaite Auditorium, 1253 LA-39, Braithwaite, LA 70040
Sandbags will be available at six locations on Tuesday, Oct. 27 from 7:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. People are asked to bring their own shovels. There will be help for the elderly or infirmed.
- St. Tammany Government- Building - 21410 Koop Dr., Mandeville
- Airport Road Barn - 34783 Grantham College Rd, Slidell, La
- The Old Levee District Site - 61134 Military Road (Hwy 190) Slidell, La.
- Fritchie Barn - 63119 Highway 1090 in Pearl River
- Keller Barn - 63131 Fish Hatchery Road, Lacombe
- Covington Barn - 1305 N. Florida Street, Covington
University | Update | Sources |
---|---|---|
Grambling State | Monitoring | 1 |
Louisiana Tech | Monitoring | 2 |
LSU | Monitoring | 3 |
LSU Alexandria | Online on Friday | 15 |
McNeese State | Closed scheduled to reopen on Monday 10/12/20 | 4 |
Nicholls State | Monitoring | 5 |
Tulane | Monitoring | 6 |
South Louisiana Community College | Classes after noon on Thursday move to online. Classes canceled Friday. | 18 |
Southeastern Louisiana | Monitoring | 7 |
Southern University | Classes after noon on Thursday move to online. Classes canceled Friday. | 8, 17 |
UL Lafayette | Classes after noon on Thursday move to online. Classes canceled Friday. | 9, 16 |
New Orleans | Monitoring | 10 |
Dillard University | Monitoring | 11 |
University of Holy Cross | Monitoring | 12 |
Loyola University New Orleans | Monitoring | 13 |
Xavier University Louisiana | Monitoring | 14 |
Date | Time | Home Team | Away Team | Game Location | Update |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10/8 | 7:30 PM ET | Houston | Tulane | Houston, TX | |
10/10 | Noon | Liberty | ULM | Lynchburg, VA | |
Louisiana | Coastal Carolina | Lafayette, LA | Date and time changed. Source | ||
10/10 | 4:00 PM ET | Auburn | Arkansas | Auburn, AL | |
Southern Miss | FAU | Hattiesburg, MS | Postponed. Source | ||
10/10 | Ole Miss | Alabama | Oxford, MS | Pushed back to 6:30 PM ET Source | |
10/10 | 7:30 PM ET | Louisiana Tech | UTEP | Ruston, LA | |
10/10 | 7:30 PM ET | Kentucky | Mississippi State | Lexintgon, KY | |
10/10 | Time and location changed. Source |
In preparation for expected impacts of Hurricane Sally to the Gulf Coast region, the New Orleans Regional Transit Authority will suspend all bus and streetcar service beginning at noon on Monday, September 14th. Ferry services will be suspended after normal operations on Sunday, September 13. Services will remain suspended until further notice.
LINKS TO WATCH submitted by WizardMama to Coronaviruslouisiana [link] [comments]
A summary of the press conference will be transcribed live when the press conference begins. ________________ PRE-CONFERENCE QUESTION: What do you think will be announced during today's conference? ________________ SummaryNOTE: The summary of today's conference is transcribed LIVE. The summary may contain spelling and grammatical errors which until it is able to be corrected once the conference concludes.Gov John Bel Edwards
QuestionsWill bars remain closed to indoor service without foodservice?Yes. Are we ready to open schools? From our perspective, we are still looking at a day-by-day basis. We still are awaiting CDC guidance on what should be done on a national level for schools. If we see we are starting to have cases decrease and see measures we put in place a week ago begin to have an effect we will act. It is too early to have a recommendation but we look at the data. Do you know when the recommendation will come with 2 weeks before school is open? The recommendation on when to move forward with schools with be had with the governor, department of education, and local leaders. But with the work we've done over the past couple of months with school leadership and the dept. of education to we have formulated a plan so we know what plans to have in place [for each phase we now need to know] what is the timing schools open. Local leadership is also considering that data as well. We want to makes sure that we know what school will look like depending on Phase [we are at and that that plan is ready to be triggered] depending on what is going on at that time. Previously we were informed that some regions were considering canceling non-essential procedures. What does that look like now? Hospital leadership is dialing in capacity depending on what they are seeing in their areas. We are seeing some hospitals defer those surgeries if they aren’t too necessary and try to reduce the elective procedures. Keep in mind another elective visit is seeing your doctor for your blood pressure reading, so if doctor can do that procedure in their office as opposed to a hospital, and they have the capacity to do so, we want people to get their regular maintenance care. Someone who gets outpatient care for their heart failure is not going to need to get a surgical bed or ICU bed. So the decision is left up the hospitals on an individual basis Yes, hospital leadership are making those types of decisions with our support. We hear problems with the ICU units is a lack of nurses and not so much ICU beds, will the state try to boost the staffing with out of the region nurses? If there is any sort of benefit to being in the position we are in now is that we have done this before. We have a variety of of tools we are able to reactivate. We can bring in staffing contracts from other parts of the country. We know that neighboring states will be unable to shift their staff because they are also being affected by a large caseload. A lot of schools are starting in a hybrid way partially virtual partially in school. DO you support that decision by the teachers or should in-person education be delayed for little longer We know this will be a challenging school year regardless. We do not want to do anything that will make it more challenging than it already is. Making the switch from distance to in person and visa versus is not an easy one to make. We have been having broad-ranging discussions to make sure schools are doing parallel contingency planning so no matter what the situation is in their region they can provide some accommodations to students. LDH does not have a switch that we dictate whether schools start or not. We provide information to the governor who provides that information to local leadership. What is the update on the convention center in New Orleans? Do you plan on using it? Or do you plan to do other similar sites across the state We still have capacity but I am not sure how much. We are looking at a variety of different opportunities. Keep in mind those places are to reduce stress on the hospitals when they are reaching capacity and less so for new acute patients. If hospitals are seeing a lot of new patients but not seeing compression issues we need to make sure they have the staff to take care of those types of cases vs medical monitoring which are people who have stayed in the hospital for longer [and the typical patients in the convention center]. * Encourages the public to donate their plasma if they have had COVID19. - Still have significant capacity at the medical monitoring location if that needs to be duplicated somewhere else depends on what is going on in the ground in that particular location. Hearing different situations in testing across the state. Different subs? Self swabbing? Why is there not a uniform procedure on how the tests are done? Can accuracy be trusted? Even if the swab is slightly different in diameter everything has been validated. When we are talking about having to do large volume tests you may need to use different swab sizes at different locations. As for timing, we are using a uniform procedure, so you have a slightly different experience depending on each person you are with, but the protocol is uniform, and the place tests are being tested is uniform as well. Schools are planning to open for in-person education in a couple of weeks to a month, is this safe for them to open? There is not an easy answer to that. When we look at kids we believe they are at lower risk for poor outcomes from COVID. We are seeing a surge in cases in the young age group but not as many deaths as we saw with the older age group. However, we are seeing an increase in the number of people in the young age group going to the hospital. We do not want to see more kids have health risks due to exposure to COVID. The larger risk is for the teachers and who the kids return home to. How do we operate in a way the reduces the likelihood that if a student has COVID they would be less likely to spread it to others? Medically there is no easy way answer to say yes you have school, no you don't have school... what we can say is that education is critical and we need to be able to do this work in person or virtual. From a public health standpoint, we give advice on how to reduce the risk to the public as much as possible. Governor John Bel Edwards
Conclusion: - The virus is the enemy we are not each other's enemy. QuestionsAG Landry and you have great differences. Is he still participated int eh untied command group meetingsHe is not to my knowledge. There is an individual from the AGS office who gets the opportunity to brief or listen to the daily update and facts, but he has not personally participated in my knowledge. He may be listening, but he has not participated. As cases continue to surge with no indication they are going down is it ethical that we are seeing schools still consider virtual options as we see cases hover where they are Yes, as they try to get the mix right with how many they want on-campus vs how many they want to do distance learning or the hybrid situation where they do some by virtual or some by distance, and when to start. Do we have all of these school districts working extremely hard to follow the guidelines and they are going to make decisions that are in their best interest. We will work with them and source them the best we can, whether it is PPE or the information they seek. This is a very difficult task they have. Our school districts are learning from one another, as well as other states, to get kids back safely into the classrooms. You have to strike the right balance between public health and the education of our kids. That is what we are trying to do, using science and the best information we can get from the CDC. We continue to be impressed with how school districts are doing this. As you see cases rising you will see some districts choose to start virtually and that is the flexibility they all have. So you have no expectation to make a statewide decision? No, the BESE board came up with guidelines based on whatever Phase we are in at any given time. So there is a broad range of contingencies there that inform such thing like how many kids can be on the bus to how many kids can be in a classroom room, etc. So we will make decisions in the Governor's office based on the gating criteria we have been asked to look at. We will make the announcement as early as we can. Over the next week, I plan to meet with a variety of stakeholders in our school systems to makes sure I receive their feedback and hear their concerns. This is not an easy situation for any part of the state of Louisiana. We're in Phase 2 until a couple of days before we start... should schools prepare as if we will be in Phase 2? Schools should prepare to be in whatever Phase we could be in. It will be dependent on the data we have between now and then, but if people follow the mitigation protocols we will bend the curve again. But I cannot tell you what things will look like on a certain date. This is why schools came up with guidelines to deal with each Phase of reopening. If I was a school leader I would put most of the concerted effort, considering we are currently in Phase 2 to start in Phase 2, but I cannot guarantee we will be in Phase 2. It is my hope and expectation that we do not go backward, but we will do what is necessary to make sure we do not exceed the capacity of our hospitals. Recommendations by the WH request closing gyms, reduce gatherings, etc. Now that you have seen hose recommendations why not tighten up regulations to be aligned with that the WH is recommending The biggest part of the recommendations were things I put in place before the White House Taskforce officially revised the guidelines. Although, at the time, they were telling us to do the mask mandates and close the bars. We are looking to get further clarification on the occupancy size of restaurants and other locations. For example, 25% in occupancy vs 50%. We currently say it up to 50% but you have to be able to able to socially distance with those that are not apart of our household. So we believe the modeling that says 25% is really based on the ability to socially distance, which is already part of our current restriction at 50%. So we do not feel the need to change from 50% to 25% because we are already requiring restaurants to makes sure people are adequately socially distanced at 50%. So unless we get further information to change from 50% to 25% we will not because we already require restaurants to make sure people are already socially distanced. Contact tracing we have done does not show significant relation to gyms causing outbreaks, unlike bars which were the number one venue where outbreaks occurred. This is true even though bars were closed down in Phase 1 but in Phase 2, when they opened, they were the driving force behind the most cases we see we look at outbreak locations. If we continue to learn anything that suggest we need to take additional measures, or that we can ease restrictions on certain venues, we will do that. We are working hard to use the data and guidelines to strike the right balance here in Louisiana. In terms of additional healthcare facilities is that something you are considering doing in other parts of the state? Everything is under consideration, but we would have tremendous difficulty staffing new facilities that are constructed that are created outside the existing footprint of our hospitals. So that is not our first effort. One of the things I'm happy we decided months ago is that hospitals around the state created additional permanent capacity for surge beds. It greatly exceeds what was previously available. I think it's about 350 beds around the state of Louisiana that are in existence today that didn't exist before. At LCMC they have a couple of hundred beds that are not ICU beds but can be quickly transitioned to beds. But we still need to figure out the staffing, which is easier to do within an existing hospital footprint. We may need to set up the hospital that was previously set up in Region 2 by the Navy to figure out what kind of staffing we can get from existing hospitals. It is much easier to surge in an existing hospital when staffing is the challenge. BESE recommends that Grade 3 and above should wear masks as much as possible does that strike the right balance between an outright mandate and basically recommendation that kids wear masks? It does because I view it as a mandate and I believe it is recommended for children younger than that to do it but without a mandate. Obviously the younger the child is the more difficult it is to have them wear a mask appropriately. Anecdotally, I was watching a North Carolina Kindergarten teacher explain on TV that she was afraid children would not be able to wear a mask but after she went through it one time with the children, they did it, and it hasn't been a problem. So, we will see. When you look at the guidance from BESE it is exactly right. I interpret it as a mandate for those that do not have a health condition that prevents the individuals form wearing a mask. Closing remarks - I have faith that we can flatten the curve. WE have done it before, we can do it again. This depends on EVERYONE doing their part. - Wear a mask. Wash your hands often. Practice physical distancing. Stay home when you are sick. - Please join us tomorrow for prayer and lunch fast. - Next press conference Thursday at 2:30 PM |
NEW ORLEANS — It's an announcement that has been months in the making from City Hall. "I kinda visualize a faucet. This is our opportunity, we are going to turn the faucet on. But not high stream. And as the state has started reopening, New Orleans has for Phase 1 and 2 reopened later than the rest of the state. Chiba — Oak Street’s Chiba has permanently closed after eight years as one of New Orleans’s top spots for sushi. The sleek and spacious restaurant debuted in 2012, and despite some unnecessary airs, the sushi was good — at a time when New Orleans was somewhat lacking in options. Drinks to go has long been a fixture of New Orleans bar culture. Staff photo by Ian McNulty . But others still plan to remain closed until they can at least seat some patrons. That includes Snake Above: Two years ago, New Orleans had still not reopened its public schools. Children here go to charter schools, private schools, or in a few extreme cases, they stay home and live a street life. Organizations like Teach America have provided teachers for our charter schools. This school in Uptown, on Leonides street, shows six years of neglect. As New Orleans reopens, tourists and residents are hesitant to return - The Washington Post. The streets of the French Quarter remained eerily quiet on Day One of the city’s reopening. Skip to New Orleans was able to move to its Phase 1 reopening on Saturday, opening restaurants, bars and many other businesses to reopen in a limited capacity. KEY BACKGROUND Phase 2 of reopening in New Orleans will mean restaurants and other businesses that had been open at 25% capacity in Phase 1 can bump that up to 50%, as long as social distancing is maintained Last Updated: Friday, January 29, 2021 1:43 PM. On January 29, 2021, New Orleans will enter into a Modified Phase Two of its reopening plan. The importance of following the city and statewide rules during this time cannot be overstated. Wearing a mask or face covering is mandatory statewide when out in public. Spas and tattoo and massage parlors will also remain closed. Gyms can reopen in New Orleans, but fitness classes are not allowed. Gym locker rooms, showers and saunas also will remain closed
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Abandoned: New Orleans #abandoned #neworleans #hurricane #katrina Follow us on our other Social Media! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheStrangestofficia... In today's video we check out the reopening of LEGOLAND Florida to see all of the new health and safety measures that has been put in place after the pandemi... State police say Interstate 12 in both directions near the Goodbee community in St. Tammany Parish has been reopened after nearly six hours closed due to an ammonia leak at the Diversified Foods ... Councilman Joseph Giarrusso of New Orleans joins Cheddar's Hena Doba to talk about the city partially reopening businesses over the weekend. Subscribe to Cheddar Live on YouTube: https://chdr.tv ... Freedia and katey red in the third ward of new orleans the first club that reopened in new orleans was audience like at shows outside of new orleans. The orleans bowling center - the orleans hotel ... The theater was the first in New Orleans to reopen after 2005's Hurricane Katrina, when Rene Brunet threw open its doors and offered free movies to first-responders for several months. Sylvia Scioneaux-Richard, president of the East New Orleans Neighborhood Advisory Commission, shares her thoughts at a press conference preceding a tour of t...
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