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Sep
03

As bloggers and Twitters have noted, James O’Byrne’s signed editorial in The Times-Picayune, “Next time, we won’t leave,” ain’t where it used to be on the paper’s Web site, for whatever reason.

For the moment, it can be read here, or on page B-7 on the dead-tree edition. (If it disappears again, we saved a copy.)

A sample of O’Byrne:

News flash: We know it’s dangerous to live here. We accept the possibility of no gas, no power, no readily available food. We’re Katrina survivors. We’ll figure it out.

But if the enduring image of Gustav is a U.S. soldier with an M-16 denying a citizen the right to return to his home, then you can pretty much write off the next “mandatory” evacuation. Leaving your home in advance of a storm is an extraordinarily stressful, difficult, traumatic and expensive proposition. The one thing that must be honored is that people must be allowed to return to their homes as soon as humanly possible.

As a journalist, I spent the past two days driving around reporting on the storm. And by Tuesday afternoon, this city was as safe as it needed to be. Indeed, all those tree branches and debris would be picked up and stacked neatly on the curb by lunchtime on Wednesday if people had been allowed to come home.

I fully appreciate the risks of letting my family stay. But I have to weigh that risk against the alternate risks, of getting trapped in an endless evacuation traffic jam, of being stranded on a highway far from help, of not being able to return in a timely manner, to secure our property and come back to as much of a normal life as possible.

New Orleans is my home. I love it, and I choose to keep living here. But if you are a public official who wants me to leave for the next storm, then you have to hear what I am telling you. It’s time to rewrite the contract.


Comments:
Mark on September 3rd, 2008 at 11:14 am #

as someone who didn’t evacuate and stayed in New orleans, all i can say is that no one pointed an M16 at you and *made* you evacuate, you could have been brave, like me, and stayed, but no, you CHOOSE to evacuate. Oh, you didn’t realize you were putting your fate in Nagin’s hands, by evacuating?…next time, read the fine print

[...] editorial has been taken down by the Picayune, but Gambit Weekly’s Blog of New Orleans has an [...]

New Orleans Ladder on September 4th, 2008 at 6:53 am #

http://blog.nola.com/editorials/2008/09/next_time_we_wont_leave.html

This editorial is still up in the same place where we hung it on the Ladder on Sept 2nd. What are you talking about?

New Orleans Ladder on September 4th, 2008 at 7:58 am #

Mmmmm Coffee finally.
OK, that article was not “buried” but moved over to “editorial” and it is still where we found it yesterday (not the 2nd:)…coffee mmmmm…

I had trouble keeping up with the pace of news they were rolling over at nola.com.
They did a fine job of staying on the fast news and pictures of the scene.

I lost track of y’all around the 31st, but Hat Tip to you too, as I fang back and see the posts.

It got pretty hairy there for a bit and will remain a test for the media as well. We must do even better the next time.

All in all I thought you all did great! You all rocked and rolled thank you very much.

Editilla

Polimom Says » Nagin sets up the next disaster on September 4th, 2008 at 8:58 am #

[...] the hurricane season is fully underway. But I bet New Orleanians won’t be evacuating on such a large scale the next [...]

Kevin Allman on September 4th, 2008 at 9:18 am #

“This editorial is still up in the same place where we hung it on the Ladder on Sept 2nd. What are you talking about?”

As we noted (and several other bloggers did), the O’Byrne editorial disappeared from the T-P site for the morning, and wasn’t even available by search. By afternoon it had returned and was featured on the front page of nola.com.

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