The $20 million garbage plan, a COVID drug wanes and the secret of a Tulane dorm room
By Drew Broach | Deputy metro editor THE LONG HAUL: In the biggest attempt yet to end New Orleans' garbage crisis, Mayor LaToya Cantrell says she's contracted with four emergency waste haulers to put more collection trucks on the street immediately and speed trips to the dump. The $20 million plan includes more than 20 additional garbage trucks and 35 work crews using dump trucks and front-end loaders to pick up waste. In a related bit of good news, the City Council suspended the $24 monthly sanitation fee that appears on Sewerage and Water Board bills. SUPPLY AND DEMAND: Louisiana’s supply of monoclonal antibody treatments, a drug the state has used to try to keep COVID-19 patients from becoming critically ill, has dropped by about 30% as demand rises in other states struggling with the delta variant. NOTES FROM THE PAST: At Tulane University - specifically in Monroe Hall's Room 921 - there's a cute custom of the dormitory room resident writing a tiny note and hiding it in a hole in the wall for future residents to find. Here's how it started and how long it's been going on. Thanks for starting your day with us. Check out the rest of our coverage on NOLA.com. D.B. |
|
|
|
| In the most sweeping measure yet aimed at ending New Orleans' trash crisis, Mayor LaToya Cantrell on Thursday said the city had hired four … Read more |
|
| The New Orleans City Council on Thursday passed a one-time suspension of monthly sanitation fees after weeks-long gaps in solid waste colle… Read more |
|
|
|
|
|
|
---|
| Louisiana’s supply of monoclonal antibody treatments, a drug the state has relied on heavily to try and keep COVID-19 patients from becoming critically ill, has dropped by roughly 30% as demand rises in other states struggling with the delta variant, according to public health officials. Read more |
|
|
|
|
|
|
---|
| This is a story about notes written by Tulane University freshmen on small scraps of paper. The notes were stuffed in a tiny hole, in the wall of a dorm room, where somebody might find them, or might not. They were simple messages from one newcomer to another. Nothing terribly profound, really. But in a world of instantaneous, not-always-encouraging communication, the tiny notes seem somehow precious. Read more |
|
|
|
|
|
|
---|
|
|