With plans for parts of
New Orleans
to reopen to residents during the
weekend, Louisiana State Police have established safe routes for re-entry into
the city.
According to a press release from Sgt. Mark
Mix, the main routes for re-entry into the east bank of Jefferson Parish are:
- U.S. 61; and
- U.S. 51 from Interstate 10 to U.S. 61;
The main re-entry routes into the west bank
of Jefferson Parish are:
- U.S. 90 east;
- Louisiana Highway 1 south;
- Louisiana Highway 3127 south; and
- Louisiana Highway 18 east.
However, the following roadways will remain closed near the parish:
- Interstate 10 east at U.S. 61;
- Interstate 55 south of Ponchatoula;
- Huey P. Long Bridge between U.S.
90 and U.S.
61;
- U.S. 90B (raised portion); and
- Crescent City
Connection Bridge.
Repairs on two of the area's roadways most
damaged by the storm are also under way. On Monday, Sept. 12, work began on the
Interstate 10 Twinspan Bridge in New
Orleans, which was severely damaged in the storm and
subsequent flooding.
"Restoring this critical eastward link for New Orleans will speed
recovery of the city and the entire Gulf region," U.S. Transportation Secretary
Norman Y. Mineta said in a press release. "Every day we're getting road work
started to reconnect the region and help people rebuild."
According to the press release, the work was
contracted to New Orleans-based Boh Bros. Construction Co. Under the contract,
the bridges must be finished within 45 days, and includes a $50,000-per-day
incentive to finish the work ahead of schedule.
At least 100 miles of roadway on U.S. 90 in Louisiana were also "basically wiped out," Mineta told The
Associated Press. A temporary roadway will be completed within 90
days while the permanent highway is reconstructed, the Department of
Transportation press release said.
In an interview with The AP on Sept. 4, Mineta said repairs to
Interstate 10 and U.S. 90 alone would cost at least $1.5 billion.
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco and state Department
of Transportation and Development Secretary Johnny B. Bradberry announced that
the Twinspan Bridge
over Lake Pontchartrain will be repaired and
functional within 45 days, thanks to more than $30 million in emergency repair
funding, the Lafayette Daily Advertiser
reported Monday, Sept. 12.
The following is the complete list of
roadways that remain closed throughout Louisiana
as of Friday morning, Sept. 16:
- All roads into St. Bernard Parish;
- All roads into Plaquemine Parish for non-parish residents;
- Interstate 10 east at U.S. 51;
- Interstate 10 east at Causeway
Boulevard;
- Interstate 10 west at Oak
Harbor exit;
- Interstate 10 Twinspan
Bridge;
- U.S. 90 at the Orleans Parish line;
- U.S. 90 at Interstate 310;
- Interstate 55 south at Interstate 10;
- U.S. 61 south at St. Charles Parish line;
- U.S. 61 south at Kenner
City (Jefferson
Parish) line;
- U.S. 61 south at Shrewsbury
Road;
- U.S. 11 at Little Irish Bayou;
- Louisiana Highway 1 at Port Fourchon to Grand Isle;
- River Road at the Orleans Parish line;
- River Road at Dakin
Ave.;
- Parish Road at Judge Perez;
- Parish Road to Murphy Oil Refinery (Hazardous material spill);
In Alabama,
the only road that remains closed is Alabama Highway 44 east of U.S. 78, which
was shut down due to a landslide. However, a number of roads in Mobile, Sumter, Choctaw, Marengo, Tuscaloosa,
Washington, Clarke, Baldwin and Marion counties remain
under advisories as debris cleanup and roadway repair continues.
Road conditions have improved dramatically in
southern Mississippi.
With the exception of U.S. 90, which runs through the state from Alabama to Louisiana,
all roadways are open in the state. However, the Mississippi Department of
Public Safety is still urging caution as hurricane cleanup carries on
throughout the area.
Because of the nature of a natural disaster,
road conditions and closings are prone to change at a moment's notice. For an
up-to-date list of closings in specific areas, visit the following states' Web
sites for more information:
- By Aaron
Ladage, staff writer
aaron_ladage@landlinemag.com