Former NOLA mayor to play 'key role' in LA rebuilding efforts
Mitch Landrieu, the former mayor of New Orleans who helped rebuild the city after Hurricane Katrina, will be playing a "key role" in Los Angeles' recovery from the wildfires, Mayor Karen Bass announced Tuesday.
During a press conference, Bass said Landrieu would be touring the Palisades Fire area alongside Councilwoman Traci Park and newly-appointed Chief Recovery Officer Steve Soboroff.
"I'm making sure this is an all-hands-on-deck recovery," said Bass.
Landrieu took office as New Orleans was still recovering from Katrina and in the midst of the BP oil spill. He also served as the federal infrastructure czar.
With rain possibly arriving this weekend, Bass issued an emergency order today to shore up burn areas and prevent hazardous runoff in areas affected by the fires.
Park said, "We've never seen a burn scar in an urban area of this scope and magnitude."
"The burn scar of the Palisades Fire not only sits feet from the ocean itself, but already on hillsides that are already prone to slide and which have already absorbed a tremendous amount of water from firefighting broken pipes and melted pools," she said.
The order mobilizes City Public Works crews to clear and remove vegetation, shore up hillsides, reinforce roads and clear debris from neighborhoods and areas that were burned.
According to the National Weather Service, rains could hit the region as early as Saturday.
"With rain in the forecast, it's imperative we take aggressive action to prevent additional damage in burn areas and to protect our water and ocean from hazardous runoff,'' Bass said in a statement.
Crews are expected to install reinforced concrete barriers, lay down sandbags and clear debris, according to the mayor.
City News Service, Inc. contributed to this report.