Drains to Get Cleaned and Marked January 21

January 18, 2016 by Charlie London

Would you like to help?   Please call Ms. Roberts at 504-942-3856

Everyone will meet on the steps of the New Orleans Museum of Art 10 a.m. January 21st

The Sewerage & Water Board Environmental Affairs Department is planning a storm drain cleaning and marking event  January 21, 2016.

drainstolake

They will meet in front of NOMA and walk through the park down Lelong Drive and Esplanade Avenue cleaning and marking storm drains.

bluerackcleansdrainStorm drains often become clogged with dirt, leaves and garbage.  Blocked catch basins prevent stormwater from entering the drains which contributes to street flooding. Part of the Sewerage and Water Board’s mission is to inform residents of ways to prevent flooding and improve drainage and water quality.

Because storm drains flow directly in to Lake Ponchartrain, NOT to wastewater treatment plants, storm drain marking is an essential element of the city’s stormwater pollution prevention program.

Rainwater picks up street litter, yard waste, lawn fertilizers, pesticides, pet waste, and oils and fluids from driveways and streets. The first inch of runoff from a storm generally carries 90% of the pollution and causes at least half of water quality problems.

The storm drain marking program is a hands-on project for volunteers who are interested in educating the public about nonpoint source pollution prevention. The markers are placed on storm drain inlets and intend to remind citizens to help protect our waters from pollution that can be harmful to fish and wildlife and increase weed and algae growth.

Even the best plan for managing watersheds and controlling non-point source pollution cannot succeed without community participation and cooperation.

Volunteer Opportunity Fact Sheet

Project Name: Storm Drain Marking in Orleans Parish
Agency Name: Sewerage & Water Board of New Orleans Department of Environmental Affairs
Contact Person: Scott Finney
SWBNO Storm water Management Program
Contact Phone: (504) 942-3855
Contact Email: [email protected]
Contact Fax: (504) 942-3857
Project Date(s) Any dates that are convenient for participants
Project Location Neighborhoods on the east & west bank of Orleans Parish
Project Time(s) Anytime during daylight hours; however, weekends are best
Project Description:
The SWBNO Storm Drain Marking Program relies primarily on volunteers to glue storm
drain markers on or near drainage catch basins and drop inlets in neighborhoods around
the parish. The SWBNO provides the markers, glue, cleaning tools and safety equipment
to participants. Storm water staff instructs volunteers in how to correctly apply markers.

If the volunteer group has not chosen an area to mark, staff can provide maps of
prospective locations and indicate placement of catch basins and drop inlets.

What types of work can volunteers do on this project?
This project usually consists of work teams of 2 or more and entails cleaning a section of
pavement or metal, then affixing the placard. It is a good idea to have someone watching
for traffic, as most of the Parish catch basins and drop inlets are in or near the street.

What age ranges of volunteers will you accept to work on this project?

We will accept volunteers in the range of 12 years and up; however, participants under 18
years of age must be chaperoned by adults, e.g. parents, teachers, scout leaders, etc.

Does your agency require volunteers to sign a waiver of liability?
If so, could you please attach one so that we are able to have
volunteers sign them in advance of events?

None is required.
***

The Sewerage and Water Board will be marking and cleaning drains soon. YOU still need to maintain them by keeping debris away from the front of the catch basin.

Rex and Nancy are serious about flood prevention and encourage you to clean the storm drains near you!
Rex and Nancy are serious about flood prevention and encourage you to clean the storm drains near you!

drain-rex-nancy2014sep20A few minutes cleaning the storm drains near you can make a tremendous difference in the amount of water in the street during rain events.

If you think the City of New Orleans is going to clean the catch basin in front of your home please rethink that plan. If you don’t clean the catch basin in front of your home it is you who will suffer the consequences. Please consider cleaning the catch basins in and around your home NOW!

A catch basin, which is also known as a storm drain inlet or curb inlet, is an opening to the storm drain system that typically includes a grate or curb inlet at street level where storm water enters the catch basin and a sump captures sediment, debris and associated pollutants. Catch basins are able to prevent trash and other floatable materials from entering the drainage system by capturing such debris by way of a hooded outlet. The outlet pipes for catch basins on combined sewers (sanitary waste and storm water in a single pipe) are also outfitted with a flapper (trap) device to prevent the backflow of any unpleasant odors from pipes. Catch basins act as pretreatment for other treatment practices by allowing larger sediments to settle in the basin sump areas.

 

In this photo, Tommy Lewis shows the simple tools necessary to prevent flooding on your street.
Tommy Lewis shows just how simple it is to prevent flooding.

It is important to maintain catch basins to prevent storm sewer blockages and minimize the amount of pollutants entering storm sewers which may eventually discharge into local streams and waterways such as Lake Ponchartrain. Clogged catch basins can also result in the ponding of water along streets and parking lots causing a nuisance to motorists, pedestrians and businesses.

How you can help: When you are clearing your sidewalk or driveway, dispose of waste in trash receptacles instead of sweeping it into the gutters or catch basins.

If leaves or other debris are blocking a catch basin near your house or business, remove and dispose of the debris properly. Article from: http://www.bwsc.org/PROJECTS/Maintenance/catchbasin.asp

Some may remember that the Faubourg St. John Neighborhood Association has reminded people through the years to use their brains and clean their drains.  Anyone who has been through a major storm or regular rainfall in New Orleans knows that clogged catch basins contribute significantly to street flooding.

The pumps can’t pump what they can’t get. If your catch basin is clogged, please clean it today. If you need help, get with your neighbors and clean all the catch basins on your street. If you still need help, write to [email protected] and we’ll help you get it done.

If your catch basin requires mechanical cleaning or maintenance, call 311 to report the problem.


THE CITY IS ASKING THAT YOU CALL 311 FOR
CATCH BASINS THAT NEED MECHANICAL EQUIPMENT TO CLEAR

HERE’S HOW YOU CAN HELP: Clean litter and debris from the catch basins near your house. Also, clean the surrounding curb area, because any litter, leaves, or grass on the street or sidewalk can end up in the catch basin. Do not lift the drain cover or attempt to disassemble the catch basin; just clean what you can see. All you need is a pair of work gloves, a shovel or small rake, and a trash bag. Remember: If your neighbor is elderly or disabled, please help clean their catch basin too.

2) Dispose of trash and lawn clippings in trash cans. Do not sweep or blow yard waste into the gutters and catch basins. Remember: Trash in our streets ends up as trash in our lake!

3) Construction sites or sites with hazardous materials must take special precautions to properly dispose of their paint and chemicals. They should not sweep, blow or hose waste into the catch basins. Report any improper actions to the City of New Orleans by calling 311.

Residents are advised to stay at home during the severe weather unless an emergency makes it absolutely necessary for them to get on the road. The NOPD will ticket motorists who drive faster than 5 mph on streets with standing water.

The following is a list of streets prone to significant flooding during severe weather.

Calliope @ Claiborne towards Tchoupitoulas St
Calliope & Tchoupitoulas St On-ramps
I-10 and Tulane Exit towards Claiborne
Airline & Tulane Ave intersection
4400 Block of Washington
Washington Ave. near Xavier
All surrounding streets to St. Charles flooded, Gravier/Tulane/S Dupre, S Claiborne/Washington.
Claiborne/Orleans Ave.
S Carrollton/Palmetto
Magazine/St Mary
Broad/Louisiana Ave./S.Claiborne
Josephine/Prytania
Earhart/Jeff Davis-Carrollton
500 blk of Lake Marina
Canal Blvd/I-10/Navarre
Erato/S Genois/City Park/Carrollton
Washington Ave. near Xavier, Washington
Gravier/Tulane/S Dupre
S Claiborne/Washington
Simon Bolivar & Calliope coming from Loyola Ave under the overpass
Poland Ave from St Claude to N. Claiborne
S. Claiborne at Joseph
Holiday to the Crescent City Connection
Shirley and DeGaulle
DeGaulle under the Westbank Expressway
General Meyer from Pace to Shirley
Richland and General Meyer
MacArthur and Holiday
Tullis
Garden Oaks
Chelsea
Vespasian and Wall
The City’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness is monitoring the severe weather and will keep residents updated through e-mail alert and the Twitter handle @nolaready.

What are catch basins?

Catch basins are the grated storm drains that you see on almost every street corner. They are storm sewer inlets – typically located next to street curbs – that are the entryway from our streets to our pumping system and represent the first step in stormwater collection and disposal. On rainy days, rainwater and anything else on the streets enter catch basins.

How do catch basins get clogged?

Catch basins have grids to prevent large objects from falling into the sewer system. However, the bars are fairly widely spaced so that the flow of water is not blocked. Consequently, many objects fall through.

What are the consequences of clogged catch basins?

When catch basins get clogged with recently fallen leaves and debris, water can no longer be drained from the street. Water ponds along streets and can flood intersections and homes. Localized street flooding can be a hazard to the traveling public.

Contrary to popular belief, pet wastes, oil and other materials dumped into catch basins do not go to the wastewater treatment plant, but instead  flow directly into Lake Ponchartrain.  For example: dumping oil into a catch basin can have almost unthinkable consequences. If it reaches a river, lake, or stream, five quarts of oil can create a slick as large as two football fields and persist on mud or plants for six months or more.

It is important to monitor and clean catch basins to prevent street flooding, property damage, and hazards to the traveling public.

How can you help keep catch basins clean?

To lessen street flooding, the City asks residents to help clean the inlets and catch basins near your house or business. The grates of catch basins can become clogged with leaves or litter, especially in the fall and winter. Regularly inspect the grate and remove debris.

Stand on the curb and use a rake or pitch fork to clear leaves, limbs, and debris from the catch basin. Do not attempt to remove the grate, only the debris on top of the grate. Dispose of the debris properly.

The best time to inspect the catch basin in front of your house or business is prior to a rain event. Monitor and clean the catch basin in the fall when the trees are shedding their leaves. When the forecast calls for heavy rainfall, remove debris from the catch basin before a storm. After a storm, maintain the openings to catch basins by clearing away any debris.

Disposing of leaves and debris

When you are clearing your sidewalk or driveway, dispose of waste in trash receptacles instead of sweeping it into the gutters or catch basins. Please do not rake or blow the leaves from your yard into the street.. Dispose of leaves and yard debris in trash containers for pick up.

Getting help

If you see a catch basin filled with debris below the grate, or if you cannot clear the basin near your property yourself, call 311. Never attempt to remove catch basin grates, only the debris on top of the grate.

How you can help keep catch basins clean

The following simple actions can help keep streets open and catch basins clean:

  1. Monitor and clean the catch basin near your house or business, especially prior to a rain event.
  2. Stand on the curb and use a rake or pitch fork to clear leaves and debris from catch basins so that water can drain easily. Do not try to remove the grate.
  3. Do not rake or blow leaves from your yard into the street. Bag them at the curb in the parking strip and prepare them for curbside pickup by your garbage hauler.
  4. Dispose of waste in trash receptacles instead of sweeping it into the gutters or catch basins. Dispose of leaves and yard debris in curbside yard debris containers. Pile shoveled snow where it can be absorbed into the ground.
  5. Notify the City at 311 if you cannot clear a catch basin yourself.

What else can I do to prevent flooding?

Use non-phosphorus detergents
Do not pour or throw anything into a storm drain.
Use native plants for landscaping around your home
Limit the use of fertilizers on your yard, especially before a large rain
Pick up pet waste from your yard and while walking your dog
Build a rain garden to capture storm water runoff from your house and yard
Install a rain barrel or cistern to store rain water to water plants
We could change the world
in the night while we are sleeping
The power’s in my neighborhood
https://youtu.be/Gkgna7erlqw

 

Filed Under: Featured, HISTORY Tagged With: bayou st john, catch basin, clean, clean drains, dump no waste, faubourg st john, New Orleans, nola, s&wb, sewerage, sewerage and water board, storm drain, swbnola, water board, water department, water dept

NO WASTE NOLA

September 4, 2015 by Charlie London

Welcome to No Waste NOLA!

nowastenolaNO WASTE NOLA has a lot going on this month, so check out the info below and be sure to connect with us!
No Waste NOLA is dedicated to educating the residents of New Orleans regarding the harm caused by plastic pollution and enacting change through local popular support. We need to encourage our elected officials to implement waste-reduction policies, so we can continue to thrive as a recovering city.

Summer Social

Join us at Bayou Beer Garden on September 17 at 6:00 PM for No Waste NOLA’s first ever social! Meet the activists, learn about our cause, and just hang out. We’ll provide information on how to get involved.

Become a member, and snag a No Waste NOLA tote bag and other goodies.   See you there!

 

No Waste NOLA’s Letter to the Editor

Did you see our letter to the editor of the New Orleans Advocate in May? The letter sparked discussion and exposure within our community about the harms caused by single use plastic bags and other pollution.

Have we been in your neighborhood?

No Waste NOLA members have been visiting Neighborhood Associations to garner residents’ support for a single-use plastic bag ban. We’ve been to Fauburg Marigny, Faubourg St. John, Parkview, Mid City Neighborhood Organization, and the Carrolton Riverbend Neighborhood Organization.

Don’t see your neighborhood on the list?

Let us know when your next meeting is, and we’ll send a representative

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

SEPT 17   6PM Summer Social, Bayou Beer Garden
SEPT 26   6PM Get out the Vote, Howlin’ Wolf
OCT 1   6PM Volunteer Orientation

Plastic Bag Ban Petition
The No Waste NOLA petition to eliminate single use plastic bags in the city of New Orleans almost has the 1,000 signatures we need. Help us create a more sustainable New Orleans by signing and sharing the petition today!

 

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: clean, New Orleans, no waste nola, plastic bags, recycle, refuse, trash

City Sweeps Clean

April 22, 2015 by Charlie London

photos and text by Charlie London

City Sweeps Clean April 21, 2015
City Sweeps Clean
April 21, 2015
I recently requested a street sweeper to be dispatched via 311 on Moss Street which runs on both sides of Bayou St. John. A few days later while heading to work early in the morning, I spotted a City of New Orleans street sweeper cleaning the area by the U.S. Post Office.

Many thanks to 311 and the Department of Sanitation for their combined efforts and the great job that resulted.

City Sweeps Clean on the Bayou April 21, 2015
City Sweeps Clean by the Bayou
April 21, 2015
Many thanks to the City of New Orleans for cleaning up Moss Street.
Many thanks to the City of New Orleans for cleaning up Moss Street.
311 does work. Many thanks to the City of New Orleans for cleaning up Moss Street.
311 does work.
Many thanks to the City of New Orleans for cleaning up Moss Street.

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: 311, bayou st john, best neighborhood in the city, city of new orleans, clean, faubourg st john, street sweeper, sweep, thank you

Volunteers Help Keep New Orleans Beautiful

February 28, 2015 by Charlie London

bayou-trash-mob-2015mar8
cleanup7-2015mar8

Thank you to the great volunteers from near and far
who came out to help keep New Orleans beautiful.


cleanup8-2015mar8

great-american-cleanup-day1

Get ready for the Great American Clean-Up Day,
co-hosted by the good people of the Friends of Lafitte Corridor and
NOLA Trash Mob.
On Sunday 8 March, community service organizations will come together across from the U.S. Post Office on Bayou St. John (501 N Jefferson Davis Pkwy) at 9:30am for coffee and pastries compliments of Mid-City Market!

This will be a major Trash Mob event. It’s an offer you can’t refuse.

cleanup2-2015mar8The event will start with background information and tips on how to be safe when picking up litter. Around 10am, participants will split up into small teams and focus on areas adjacent to the Lafitte Greenway. The clean-up should last for about two hours. When the mission is complete, the group will gather together to take some pictures in front of the trash collected.

In addition to FOLC and NOLA Trash Mob, the University of Georgia’s IMPACT program will join the mob at 9:30 a.m. on March 8th where Bayou St. John meets Jefferson Davis Parkway. This should be a fun trash mob that makes a big difference.

Some supplies, including bags for trash and recycling and gloves will be provided. A limited number of grabbers and orange vests will be available for those who want them. Please feel free to bring your own supplies. Bringing your own supp that would be most awesome and sincerely appreciated.

Please join the fun at 9:30 on Sunday, March 8th where Jefferson Davis Parkway meets Bayou St. John!

uga-logoThe University of Georgia’s Urban Environmental Awareness group will travel to New Orleans, Louisiana to explore the relationship between busy, bustling cities and mother nature. During the week of service the uga-impactgroup will be going to places like Green Light New Orleans, The Green Project and will join in the Great American Clean-up at 9:30 a.m. on March 8th at Jefferson Davis Parkway and Bayou St. John in New Orleans, LA. From these local environmental service and advocacy organizations the students will learn what they can do to make cities more sustainable. In addition to community service, the group will get the chance to explore the rich culture of New Orleans.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou clean-up, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, clean, clean up, community service, faubourg st john, impact, mob, New Orleans, trash, uga, university of georgia

Join the Mob Sunday at 10 a.m.

October 1, 2014 by Charlie London

Get your head out of bed and join the mob at 10 a.m.
Get your head out of bed and join the mob at 10 a.m.

And, you’ll still be home in plenty of time for the Saints game!

This Sunday, 5 October, we will meet at

10 am

at the intersection of

Conti and Jeff Davis

to mob from there down Conti toward Carrollton. This area is always littered, but we can’t promise that we’ll find a mattress like usual! Come help us clean up this neglected corner of Mid-City.

We will bring some supplies, including gloves and bags and grabbers, but do feel free to bring your own stuff, too. That is always appreciated. We will mob for an hour, pile everything up, and take some photographic proof of our efforts.

NOLA Trash Mob is on a continuing mission to change the way New Orleans thinks about litter. We hope that by setting a good, visible example we can get others to reconsider throwing garbage on the streets and sidewalks and make our city just a bit more beautiful, if only for a day and in our small way.

If you have any ideas about spots that need mobbed, please reach out and email us, ya hear? Our address is [email protected].

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: clean, help, mid-city, refuse, trash, trash mob, volunteer, yeah you right, you know it

Does Bayou St. John Need a Water Wheel?

June 26, 2014 by Charlie London

article and photo courtesy National Public Radio
water-wheel-baltimore

Could this be an idea to help keep Bayou St. John clean?

Could solar power be used to power the wheel in areas where there was slow or no current?

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou st john, clean, national public radio, New Orleans, npr, water wheel

YOU WILL BE JUDGED MAY 8th

April 30, 2014 by Charlie London

Faubourg-St-John

Cleanest City Challenge Judging May 8

To get ready for the Cleanest City Challenge final judging next week, residents are encouraged to form Adopt-A-Block groups and pick up litter regularly in their neighborhoods. Talk to merchants about sponsoring their blocks and activities.    Clean the curb on your block and clean the catch basins of leaves & debris.   Involve churches, schools, businesses and organizations.   Help is especially needed from Carrollton businesses (and homeowners) from I-10 exit to Orleans Avenue.  To help or share suggestions, contact [email protected]

http://keepneworleansbeautiful.com/2014/04/30/199/

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: city, clean, clean city, faubourg st john, judge, judgement day, judgment day, may 8, New Orleans

BAYOU CLEANUP September 28th

September 13, 2013 by Charlie London

bayou-boat

Volunteers will meet at the Bayou Kayaks launch site at 1101 Florida Ave (near the LSU Dental School) at 9 a.m. on September 28th and collect debris until 11 a.m. Kayaks will be available for use on a first come first serve basis. Volunteers on foot are especially important as there are many items to be collected along the banks. Please join the Bayou Clean Up on Saturday, September 28th to keep Bayou St John beautiful.

Meet at 9 a.m. on September 28th at Bayou Kayaks’ Launch Site, 1101 Florida Ave
(on the bayou near the LSU Dental School).

** Clean up from a kayak (if you get there early) or clean up the banks & the bayou on foot.
** Food will be served to those helping with the clean-up. (grilled foods)
** T-shirts
** Receive a $10 off kayak rentals for helping!
** Be the FIRST to experience the SUP (stand-up paddleboards) that Bayou Kayaks will offer soon.
For those who want to stick around after the clean-up, take a spin on the board for up to 30 min for free!

** Looking to let a Food Truck know about the event, so if you know any that might be interested, e-mail us at [email protected] Thank you!

Volunteers will meet at the Bayou Kayaks launch site at 1101 Florida Ave (near the LSU Dental School) at 9 a.m. on September 28th and collect debris until noon. Kayaks will be available for use on a first come first serve basis. Volunteers on foot are especially important as there are many items to be collected along the banks.

Please join the Bayou Clean Up on Saturday, September 28th to keep Bayou St John beautiful.

[print_thumbnail_slider]
Click on any image in the slider to learn more.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou clean-up, bayou cleanup, bayou kayaks, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, clean, faubourg st john, kayak, kayaks, litter, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood

Trash Mob on Lafitte

June 23, 2013 by Charlie London

trashmob2013june23

Sunday | June 23rd | 8:30 a.m.


We will meet at 8:30am at Hagan & Lafitte toward Broad (near Jeff Davis) and mob our way down Lafitte St. If you arrive anytime after 8:30, just look for us along Lafitte St. We’re hoping the earlier start time will help us beat at least some of the heat. Please help us continue our assault on litter as we take back the streets from the trash!

Participants are encouraged to bring their own gloves and garbage bags, but we will try to bring a limited supply of extras. The trash mob will last for about 1 to 1.5 hours, but people can participate however long they would like.

=====
For those that are new to NOLA Trash Mob, we are a group of volunteers who want to change the way New Orleans thinks about litter, primarily through clean-ups or “trash mobs”. For these trash mobs, we select a public space, usually a particular city block or area that has a significant amount of litter, and we set a time and day to go and pick up trash there. They usually are scheduled about once a week on Sunday mornings.

We welcome feedback from the community of where areas there is a lot of litter to target for future trash mobs. Additionally, if anyone knows of any organizations that would like to publicize and/or sponsor a trash mob event, we are always in need of publicity, incentives for participants, and trash grabbers to save the mob’s back.

So tell your friends and come on out this Sunday to join NOLA Trash Mob!

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: clean, keep new orleans beautiful, New Orleans, nola, volunteer

The Mob is Looking for You

May 31, 2013 by Charlie London

trashmob

NOLA TRASH MOB | 11 a.m. | Sunday, June 9

The monument by the Jeff Davis Trail where it crosses Tulane Avenue was surveyed and it was peppered with trash. This area has become the main battleground, and this Sunday, June 9 we’ll take it back. We can then mobilize toward where litter is dense, perhaps even over I-10 across the Jeff Davis Bridge if we’re so moved.

Meet at 11AM by Jefferson Davis Parkway and Tulane Avenue ready to take back one of our nicest green spaces!
=========

Participants are encouraged to bring their own gloves and garbage bags, but we will try to bring a limited supply of extras. The trash mob will last for about 1.5 to 2 hours, but people can participate however long they would like.

For those that are new to NOLA Trash Mob, we are a group of volunteers who want to change the way New Orleans thinks about litter, primarily through clean-ups or “trash mobs”. For these trash mobs, we select a public space, usually a particular city block or area that has a significant amount of litter, and we set a time and day to go and pick up trash there. They usually are scheduled about once a week on Sunday mornings.

We welcome feedback from the community of where areas there is a lot of litter to target for future trash mobs. Additionally, if anyone knows of any organizations that would like to publicize and/or sponsor a trash mob event, we are always in need of publicity, incentives for participants, and trash grabbers to save the mob’s back.

So tell your friends and come on out this Sunday to join NOLA Trash Mob!

Check it out on Facebook…
https://www.facebook.com/NolaTrashMob#!/events/130778570459960/

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: carrollton, clean, cleanup, keep new orleans beautiful, litter, mob, New Orleans, sweep, trash, trash mob, tulane, up

Bayou Clean Up April 20th

March 18, 2013 by Charlie London

Bayou Clean Up | Saturday | April 20th | 9-12

bayou-cleanup2013apr20
It’s that time of year again, the flowers are blooming the birds are singing and people are paddling. The winds have been blowing and debris has been making it’s way into the bayou and Bayou Kayaks needs your help to keep Bayou St John beautiful.

Bayou Kayaks is organizing a Bayou Clean Up in preparation for the Earth Day Festival. Volunteers are needed to make sure the bayou is ready.

Volunteers will meet at the Bayou Kayaks launch site at 1101 Florida Ave (by the LSU Dental School) at 9 a.m. on April 20th and collect debris until noon.
There will be refreshments and a few supplies to aid in the clean up. Kayaks will be available for use on a first come first serve basis. Volunteers on foot are especially important as there are many items to be collected along the banks.

Please join this Bayou Clean Up on Saturday, April 20th to keep Bayou St John beautiful.

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best, best neighborhood in New Orleans, clean, clean up, cleanup, eclectic, faubourg st john, kayak, neighborhood, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood

DESMARE | Saturday | September 22nd

September 20, 2012 by Charlie London

photo by Charlie London

Faubourg St. John neighbors and the Cabrini Dads Club worked together on September 22, 2012 to make Desmare Playground a better place for everyone!

DESMARE PLAYGROUND | 3456 Esplanade Avenue


A significant amount of debris
was removed from Desmare Playground.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best, cabrini, clean, cleanup, coffee, dads, desmare, eclectic, esplanade, faubourg, faubourg st john, gab, mow, neighborhood, New Orleans, park, playground, rake, weed

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