Po Boy Views
By
Phil LaMancusa
Trick or Treat
Or
Grim Reader
Oh
you wide eyed innocents who have come to this place believing the myth that
you’re entering that Nirvana called The Big Easy; woe unto you who have sipped
from that goblet of illusion, that wine of delusion, and are now waking with
the headache of confusion. Never fear, your Uncle Phil will give you the
straight skinny about what you need to know about living here; and if you don’t
need these words of wisdom, you can pass them on to friends that are deciding
whether or not to make New Orleans their home.
First:
I assume that you already have a job; now, get a good landlord. Fact one is
that the majority of landlords here have gotten really really greedy in the
last few years. New Orleans is the
seventh least affordable place to rent in the country (proportionate to
income); and, most important to note:
tenants have zero rights here. You may get a one year lease and then go
month to month, that means nothing. Unless you register your lease at City Hall
a landlord can evict you with five days notice, for any or no reason (just ask
former tenants of current airbnb apartments). Point two: landlords are doubling
and tripling rents here because they know that some fool will pay; don’t be
that fool, be prepared to take your time choosing your home, space and neighborhood. Also, if you’re a first time home buyer---New
Orleans is the least friendly place for you to try to take root.
Okay,
so now you’ve found your digs. Here’s what’s next: you have to register to vote
and you have to get a library card. You have to know about politics here; thatt’s
really very easy; New Orleans is a blue dot in a red state and as far as
politics goes: not much gets done without somebody getting/giving some money. You
have to learn to and how to recycle: break down your boxes, don’t try to
recycle glass or plastic bags and no garbage in the recycle bin or it simply
will not be picked up.
You
also need to be aware that it is up to
you to take your trashcans to the street (and tote them back). Become aware of when pickup day is, pull up
your big boy pants and take the garbage out; and don’t put too much extra stuff
out all at once (foliage cuttings, old furniture, spare tires) unless you want
to see it sit in front of your house. ‘Free at Five’ means pickers get the good
stuff you’ve left by the curb. Metal pickers pick up anything that they can
sell for scrap, including beer cans and bicycles.
Bicycles
are a great way to get around and it’s almost like a rite of passage to have
one or two stolen. A word about bike riding is, you take your life in your
hands because of reckless feckless rubber necking drivers. The alternative is
to rely upon a motorized transportation. Public transportation, known here as
the ‘Shame Train’ is an exercise in patience, humility, frustration and
fortitude, not for the faint of heart, but sometimes necessary.
Cars
are a way to get around; parking around
town is a bitch, with meter maids and boots costing you money as well as paid
parking that costs as much as your child’s tuition. Make sure that you have a
good mechanic that knows other professionals in the business; set aside a
thousand dollars a year for shock absorber replacement because of our street
conditions. Your windshield, tires, insurance carrier, nearest junkyard
facilities will all come by recommendation. You’ll need a vehicle to evacuate
from storms and to get you anywhere outside of the city limits, like over to
Jefferson Parish where you can catch a show, shop or recycle glass. And yes,
the First Amendment guarantees a person’s right to beg at street intersections;
get over it, they aren’t going away.
Yes
we have storms here, rain, thunder and lightning. The streets will flood because the storm drains
rarely are cleaned out and are used by construction workers to flush paint,
cement and lawn debris to our lake. Also there is a culture of litterbugging
here, you’ll see everything from cigarette butts, beverage containers, crawfish
shells, plastic bags and even soiled diapers, try not to become part of it.
Wildlife,
oh yes, we’ve got more wildlife than just you out for drinks and music with
your friends. Feral chickens and rabbits, possums, clowders of felines, lizards,
snakes, turtles, frogs, stray canines, bats, alligators and every imaginable
insect to bite, scratch, sting and frighten you; please don’t try to pet the
raccoons. And yes, those are gigantic cockroaches (called Palmetto Bugs) they
fly and will nip you; caterpillars will drop from oak trees and sting the heck
out of you, and wait until the season when termites swarm into your house
looking to relocate in your undies. There are also plants that will hurt you
and some that drop seedpods that will poison your pets.
We
also use chemicals with abandon here, we’d rather spray our way out of weeds
and bugs than guard our health. Workers
chip paint, grind sidewalks and blow leaves with a gasoline driven machine
strapped to their back with aplomb and without facemasks. Our lake fluctuates
between safe and unsafe for swimming; I would not recommend eating any seafood
from our waterways or vegetation grown in any un- remediated yards.
And
crime? It happens. I’m not allowed to furnish you with the variety, frequency
and degree of that insanity and still welcome you to our city. I personally
wouldn’t live anywhere else, they just ain’t civilized out there. You’re now
living in New Orleans, don’t call it the Big Easy.
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