September 2006
ALA takes a chance on New Orleans
Following Hurricane Katrina, 87 events cancelled or moved to other cities, taking with them more than $2 billion worth of meetings, convention and trade show business from the city of New Orleans. But ALA decided to stand by its commitment to come to New Orleans, becoming the first citywide convention in 10 months. EXPO brings you the real story behind how the show came together, and what other organizers can expect in New Orleans.




On the morning of June 24, 2006, Donna Karl, Vice President of Client Relations for the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau (NOMCVB, www.nomcvb.com) stood at the doors of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center enthusiastically welcoming trade show attendees to the American Library Association’s (ALA, www.ala.org) Annual Conference & Expo, known as “the Stacks.” It might have been the sort of job typically left to a retiree, but for Karl, other volunteers from the CVB and the city of New Orleans, the moment was bitter sweet and could not be missed.

It was the culmination of 10 months of exhausting work. “We were smiling, but if we looked too long at one another, we could have cried,” says Karl, who, like other hospitality workers in the city, sported a purple button that read “We’re Jazzed You’re Here.” 

As ALA attendees streamed off the long white shuttle buses into the heat and humidity, typical summer weather in New Orleans, and passed into the cool lobby of the convention center with its brand new carpet in soft shades of blue and green, everything seemed so normal. It felt like any other show.

But it wasn’t.

ALA was the first citywide convention to be held in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina, bringing with it an estimated economic impact of $27 million. 

If ALA had come to New Orleans a year before, it would have been just another show. But this time, the show represented a milestone, a civic achievement for which everyone — from the CVB President to the bartenders on Bourbon Street — took credit.

Last August, the winds and waters of Hurricane Katrina swept into the city, leaving 80 percent of the destination under water. And when the storm subsided, it not only turned life upside down for the city’s residents, but it also carried away more than $2 billion worth of meeting, convention and trade show business. Eighty-seven events either cancelled or moved to other cities in the weeks after the storm. Some shows simply had to move, but for those, not planned until later in the year, Karl and other CVB staff tried to convince show organizers to stay.

One of those who decided to stay was Deidre Ross, Conference Director for ALA.

To say the decision wasn’t easy would be putting it lightly. As pictures of thousands of people stranded without food and water at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center began to appear in news reports, Ross was mortified. The human suffering shocked millions and, while Ross felt that, she had another thought on her mind. PANIC.

ALA’s annual conference and trade show was supposed to occupy the very space she was watching on TV filled with desperate people pleading to be rescued. Last year, the event attracted a record-breaking 27,800 attendees and more than 1,000 exhibitors to Chicago in June. Given what appeared to be widespread devastation, how could New Orleans possibly be up to hosting such a mega-event less than a year later? 

Ross’s mind began to process the enormity of the task. Would the convention center be able to host events? Would there be restaurants and hotels? Would the attendees and exhibitors come? 
 
“I immediately got on the phone and started calling other cities,” Ross admits.

But 10 months later, approximately 17,000 librarians descended on a grateful city. They wandered the freshly redecorated corridors of the convention center and, in grand New Orleans’ tradition, they partied until the wee hours of the morning on Bourbon Street. Freight arrived on time. Labor showed up to move the show in and tear it down again. Security issues surrounding a long list of VIP guests, including First Lady Laura Bush, went off without a hitch.

How did it happen, and what can other organizers expect in New Orleans? ALA offered EXPO magazine behind-the-scenes access to show operations. EXPO was on site throughout the ALA show talking to attendees and exhibitors, as well as shadowing Ross and her team. Following is the story of the rebirth of the city’s convention industry, the determination of a city and its residents, and the commitment of an association to stand by it’s word and come to New Orleans.

Should we stay or should we go?
Relocating the ALA Annual Conference would be no small task, but Ross had no choice but to try. Not only would another venue need to be big enough to accommodate the show and its 2,300 breakout sessions, but the planned dates of the show could not change. The ALA event is timed carefully not to conflict with other library industry meetings and events. With less than a year before the show, Ross was having trouble finding cities that could adequately accommodate the event during its dates.

Meanwhile, New Orleans didn’t give up on the event. They remained in contact with the association and urged organizers not to move the show — confident the city would be back in business in plenty of time.

By October 2005, unable to find another suitable venue, Ross and the association’s executive team turned their attention back to New Orleans. “They kept urging us to come down and see that the damage wasn’t as bad as the media portrayed, so we took them up on the offer and went to see the city for ourselves,” remembers Ross.

Ross and the executive team visited the convention center. They toured the three largest hotels in their hotel block. They met with city officials. They investigated the area surrounding the convention center, including the French Quarter, and spoke with public health experts. “Nothing we saw looked insurmountable,” says Ross. “Not that a lot of work didn’t need to be done, but we were surprised it wasn’t worse.”

Ross consulted with major interested parties in the show, including representatives for GES Exposition Services (www.ges.com), the show’s general service contractor, and Paul Graller, Vice President and Show Director for Hall-Erickson Inc. (www.heiexpo.com), the company responsible for selling exhibit space and sponsorships, as well as managing the show floor. All agreed the task was possible.

The group returned home and met with the association’s board. After lengthy discussions, the ALA board voted to keep the show in New Orleans. Not only did they have faith in the city, but they knew keeping their event in New Orleans was the best thing they could do to help the people of the region. Ross and her staff of 10 had their work cut out for them, but being the first citywide event back in New Orleans gave the work a new sense of purpose.

Once the commitment was made, Ross and her staff began to draw up lists of everything that might be a special challenge with this show. They convened meetings with Hall-Erickson, GES and the bureau.

Adversity was no stranger to ALA events. In 2003, the show took place in Toronto at the height of the SARS scare. The situations were similar. The No. 1 enemy was false perception. “Things like this just happen in this business. You plan for 95 percent, and then five percent of it just comes up weird,” says Graller. “That’s the five percent you get paid for.” 

Perception vs. reality
“The success of the show depended on educating our membership about what things were really like in New Orleans,” says Ross. “Not everyone wants to be a pioneer, so we knew attendance might not be what it was at the last show, but we felt if people understood what things were really like in the city, they’d come.” Ross’s team estimated 20,000 attendees would take a chance.

ALA set up a task force comprised of Ross and other key ALA executive staff, as well as those key to public relations and membership outreach.

Updates became a regular feature of the association’s weekly e-newsletter. Members were invited to send in their concerns, and answers were then given in subsequent issues. A special section was created on the event Web site where regular updates were posted every time a representative of ALA made a site visit. Common Q&As were also posted on the site. Common questions included: Is it safe? Can you drink the water? Are there taxis? Is there debris everywhere? Will there be enough hotel rooms? Will there be enough places to eat that I can afford?

“Some attendees expressed concern about what our plan was should there be a disaster during the show, for example,” says Ross. “So we publicized our disaster plan.”

ALA used a service where attendees could subscribe to and receive instant updates on their mobile phones in the event of a disaster. Association staffers were assigned to different hotels within the room block. If anything happened, they were to be a source of information for guests in their hotel. Finally, the bureau helped prepare emergency instructions, which were placed in each hotel room within the room blocks.

In New Orleans, the CVB formed a task force to back up show management with rapid response answers about the state of the city. “Members started hearing that there weren’t very many moderately priced restaurants open in the city,” says Karl. “They’re a budget-conscious group, so we immediately put together a list of moderately priced restaurants that ALA could share with the members.”

As other concerns came in from potential attendees, such as whether the airport shuttles would be running or what the air quality would be like, the bureau formed the answers for the ALA. “They were great,” says Ross. “When we’d send them questions from our members, they’d usually have an answer for us to share within a day.”

The exhibitors, however, had one primary concern. Would attendees come? To quell concerns, exhibitors were given regular updates on registration numbers, as well as information about what ALA was doing to promote the show and deal with any of the unique operational issues that might arise. “Most of the space sold a year out,” says Graller. “When it was announced that we were staying in New Orleans, only two or three exhibitors cancelled, and maybe a half dozen downsized their booths.” Indeed, the Stacks featured 140,000 square feet of exhibit space, down slightly from Chicago’s 155,000 square feet, but in line with 138,000 square feet in Orlando in 2004.

Knowing that exhibitors ranged from experienced pros to novices, Hall-Erickson set up an exhibitor portal where information was posted. “Really, it was just a matter of battling CNN and answering questions,” says Graller. “Even the day I landed in New Orleans for the show, I had an e-mail from someone who’d heard a rumor that there was no water pressure in the city.” It wasn’t true.

The bureau prepares
As spring came, bureau staffers were trying to predict any issues that might arise for ALA and solve them before ALA even had a chance to think of them. They set up five task forces dealing with transportation, public services, public relations, emergency planning and local hospitality outreach.

Because the city had been without tourists for so long, airport shuttles weren’t running at their former capacities. Many of the city’s taxi drivers were working other jobs because there just weren’t enough fares to keep them going. The bureau reached out to the airport’s official shuttle company and taxi drivers to ensure they were ready. They provided the companies with extensive information about event registration to assure drivers it would be worth their time. As a result, the airport shuttle company and taxi companies began hiring back drivers in time for the show.

The bureau’s transportation committee consulted with the shuttle bus service that would transport attendees to and from the convention center daily. Shuttle routes were carefully planned for maximum time efficiency. The bureau even contacted businesses and property owners along the shuttle routes to ensure no one would have major construction projects underway that might cause bottlenecks for the show’s shuttle buses. Construction projects abound in New Orleans as the city refurbishes and rebuilds, and many of the streets in the older sections of town — where tourists love to go — are narrow. Thus even a single cement mixing truck or a badly placed construction dumpster could cause major delays.

To gain the cooperation of the local community and ensure the best possible experience for visitors, the bureau also conducted a local public relations campaign. The hospitality community was brought together to be sure that nothing was overlooked.

“For eight months, we were used to hosting long-term guests such as relief workers or FEMA staff,” says Karl. “We wanted to remind everyone what it was like to host short-term tourist guests. It’s very different.”

Hotels were encouraged to be ready to offer regular maid service and to make amenities tourists expect, like room service, available even late at night. Many hotels had cut back on these services as guests, and workers, were in short supply.

Local merchants, waiters and hotel workers were treated to a special event for hospitality workers shortly before the show. They were given information about the show, reminded how vital it was to the future of New Orleans, and given purple buttons that were worn throughout the week that said, “We’re Jazzed You’re Here!”.   

French Quarter merchants and tourism workers even undertook a public cleaning day to pick up litter, and Bourbon Street never looked so clean.

Everyone knew that the comeback of the convention and tourism industry would be greatly impacted by this show. If it went well, others would likely follow. If it didn’t, others might pull out or not come at all.

Behind the scenes at GES
GES had concerns of its own. Before the storm, GES had a warehouse and office that employed more than 70 people. It served an average of 20 major shows a year in the region, as well as 60 smaller meetings and events. This year, however, they’ll work seven shows at the center. In the aftermath of the storm, the warehouse was flooded, and GES staffers were relocated to other cities. The damage to the GES facility was put at more than $500,000 after taxes. Even now, repairs are still underway. The GES facility should be back on line by January 2007 but, with such a high demand for construction workers, even that might not be possible.

GES tapped the displaced New Orleans workforce to plan for the show. Working the ALA show gave local staffers opportunities to go back to the city and check on their own homes, as well as help with the rebuilding of the GES offices.

By November 2005, GES made a list of possible concerns. Would there be enough fuel available? Would there be difficulty getting freight into the city? Would they have access to the equipment they were accustomed to in order to service the show? And perhaps the biggest concern — would there be enough labor available?

GES met with show management once a month until 60 days before the show, and then weekly after that. As the weeks ticked away, many of GES’s initial concerns were wiped away as the city began to bounce back.

At a site visit in April 2006, the convention center was laying new carpet and much of the renovation was complete. “We were able to get carpet samples, and after looking around, we were confident there would be no problems with the center, which was a great relief to Deidre and the folks from Hall-Erickson,” says John Loveless, Senior Director for GES, who is responsible for the show.

The one issue that haunted the GES team was whether enough labor would be available to serve the show. Because of the renovation and rebuilding boom in New Orleans, there’s no shortage of jobs for carpenters, electricians and other such specialists GES would rely on.

Loveless consulted with the labor agents in New Orleans and was assured labor availability wouldn’t be a problem. “Just to be safe, we obtained the names of the 100 laborers who said they’d be available for the show, and we called each of them personally, just to be sure they’d be there,” says Loveless.

The convention center agreed to give the show extra move-in and move-out dates, so that if enough labor didn’t materialize, the show would have plenty of time to set up and tear down.

Show time in the Big Easy
All the anticipation and preparation on the part of the show and the city paid off. One of the few things that set the show apart from others were the many activities ALA planned to help Gulf Coast libraries rebuild. Although the center looked brand new, what transpired there 10 months before wasn’t far from anyone’s thoughts.

At the show’s ribbon cutting, Boy Scouts from Troop 33 in DeKalk, IL, presented ALA President Michael Gorman with a $3,000 check for the ALA Hurricane Katrina Library Relief Fund. The scouts had ridden bicycles from Memphis to New Orleans to raise the money. Later that day, the show’s attendees were addressed at the opening session by Mayor Ray Nagin, Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu and the keynote speaker, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. Other VIPs at the show included Mary Chapin Carpenter, First Lady Laura Bush, CNN’s Anderson Cooper and NPR’s Cokie Roberts.

On the show floor, attendees packed booths of publishers, technology providers and library furniture manufacturers. They lined up to get books signed by famous authors flown in by their publishers to wow the librarians. EXPO interviewed dozens of attendees at the show, and not one regretted coming to New Orleans. 

 “The reception we got here in New Orleans was amazing,” says attendee Vicky Schmarr, Vice President of the Ohio Educational Library Media Association, Columbus, OH. “Everyone has thanked us for being here. We’d go to a restaurant, and they’d thank us for coming. You’d go to buy something in a store, and the clerk would thank you for coming to New Orleans. Our being here meant a lot, and I’m glad we came.”

The exhibitors were equally pleased. “I think the show was actually better than last year in Chicago,” says Cindy Cohen, Public & Media Relations Manager for Lonely Planet who worked the company’s booth. “Everywhere you go, people are grateful you’re here. And at the convention center, even the littlest things got attention. We’d throw something away in our booth trash can, and someone would be there almost instantly to empty it. We needed an extra table, and it was brought immediately. It’s the little things like that really make a difference.”

After all the concerns about whether enough labor would be available, or how move-in might go, things couldn’t have gone more smoothly. “It turns out we really didn’t need the extra move-in or move-out time,” says Loveless, “We had plenty of labor, and many of the exhibitors were able to take Friday off to see the city.”

ALA did experience an attendance drop, from approximately 27,000 in 2005 to 17,000 at this year’s conference. Chicago is a destination that traditionally has great pull for the association; however, Ross acknowledges choosing New Orleans is partly responsible for the dip.

Airline service wasn’t up to pre-Katrina levels, thus there were fewer airlines serving the city and fewer flights available. That, combined with the sudden demand generated by the show, drove up the price of airline tickets. Several attendees EXPO spoke with said they would have liked to have brought more of their staff, but simply couldn’t afford the airfare. As demand for flights grows, however, it’s a problem that will likely resolve itself.

Some attendees who did come were partly motivated by a desire to see what New Orleans was really like. Several attendees and exhibitors rented cars and explored the outer regions of the city. “It was like night and day,” says Cohen, who rode through some residential areas with Lonely Planet’s local travel writer. “There was street after street of abandoned houses. Some of them had numbers and letters scrawled on them, a kind of code at the time to tell rescue workers which areas had already been inspected and how many bodies were there.”

While downtown New Orleans is back to its old self, the surrounding communities still have a lot of recovery ahead. That fact wasn’t lost on the attendees, many of whom had performed volunteer work around the city. Several conveyed pride in their association for coming to the city. “This event meant a lot to the city,” says Kathleen Mayo, Manager, Community Access Services for the Lee County Library System in Esterno, FL. “You can’t help but think about all the things that happened here. It’s amazing what they’ve done, and by being here, I feel like I got to help.”

As for Ross, 10 months after her initial panic and rush to relocate the show, “All and all, I can’t say enough about our experience in New Orleans,” says Ross. “I’d say to other show organizers, don’t be afraid to come. New Orleans is back.”


Heather Kirkwood, Senior Editor of EXPO, has written about the exhibition industry since 1997. In 2005, Kirkwood won Folio’s Eddie Award for editorial excellence and min’s B-to-B Best Web site Redesign Award. She can be reached at (913) 344-1376 or hkirkwood@ascendmedia.com.

Sidebar: FAQs about New Orleans

Is air service back to pre-Katrina levels?
Before Katrina, 166 daily flights came in and out of the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport, with an average of 21,000 seats serving 42 cities. As of July 1, the airport is serving 107 daily flights in and out of the city (64 percent of its pre-Katrina capacity), representing 11,244 seats (54 percent of pre-Katrina seats) to 33 cities (79 percent of pre-Katrina cities). More flights are expected to come online in September. Before Katrina, the airport was served by 14 carriers. Today it’s served by 10.

What hotels are open?
As of July, 103 of the city’s 140 hotels are open for business. As of press time, there were 90 hotels open in downtown New Orleans and the French Quarter. A few remain offline. The Ritz-Carlton will reopen in December 2006. The Hyatt is also undergoing extensive renovations and will open in fall 2007 as part of the proposed Hyatt Jazz District Project. The Fairmont Hotel is also still under renovation and plans to open in spring 2007. Citywide, 27,300 of the pre-Katrina inventory of 38,000 hotel rooms are open.

Is there taxi service?
As of July 1, the largest taxi company in New Orleans reported more than 50 percent of its cabs were back in service, and the number will grow as demand returns. The airport’s official shuttle service is fully operational. Fares run $13 to and from the airport and designated hotel drop off points.

How many restaurants are open?
According to the Louisiana Restaurant Association, 2,776 retail food establishments have received certificates from the Department of Health to open again as of May. There’s no difficulty finding restaurants in the tourism areas; however, choices may be more limited in the outer areas of the city.

Is New Orleans environmentally safe?
Yes. Dr. Kevin Stephens, Director of the New Orleans Department of Health, says the city regularly tests its land, air and water quality — and all are testing within normal limits.

Is the city safe?
EXPO explored the areas of interest to tourists around the convention center and the French Quarter. Just as in any major city, it’s important to exercise common sense. But high-traffic tourist areas seemed as safe as they ever were. Before Katrina, the city had 1,688 police officers. Today, it has 1,536.

Is there a lot of debris around?
Clean up is complete in the city’s core areas, such as in the French Quarter, Central Business District, Magazine Street and St. Charles Avenue. Outlaying neighborhoods are another story. There is, however, quite a bit of construction and rehab work underway throughout the city.

What’s the population of the city like now?
As of July, there were 190,000 residents in New Orleans Parish, compared with 485,000 pre-Katrina, and 977,500 residents in the Metro area, compared with 1.3 million post Katrina.



Sidebar: More on expoweb.com
Find exclusive Web-only content from this feature including:

A timeline of major events leading up to the show: Rebuilding the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center

Aug. 29, 2005 – Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans

Aug 30, 2005 – It’s believed 15,000 to 20,000 people are stranded in New Orleans.

Sept. 1, 2005 – The first rescue workers arrive at the Superdome and hear reports of other survivors stranded at the convention center. The news media investigates, and images of thousands of survivors without food, water or medical care begin to appear on the world’s TV screens.

Sept. 1, 2005 – Jimmie Fore, President and General Manager of the Convention Center, and 35 of his staff stayed in the building.

Sept. 2, 2005 - The Louisiana National Guard, after hearing rumors of murder, rape and violence (claims that were later never proven), took control of the building. Expecting the worst, they brought a 1,000-man force, but it only takes 20 minutes to secure the building. There was no resistance.

Sept. 4, 2005 – The last of the survivors are evacuated from the convention center.

Oct. 6, 2005 – The staff of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center announce they have re-established operation of the building. Reports of hundreds of people killed inside the center are found to be overblown – there were four confirmed deaths at the center, three from natural causes.

October 2005 – Plans to rehab the convention center begin. By mid-month, groups, like the ALA, are already making site visits. By the end of October, 95 percent of debris removal is complete. Carpet removal is 85 percent complete, and a cleaning of the exterior of the building is 80 percent complete. Environmental tests are performed and repeated several times and find the center has no airborne contaminants. Cleaning of the first floor restrooms is complete. The kitchen is in the process of a thorough cleaning. The kitchens will be cleaned to hospital-grade standards. Temporary roof repairs are in place, and glass replacement in the building is 65 percent complete.

By the end of October, the buildings tenants include the City of New Orleans Archives, FEMA, the New Orleans Police Department, EMS, the U.S. Army and a field hospital.

Mid-November 2005 – The removal of debris is complete. Cleaning of the interior, as well as the front exterior are wrapping up. Tests continue on the building’s air and water quality. The tests will be repeated throughout the restoration of the building. An order is placed for 88,000 square feet of custom carpet.

Late November 2005 – Restoration work is underway on the terrazzo tile floors in the D, E, and F Hall lobbies. This portion of the building is scheduled to open in January. Replacement or restoration of all the doors and hardware in the building is underway. Carpet removal is completed in the meeting rooms. The nearby Riverwalk Mall is also open with limited hours.

Mid-December 2005 – The center now has 25 events scheduled for 2006, bringing in approximately 152,000 out-of-state attendees and generating 214,070 room nights. Halls D–F are expected to open soon to host the Helen Brett New Orleans Gift and Jewelry Show. Work continues on the tile, hardware replacement and replacement glass for skylights. Sheetrock is also being replaced.

Jan. 1, 2006 – With the first show since Katrina only six weeks away, contractors put a rush on painting, repairing and refinishing all the surfaces in the convention center. Permanent roof repair is underway. The center also says it will share architectural renderings of the new center interior soon. They promise the burnt orange color that was in place before will not return.

Late January 2006 – The pace is picking up on the restoration efforts around halls D, E and F in preparation for the Helen Brett Gift and Jewelry Show. Another round of deep cleaning is underway. In addition, business is shaping up for 2007. Not only does the city expect to host 25 events by the end of 2006, but they expect that the remaining booked business for 2007 will generate 400,000 guests and 600,000 room nights.

Late February 2006 – The center hosts its first trade show, the Helen Brett Gift and Jewelry Show, Feb. 17–20. Repair work in Halls D, E and F is complete. The first renderings of the center’s new blue and green color scheme are released. The center now plans to host 28 groups by the end of 2006.

Mid-March 2006 - The center hosts the New Orleans Boat Show March 8–12. The first part of the carpet installation is underway. The heaviest work is concentrated in Halls G–J.

Late March 2006 - The center hosts the Greater New Orleans International Auto Show. Renovations remain on track.

May 1, 2006 – Carpet installation is complete in 90 percent of the building. Exterior restoration is ahead of schedule. The exterior orange canopy steel is being replaced by gray and is 60 percent complete.

Late May 2006 -- Helen Brett hosts another Gift and Jewelry Show May 19–22. The New Orleans Food and Wine experience is hosted May 24 –26. The center is in its final push to get ready for its first citywide show, ALA. Approximately 17,000 of the 27,000 new chairs are delivered. All the carpet installation needed for the ALA show is complete. The exterior canopy work is 90 percent complete.

Late June 2006 – More than $60 million of the center’s restoration work is complete. All but three halls are open for business. The center now offers 741,257 square feet of exhibit space, 99 meeting rooms, a 4,000-seat conference auditorium and a 36,000-square-foot ballroom.

The center welcomes the Air and Waste Management Association June 20-23, bringing 3,000 attendees. The ALA show also arrives June 22–28 and attracts 17,000 attendees.

The remaining portions of the building, which includes four halls, 41 meeting rooms and a 32,000-square-foot ballroom, are expected to be open by November.



List of major groups meeting in New Orleans in 2006
• Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship International, July 2006, 25,000 attendees
• American Psychological Association, August 2006, 16,000 attendees
• Louisiana Restaurant Association, August 2006, 16,000 attendees
• Society of Exploration Geophysicists, October 2006, 8,000 attendees
• American College of Emergency Physicians, October 2006, 6,000 attendees
• American Society for Reproductive Medicine, October 2006, 6,000 attendees
• National Association of Realtors, November 2006, 25,000 attendees
• International Work Boat Show, November 2006, 4,000 attendees


ALA helps with rebuilding efforts
Helping to rebuild Gulf Coast libraries devastated by Hurricane Katrina was a central theme of the ALA’s Annual Conference and exhibition known as “the Stacks.” Presentations, entertainment and networking events revolved around bringing attention to the plight of affected libraries, as well as helping to raise money for repairs. In many instances, ALA members also provided a little elbow grease. Among some of the events that benefited Gulf Coast area libraries:
• ALA members, friends, groups and corporations donated more than $370,000 to the ALA’s fund to help Gulf Coast libraries recover. Outgoing ALA President Michael Gorman presented several checks to regional library associations at the show’s opening session.
• More than 900 attendees came early and spent June 23-27 working on 22 local volunteer projects to help restore local libraries. One of the larger projects was the renovation of the interior of the historic Carnegie library branch of the New Orleans Public Library.
• Mary Chapin Carpenter performed for a benefit concert. Half of the proceeds benefited ALA scholarships and the other half ALA’s relief fund. The concert raised $x.
• First Lady Laura Bush brought poignant attention to the problems faced by Gulf Coast libraries in her Town Hall Meeting keynote address. She showed a moving video presentation of interviews conducted with Gulf Coast librarians among the rubble of their buildings and then shared a number of personal stories from librarians gathered while she toured the region.
• Discount retailer Dollar General, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL), a division of the ALA, and The National Education Association announced the first recipients of grants from the Dollar General School Library Relief Fund. Thirty-two schools from around the Gulf Coast region serving more than 22,000 students received grants totaling $230,000.
• The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced $12.2 million in grants for libraries in Louisiana and Mississippi.
• The Bush Clinton Katrina Fund announced a $5 million grant to repair eight libraries in the region.
• Many of the show’s exhibitors donated the books they’d brought to display to local New Orleans libraries to help bolster damaged collections.

Reporter’s Notebook
Arriving in the city

As the plane descended through the clouds over New Orleans, just as the sun was setting, it seemed as though most of the passengers were craning their necks for a glimpse of the city – a bird’s eye perspective on the last 10 months.

I was just as bad as the rest trying to see the streets below as the altitude lessened. I couldn’t see much. There were pockets that were bright and lit up by street lights –- a baseball diamond with those high-powered florescent outdoor lights –- but then again there were streets dotted by the occasional streetlight, but not much else. I wondered if these were devastated areas full of unoccupied houses, or if I simply couldn’t see well enough to see the lights on in smaller buildings. It was dusk and hard to make out the details.

When I stepped onto the jetway from the plane, that unmistakable New Orleans air hit me – thick and heavy -- the way humidity is in the South, as if the air is wrapping you up in a stifling hot blanket.

The airport terminal looked like a ghost town. Parts of it had the lights turned off and none of the usual airport gift shops or restaurants were open. (Note: Later interviews with attendees bore out that had I arrived in the daytime, I would have been greeted by a jazz band and a more normal airport.) Airport staff guided us down the hallway to the escalator that led to baggage claim. Baggage claim seemed slightly more normal as several flights had just arrived and several conveyor belts were loaded down with bags and surrounded by people.

The bags came quickly, and I was off to the airport shuttle in less than 15 minutes. It was full of librarians ready for the week ahead. Some were already planning their drink orders.

I was anxious to talk to the people of New Orleans about their experiences, so I started with the shuttle driver. “Where were you during the storm?” I asked.

“I got the heck out of here,” he said. “We were evacuated to Baton Rouge, then to Houston, then to Dallas.”

Ron, the driver, had only been back in his city for a few weeks. He’d come back to see what had happened to his house for the first time and determine whether anything could be saved. He thinks the house can be rehabbed and is currently in discussions with contractors about how much repairs would cost, but if he fixes it, someone else will live there. Ron would sell the house, if he can.

“I’m not coming back,” Ron, who never answered when I asked him his last name, said, “I can’t risk going through this again.”

Ron and his family have found a place to live in Dallas. His kids are in school there, and his wife found a job. Evacuating and then losing everything they owned has financially drained the family. They have no savings left. “We just couldn’t do it again,” he said.

He’d heard about the shuttle company needing drivers and figured working a few shifts would be a good way to earn a little much needed cash while he settled his New Orleans affairs.

“I’ll always be from New Orleans,” he told me, “I love this city. I just can’t live here again.”


Bourbon Street

The airport shuttle deposited me at the Royal Sonesta Hotel on Bourbon Street in the heart of the French Quarter. If you ever go to New Orleans and want to see the Quarter, this hotel’s location is perfect.

The lobby is beautiful with white marble, quasi-Victorian decor and the sort of large chandeliers that could only exist in a hotel lobby. There’s a lovely courtyard with a fountain at the center of the hotel. My room was, well, a hotel room, but it had a plasma TV and a set of French doors that opened onto a balcony overlooking the courtyard. Considering all the drunken chaos right outside the hotel, inside things were amazingly quiet.

I could hardly wait to see New Orleans. I’d been there several times before the hurricane, both for exhibition industry events and personal vacations. I was dying to see how the city, where I had so many personal memories, was doing so I set out to inspect infamous Bourbon Street at about 10:30 p.m. It wasn’t at all what I remembered. Yes, it was loud and pulsing with competing beats from surrounding bars. Yes, the sleazy strip joints and bars with blasting music were all there in their neon glory, but nothing smelled bad. That distinctive Bourbon Street smell –- a mixture of stale beer, urine and vomit –- was missing.

In fact, the street was spotless! There wasn’t a single piece of litter to be found. The street had plenty of librarians exploring, accompanied by more of a police presence than I’d ever seen. At every cross street, there was a police cruiser and a few officers, and in between cross streets, there were police on horseback prancing up and down the street.

Southern hospitality
In my opinion, never has a city been so happy to welcome tourists as New Orleans that week. It’s not uncommon for convention and visitors bureaus to undertake a “welcome” campaign when a very large event is in town. And you can bet that the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau was no different when the first major trade show since Katrina came to town.

The city pulled out all the stops to welcome the ALA. They held a special bash for hospitality workers at the convention center a week before the show. Two waiters at the Desire Restaurant and Oyster Bar on Bourbon Street, who I talked to and are pictured below, were in attendance. They were given the purple buttons you can see on their uniforms. They say “We’re Jazzed You’re Here.” And, they were given a refresher course on the difference between waiting on FEMA workers (long-term guests) and librarians (short-term guests). They also proudly told me that they got a free lunch out of the deal, and it was pretty good.

Everywhere you went in New Orleans, someone thanked you for being there. They thanked you in the bars on Bourbon Street, in the T-shirt shops along Jackson Square (even when I didn’t buy anything), and every taxi driver and shuttle bus driver made a point to say, “Thank you for coming to New Orleans.”

One attendee I spoke with over lunch told me her shuttle driver that morning not only said thank you, but he stood up and gave a mini speech about how much he appreciated the fact that the ALA stuck with their agreement to come to New Orleans.

Whatever was said at this hospitality worker bash, it worked. Or, maybe the good folks of New Orleans really didn’t need anyone to tell them how to be welcoming or thankful. Even if the tourists seemed tiresome at times before Katrina, there’s no other city in the country where everyone -- from the President of the CVB to the waiter in the average restaurant –- truly knows what’s like to have all the tourists leave.

After Katrina, New Orleans lost $2 billion worth of meeting, convention and trade show business. Revenues from that business represented 35 percent of the city’s operating budget. Approximately 87 events cancelled in the weeks after the storm. This show was the city’s chance to resume its place among the top exhibition destinations in the country, and it shined.

Walking the Quarter

After several long days at the show feeling a bit like a vulture as I hovered over the ALA convention staff, I made it a point to walk every part of the French Quarter. The Quarter hadn’t flooded during the storm, and thus it was pretty much as it had always been.

The places most heavily trafficked by tourists were the same as always. The bars never seem to close on Bourbon Street, and the artists still display their work on Jackson Square. The souvenir shops still push strings of beads and an endless variety of hot sauces, but the T-shirts were a bit more creative than in years past. The selection of post-Katrina T-shirts was hilarious, although perhaps not fit for print. FEMA workers aren’t feeling the love among the T-shirt vendors as the shirts sported FEMA slogans using some of the more colorful words of the English language. A mild one read: “FEMA – Stands for: Fix it My ASS!” OK, so they weren’t great copy editors! The vendors even catered to the show selling shirts that read, “Librarians do it by the book.”

I never had difficulty finding a place to eat on a modest budget. Some of the higher-end art gallaries and antique shops seemed to have limited hours, but the souvenir shops were going strong at midnight. I wandered down a street full of antique shops on my last day there around 4:45 p.m., thinking I might find them open, but only one or two weren’t closed for the day.

The other thing that struck me was that if you ventured away from the most heavily trafficked parts of the Quarter, it seemed a bit bare. While on the main drag, the iron balconies were dripping with ferns, on the side streets owners hadn’t managed to deck out their porches with plants yet this season.

By the end of the week, however, Bourbon Street had been properly baptized by partying librarians. My last night in town, I ventured down the neon gauntlet once again. This time there were discarded cups, and the smell was back!

Remembering Katrina

The ALA show attracts a number of high profile, VIP speakers. That’s typical for the show, but what was different this year were the ongoing themes. Each speaker weighed in on their perspective being in New Orleans after Katrina. Two really stick out for me – First Lady Laura Bush and CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

The First Lady had once been a school librarian herself, thus at the ALA show she was in some respects back on home turf. Because of her librarian background, Bush had a special place in her heart for ALA’s efforts to help Gulf Coast libraries rebuild. She gave a moving speech, and then a video presentation, full of stories from librarians in the affected regions against the backdrop of their devistated and molding collections of books.

The First Lady told one story relayed to her by an elementry school librarian from Mississippi. This particular librarian was always impressing upon the children the need to take care of their library books. She must have done a good job because as the families were fleeing the storm, a number of the children insisted on bringing their library books along. These children carried their library books through hurricane shelters and temporary housing until finally, they returned home. As the school opened, its library was completely gutted. But here came the children to return their books, worried that by now the fines must be enormous. Today those few books are the only ones the school has in its library.

CNN’s Anderson Cooper was another big draw. Cooper covered the aftermath of the storm. He walked through the stranded crowd at the convention center as the pictures of thirsty and hot people begging to be rescued came across our TV sets. Naturally, he was full of his own tales about the city and the storm. He talked about interviewing a man who’d brought his grandmother through the storm to the convention center, only to have her die once they arrived. The man was forced to leave her body parked in a wheelchair outside of the center. “She survived the storm, but she didn’t survive this convention center,” he told the crowd.

Twice during his speech Anderson choked up and had to stop momentarily to regain his composure. Finally, he stopped to apologize to the crowd. “I haven’t been back in this building since right after the storm,” he explained. “It’s hard to see it looking so new and polished. I’m afraid that people will forget what happened here, and we can never forget.”

I don’t think Anderson has to worry. I doubt there was a person in attendance who hadn’t walked up and down the newly carpeted corridors and tried to picture what it must have been like before. He’s right. We can’t forget. But time moves on. New Orleans has been through a lot in the last 10 months. They’ve worked hard to rebuild their city. They worked hard to host this show. The new walls and carpet aren’t simply a wallpapering of the past, they’re a sign of the resilience of a city to overcome incredible odds and rise again.


More photos from the show











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