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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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To: steve harris who wrote (137258)9/6/2005 4:00:07 PM
From: KLP  Read Replies (2) of 793914
 
Per CNN: Official: E. Coli bacteria detected in floodwater

NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- Floodwater in New Orleans is contaminated with E. coli bacteria, a city official told CNN Tuesday.

The official in Mayor Ray Nagin's office declined to be identified.

The failures of the levee system after Hurricane Katrina's onslaught left about 80 percent of the city flooded with water up to 20 feet deep -- water that became a toxic mix of chemicals, garbage, corpses and human waste. (See video of restarted pumping station -- 2:14)

E. coli comes from human and animal waste and can be found in untreated sewage.

Drinking water contaminated with E. coli can lead to serious illness and death if not properly treated.

Authorities have warned it will take weeks to drain the water covering much of the city.

In the city's historic Garden District, helicopters dumped water on a raging fire as firefighters tried to keep the blaze from spreading to the other ornate mansions.

The fire destroyed at least two large buildings -- one brick and the other wood, both former mansions divided into apartments.

Coast Guard helicopters snagged buckets of water from Lake Pontchartrain and firefighters from New York and New Orleans were using a gasoline-tanker sized truck filled with water since the city's water system has no pressure.

The fire was started by a candle in the basement of one of the buildings, the National Guard told CNN. Two people were rescued from one of the buildings. (See video on people who refuse to leave -- 2:51)

The Garden District was spared from the worst of the damage from Hurricane Katrina. The area south of the French Quarter was where successful entrepreneurs of the mid-1800s built opulent mansions.

Fire is just one of the dangers faced by residents who plan to stay in the devastated city.

City officials want everybody out, both for their own safety and for the safety of those who will be engaged in the clean-up and rebuilding efforts.

"We have to convince them to leave," Nagin told NBC's "Today." "It's not safe here."

Nagin said that he did not know how many bodies would be revealed once the waters recede, but said the death toll was expected to be in the thousands.

"It's going to be awful, and it's going to wake the nation up again," Nagin said.

Currently, state officials report 71 dead.

Nagin denied that he had ordered rescuers to withhold food and water from people who insisted on staying. There had been reports that he had issued such an edict.

Recovery teams are searching house to house in New Orleans for hurricane victims, and helicopters are continuing to circle the city in a search for survivors.

Meanwhile, crews were working to pump water out of the city and back into the lake after engineers patched the ruptured levee along the 17th Street Canal on Monday.

Lt. Gen. Carl Strock, commander of the Army Corps of Engineers, told CNN it would take up to 80 days to dry parts of the city.

Strock told CNN Tuesday that the Corps was working to minimize the environmental damage to Lake Pontchartrain. (Full story)

The military was considering using planes to spray for mosquitoes in areas where standing water could become a breeding ground for the insects, which can carry West Nile virus and other diseases, an official told CNN.

Crews also resumed efforts to recover the bodies of people killed in the storm.
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