NEW ORLEANS — Some residents are asking a judge to hold the city of New Orleans in contempt for allegedly demolishing structurally sound houses without notice and failing to maintain an accurate demolition list, in violation of a consent decree.
An attorney for the city, Franz Zibilich, said the new allegations “have no merit whatsoever.”
The request, on behalf of residents with pending demolitions in the city after Hurricane Katrina, is part of a long-running legal dispute over the city’s identification and noticing of properties to be razed following the storm, which hit in August 2005.
The filing also seeks to have all demolitions in the city halted until listing procedures are revised.
The consent decree, signed by the city and fair housing advocates earlier this year, was meant to guard against unwarranted demolitions while letting the city raze the worst properties. It required, among other things, that notice be given to owners of targeted properties, including things they could do to try to avoid demolitions.
The motion, filed late last week, claims homes are on the list wrongfully, including that of prominent local civil rights attorney Tracie Washington. It says that her home has no damage, and that structurally sound homes are being razed without notice.
Davida Finger, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said this spoke to the “worst kinds of human rights violations.”
“They’re supposed to only demolish homes that meet a certain threshold of deterioration,” she told The Associated Press.
Zibilich said the city doesn’t agree with the allegation that homes were wrongfully demolished and doesn’t concede a violation of the consent decree. He said the city is looking into the alleged listing of Washington’s home.
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New Orleans homes razed without consent
September 29, 2008
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