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| A father (L) and his son stand beside their
destroyed house in New Orleans, Louisiana, the US, October 2, 2005.
(Xinhua Photo) |
Beijing, Oct. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin
announced on Tuesday that the city will lay off 3,000 city employees, about
half the city's workforce.
"We can limp along for
another month or two," he told a news conference. "Beyond two months we'll be
talking again."
The layoffs, which Nagin described as "pretty permanent,"
are expected to save the hard-hit city $5 million to $8 million a month. New
Orleans' currently pays about $20 million a month in salaries for its more than
6,000 city workers, Nagin said.
The announcement Tuesday was a concession to a mounting
financial crisis across the region that was devastated by Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita.
"I have to deal with the reality," the mayor said, his
head bowed. "We cannot afford to keep the full complement of city workers."
It came a day after Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco warned
that many local governments were "on the verge of financial collapse" and
appealed to the Bush administration and Congress for
help.
On Monday Blanco asked Congress to amend or suspend
U.S. law that prohibits spending federal emergency money to cover the basic
expenses of local governments, including payrolls.
The law does allow for the reimbursement of overtime
costs in some cases. Enditem
(Agencies) [1] [2] [3] [4] |