NEW
ORLEANS, La. - Hurricane Katrina left New Orleans bruised and
battered, sweeping away billions of dollars of potential tourism
business. But like the city, the tourism industry is on the mend.
Visitors are returning to New Orleans in bigger numbers, and they
aren’t just going for the nightlife on Bourbon Street: One
of the biggest attractions is storm damage.
The
beignets are back, and so is the Cajun flavor. Tourists are returning
to New Orleans for a taste of it all — and they mean all.
What some of them want most is a sampling of Katrina: snapshots,
they say, of history and the city’s now-infamous levees.
Isabelle
Cossart’s tour business took a hit during the storm, and
so she’s hitting back with Katrina disaster tours.
It’s
a twist that could help restore some of the $1 billion tourism
dollars already lost.
Even
big tour companies like Grayline see Katrina as a potential blockbuster,
proclaiming it on their Web site online booking page as “America’s
worst catastrophe.”
In
bad taste?
It may be a sign of the times, but it’s a sign not welcomed
by everyone.
“Physically
creating tours to come see Katrina damage? That’s pathetic,”
says Michelle Fallon, a displaced New Orleans resident.
All
tourists welcome
Businesses like the “House of Blues” that depend on
a thriving tourism industry say the important thing is to get
tourists here no matter what.
And
Wednesday night, they’re counting on the first live show
since Katrina to start drawing them back to this institution.
“It’s
almost sold out and we’re really encouraged by that,”
says Laura Tennyson, of The House of Blues New Orleans.
It’s
encouragement that’s apparently spreading across the country
as more tourists arrive.
“Maybe
the most patriotic act an American could engage in next year is
coming back to New Orleans.” Stephen Perry of New Orleans’
Convention & Visitors Bureau.
It’s
a city hoping that red, white... and some blues... will turn the
city the color of money.
©
2005 MSNBC Interactive