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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Search for bodies ends in Louisiana


Tony Reid surveys his flood-damaged home Monday in New Orleans' Ninth Ward.
 (Associated Press photos / The Spokesman-Review)
Amy Forliti Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS – The search for Hurricane Katrina victims has ended in Louisiana with a death toll at 964, but more searches will be conducted only if someone reports seeing a body, a state official said Monday.

State and federal agencies have finished their sweeps through the city, but Kenyon International Emergency Services, the private company hired by the state to remove the bodies, is on call if any other body is found, said Bob Johannessen, a spokesman with the state Department of Health and Hospitals.

“There might still be bodies found – for instance, if a house was locked and nobody able to go into it,” Johannessen said.

Last week, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said it had completed its role in the search because its specialties were no longer needed, including getting to bodies in attics or other hard-to-reach places or in buildings that may be structurally unsound.

FEMA did nearly 23,000 thorough room-to-room searches in New Orleans with about a dozen teams of emergency workers.

Mississippi’s death toll remained at 221.

There were signs of normalcy in the city Monday – five weeks to the day since Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast.

St. Andrew the Apostle elementary school was the first Catholic school reopened in New Orleans. A week ago, residents were allowed to return to the school’s Algiers neighborhood of 57,000 people across the Mississippi River that largely escaped flooding.

Archdiocese officials said their schools also were reopening in areas outside the city.

Some public schools in nearby parishes also opened Monday, but public schools in New Orleans remain closed. Officials are developing a plan to reopen some by November, depending on environmental, health and safety concerns.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers continued pumping water out of the lower Ninth Ward. Efforts to rebuild the levees that breached, causing water to cascade into the city, remained under way. However, two canals near the area were closed on Monday as a precaution, because of stronger-than-normal winds and higher tides, said spokesman Alan Dooley.

As of late afternoon, a steady stream of water leaked through the repaired levees.

Electricity had been restored to about 36 percent of New Orleans customers and to about 99 percent of the customers in neighboring Jefferson Parish, said Entergy Corp. spokesman Chanel Lagarde.

And as another sign that the city was coming back to life, nine ships, including four container vessels, are scheduled to call on the Port of New Orleans this week, port officials announced.