NATCHEZ, Miss. – City officials and workers are struggling to pick up debris left from the hurricane-produced storms that swept through Natchez the past couple of months.
City public works crews are short-handed, Mayor Dan Gibson said Tuesday as he and aldermen discussed the need and costs of gathering the fallen trees, limbs and other storm debris left from Hurricane Delta, which came through Oct. 9. The winds of another storm – Laura – took a similar path through Natchez Aug. 27.
Gibson said the city has not been deemed to be hit hard enough to qualify for federal disaster-relief funds to help pay for storm-recovery costs. He said a private company assessed the city’s Duncan Park area and estimated clean-up costs for that part of town alone to be about $250,000.
The Board of Aldermen earlier this month did declare Natchez in a state of emergency to help make the city potentially eligible for state or federal disaster-relief funds.
Gibson noted the city has applied for reimbursements for COVID-related expenses that total about $370,000. He awaits details on the provision of those funds and how they can be spent. State and federal governments earlier this year earmarked disaster funds funneled through the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency for cities and counties impacted by the pandemic.
Gibson expressed hopes Tuesday that Natchez dodges the winds of Hurricane Zeta, which hit Louisiana and Mississippi on Wednesday.
Natchez residents since the previous storms have piled yard rubbish on curbsides for the city’s contracted trash collectors to haul away, but they will not if too large to easily grab by hand.
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