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New Orleans mayor LaToya Cantrell has recommended all major events on the city's 2020 calendar be postponed to 2021 as uncertainty over the coronavirus pandemic looms, dealing a significant blow to the thousands of workers who rely on the city's tourism and hospitality-driven economy.
Her calls also cast doubt over the future of NFL games in the city, which hosts the Saints football team and the 75,000-seat Superdome.
During a Tuesday press conference, the mayor said: "I don't think anyone has a clue right now. We're looking at hypotheticals, we're looking at data, but ... the data doesn't lie and it clearly shows us without a unified strategy nationally. Its impacted our response locally, across the country."
At least 1,103 people in Louisiana have died from Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, with roughly half of all deaths in the state in the city's metropolitan area, as of 15 April.
Postponing large-scale events could also remove the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival — a massive two-week music and food festival that attracts thousands of people to the city — as well as several other festivals from the 2020 calendar, depriving the city millions of dollars in tax revenue and severely threatening the livelihoods of countless workers in the region.
Essence Festival, which postponed its Fourth of July weekend event to the fall, announced that its cancelling its 2020 event in the wake of Mayor Cantrell's statement.
She said: "My opinion is all of that should be pushed back, period ... Absolutely no large events as it relates to the year of 2020."
New Orleans also hosts the NBA's Pelicans, whose season has been postponed indefinitely along with all NBA games. NFL officials have not announced plans to delay the league's 2020-2021 season. A league schedule has not been announced.
The league's televised draft remains on the schedule for later this month, though it will not include any public events.
Greg Bensel, senior vice president of communications and broadcast for the Saints and Pelicans, said in a statement that the organisations "are being very proactive in working with health care professionals, our medical staff and both the NBA and NFL" while in "constant contact" with city officials.
As the Saints prepare for a planned return to Superdome in the fall, "our highest priority will be the health and safety of our fans, staff, players and coaches. It is what we need to do and are doing relative to planning to play and we will be ready," Mr Bensel said. "And considering the economic and cultural significance of the Saints, we are working to do everything in our power to make it work. It's too important for our city."
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A view of empty Bourbon street in the French Quarter amid the coronavirus pandemic in New Orleans, Louisiana
Getty
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Nyla Clark, 3, accompanied by her mother, Chavonne Clark, sits in a baby stroller at a corner in New Orleans, hoping to get a few dollars from an occasional passerby. Clark was a phlebotomist with a local company until she lost her job because of the coronavirus pandemic. She is waiting for unemployment
The Advocate via AP
3/25
A man boards a streetcar
Reuters
4/25
Jackson Square, normally bustling with tourists, is seen deserted
AP
5/25
Words from Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive" are painted onto plywood covering the window of a closed business
AFP via Getty
6/25
Street performer Eddie Webb looks around the nearly deserted French Quarter looking to make money
AP
7/25
Boarded up businesses
Reuters
8/25
The normally bustling tourist mecca of Bourbon Street lies deserted in the early afternoon
Reuters
9/25
A sign along I-10 informing persons who travel from Louisiana to quarantine
AP
10/25
A man cycles along Jackson Square
AFP via Getty
11/25
Elena Likaj, prevention department manager at Odyssey House Louisiana (OHL) which runs a drive-through testing site, takes the temperature of New Orleans resident Peyton Gill
Reuters
12/25
A man walks his dog past a boarded up business on Frenchmen Street
Reuters
13/25
An empty Bourbon street
Getty
14/25
A meal is distributed at the Lantern Light Ministry at the Rebuild Center
Reuters
15/25
A woman walks in the French Quarter
Reuters
16/25
People practice social distancing as they queue up for a meal at the Lantern Light Ministry at the Rebuild Center
Reuters
17/25
French Quarter
Getty
18/25
A sign is pictured in the French Quarter amid the outbreak
Reuters
19/25
A view of Bourbon Street
Reuters
20/25
National Guard members walk down Rampart Street
AFP via Getty
21/25
A man rides his bicycle in front of a boarded up French Quarter restaurant
Reuters
22/25
A shuttered business is pictured on Decatur Street
AFP via Getty
23/25
The normally bustling tourist mecca of Bourbon Street lies deserted
Reuters
24/25
A view of Canal Street
Reuters
25/25
A New Orleans firefighter works to contain an early morning fire
Reuters
1/25
A view of empty Bourbon street in the French Quarter amid the coronavirus pandemic in New Orleans, Louisiana
Getty
2/25
Nyla Clark, 3, accompanied by her mother, Chavonne Clark, sits in a baby stroller at a corner in New Orleans, hoping to get a few dollars from an occasional passerby. Clark was a phlebotomist with a local company until she lost her job because of the coronavirus pandemic. She is waiting for unemployment
The Advocate via AP
3/25
A man boards a streetcar
Reuters
4/25
Jackson Square, normally bustling with tourists, is seen deserted
AP
5/25
Words from Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive" are painted onto plywood covering the window of a closed business
AFP via Getty
6/25
Street performer Eddie Webb looks around the nearly deserted French Quarter looking to make money
AP
7/25
Boarded up businesses
Reuters
8/25
The normally bustling tourist mecca of Bourbon Street lies deserted in the early afternoon
Reuters
9/25
A sign along I-10 informing persons who travel from Louisiana to quarantine
AP
10/25
A man cycles along Jackson Square
AFP via Getty
11/25
Elena Likaj, prevention department manager at Odyssey House Louisiana (OHL) which runs a drive-through testing site, takes the temperature of New Orleans resident Peyton Gill
Reuters
12/25
A man walks his dog past a boarded up business on Frenchmen Street
Reuters
13/25
An empty Bourbon street
Getty
14/25
A meal is distributed at the Lantern Light Ministry at the Rebuild Center
Reuters
15/25
A woman walks in the French Quarter
Reuters
16/25
People practice social distancing as they queue up for a meal at the Lantern Light Ministry at the Rebuild Center
Reuters
17/25
French Quarter
Getty
18/25
A sign is pictured in the French Quarter amid the outbreak
Reuters
19/25
A view of Bourbon Street
Reuters
20/25
National Guard members walk down Rampart Street
AFP via Getty
21/25
A man rides his bicycle in front of a boarded up French Quarter restaurant
Reuters
22/25
A shuttered business is pictured on Decatur Street
AFP via Getty
23/25
The normally bustling tourist mecca of Bourbon Street lies deserted
Reuters
24/25
A view of Canal Street
Reuters
25/25
A New Orleans firefighter works to contain an early morning fire
Reuters
Mayor Cantrell says she doesn't know what the future of league sports looks like in New Orleans under a pandemic threat.
She said: "If we're well and we're better, and better than even our surrounding areas and states and who comes, I think we'll have to think about that. It'll all be factored into not only when New Orleans opens back up, but when the state and when the United States truly opens back up to where we are confident and comfortable but safe in going about our way."