Moreno Wants More Power Over SWBNO. She Already Has It.

Moreno Wants More Power Over SWBNO. She Already Has It.

Moreno Wants More Power Over SWBNO. She Already Has It.

By Jeff Thomas | Publisher, Black Source Media | Owner, WBOK 1230 AM & 107.1 FM

TL;DR β€” Read This Before You Scroll Past

  • Louisiana just passed House Bill 1243, giving the New Orleans City Council sweeping new authority over SWBNO. It’s on Governor Landry’s desk now.
  • At the same time, Mayor Helena Moreno publicly slammed SWBNO this week over the Decatur Street water main project, after two French Quarter restaurants closed.
  • But Moreno isn’t an outside critic. By city charter, she’s the president of the SWBNO board.
  • Her own infrastructure chief, Steve Nelson, ran SWBNO’s Engineering and water main divisions as General Superintendent through 2025 β€” the same window when this project’s scope and timeline were set.
  • Now, at City Hall, Nelson says “the city isn’t involved” in a project shaped under his own recent SWBNO leadership.
  • HB1243 hands City Hall even more control over SWBNO. Before that happens, New Orleans should be honest about who already had their hands on the wheel.

Why SWBNO Control Is About to Change

New Orleans is about to get more control over SWBNO. Louisiana lawmakers just passed House Bill 1243. It would hand the City Council real authority over the water utility’s budget, rates, and oversight β€” power that has sat in Baton Rouge for decades.

The House passed it 89-8. The Senate passed it 36-0. It now sits on Governor Jeff Landry’s desk, and he’s expected to sign it.

That should be good news. But this week, while that bill waited on a signature, Mayor Helena Moreno gave New Orleans a preview of what “more local control” might look like. It’s worth a closer look.

πŸ“‹ Key Points

  1. House Bill 1243 passed the Louisiana House 89-8 and the Senate 36-0. It now awaits Governor Jeff Landry’s signature, and he’s expected to sign it.
  2. The bill would shift major SWBNO authority β€” budgets, rates, contracts, and oversight β€” to the New Orleans City Council, a power that has belonged to the state legislature for decades.
  3. On June 11, Mayor Moreno publicly called SWBNO’s handling of the Decatur Street water main project a planning failure, after Cafe Sbisa and LUFU NOLA both closed that week.
  4. By city charter, Moreno serves as president of the SWBNO board. The board sets policy and approves budgets for the agency she’s now criticizing.
  5. Moreno’s deputy chief administrative officer for infrastructure, Steve Nelson, was SWBNO’s General Superintendent through 2025, overseeing more than 400 employees across Engineering, water main replacement, and other divisions.
  6. The Decatur Street project is a transmission water main replacement β€” the exact category of work Nelson’s division managed before he moved to City Hall.
  7. HB1243 increases City Hall’s formal authority over SWBNO. It doesn’t, on its own, create new accountability for decisions City Hall’s own leadership already made.

What Is Moreno Actually Upset About?

Sewerage and Water Board construction on Decatur Street in the French Quarter
SWBNO’s transmission water main project has disrupted Decatur Street for months.

On Decatur Street, SWBNO is replacing a 115-year-old water main. The work has torn up several blocks of the French Quarter for months. This week, two restaurants on that stretch closed for good. Cafe Sbisa and LUFU NOLA both pointed to the construction.

Mayor Moreno responded fast. She called the project’s execution a mistake. SWBNO should have done the work in small pieces, she said, not all at once. The agency “failed” to properly plan it, in her words β€” and her administration is now looking at ways to help affected businesses.

SWBNO pushed back in a statement. The agency said the project’s scope and timeline were set before its current leadership came on board, under deadlines tied to FEMA infrastructure funding.

Moreno Isn’t Watching From Outside

Here’s what got left out of the headlines. Moreno isn’t an outside critic of SWBNO. By city charter, she serves as president of the SWBNO board.

That’s not a ceremonial title. The board sets policy, approves budgets, and oversees the agency’s direction. Moreno has sat at the head of that table since her inauguration in January.

So when the mayor says SWBNO “failed” to plan a project properly, she’s describing an agency she already has formal authority over. The real question isn’t just what SWBNO got wrong. It’s also what oversight from her own board caught β€” or didn’t β€” before two restaurants went out of business.

Her Infrastructure Chief Used to Run This

There’s a second connection that matters even more.

Steve Nelson now serves as Moreno’s deputy chief administrative officer for infrastructure. Before that, he ran major operations at SWBNO itself. He became Deputy General Superintendent of Engineering in January 2023, then General Superintendent in January 2024. In that role, he oversaw more than 400 employees across four divisions, including Engineering and transmission water main replacement.

The Decatur Street project is a transmission water main replacement. Its scope and timeline were set during the same window when Nelson led that exact division.

Now, asked about the ongoing French Quarter disruption, Nelson told Axios the city isn’t involved in the construction. That’s technically true today. But the planning that created this mess happened on his watch at SWBNO, just months before he moved to City Hall.

Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans maintenance truck
SWBNO crews handle the day-to-day work β€” including the divisions Nelson once ran.

What HB1243 Changes β€” and What It Doesn’t

Sewerage and Water Board treatment plant in New Orleans
SWBNO operates the infrastructure behind New Orleans’ water, sewer, and drainage systems β€” infrastructure that will soon answer to a different chain of command.

HB1243 would give the City Council direct authority over SWBNO’s budget, rates, contracts, and internal policies. For decades, that power sat with a state legislature that meets once a year. Local control, in theory, means faster decisions and clearer accountability.

But power only creates accountability if New Orleans is honest about who already holds it. BSM made a similar point this week about institutions that perform outrage instead of owning their role. SWBNO is the same story, with different names attached.

Moreno already chairs the SWBNO board. Her infrastructure chief just left SWBNO’s top operational job. Adding City Council authority on top of that doesn’t create new accountability β€” not unless City Hall also accounts for the decisions it already made, or helped make, as SWBNO’s own leadership.

The Bottom Line

New Orleans residents deserve a water system that works. Two more shuttered restaurants on Decatur Street show how high the stakes are.

HB1243 could help. That depends on whether New Orleans uses its new authority to build real coordination between SWBNO and City Hall β€” instead of using it to score points against an agency City Hall already helps run.

For homeowners across this city, the stakes go beyond one street. Rising insurance costs are already squeezing Black homeowners in New Orleans, and a utility system stuck in blame-shifting won’t make that easier.

So here’s the standard. Don’t just ask what SWBNO did wrong on Decatur Street. Ask who at City Hall already had a hand in how that project was planned β€” and whether more power changes anything if nobody admits that.


About the Author
Jeff Thomas is the Publisher of Black Source Media and Owner of WBOK 1230 AM & 107.1 FM, New Orleans’ premier Black talk radio station. He writes on politics, power, and the civic life of Black New Orleans and Louisiana. His opinions are his own β€” and he stands behind every word.

Sources

  • Fox 8 WVUE β€” “Mayor Helena Moreno criticizes SWBNO after Decatur Street construction leads to restaurant closures,” June 11, 2026. fox8live.com
  • NOLA.com β€” “Mayor Helena Moreno blames S&WB for delays on French Quarter construction project,” June 2026. nola.com
  • NOLA.com β€” “Chefs who won Michelin recognition lose their French Quarter restaurant over road work,” June 2026. nola.com
  • WGNO β€” “Sewerage and Water Board of New Orleans names new general superintendent,” December 2023. wgno.com
  • WWL-TV β€” “‘A new tone’: Moreno unveils 100-day roadmap and cabinet picks ahead of inauguration.” wwltv.com
  • Axios New Orleans β€” “French Quarter construction drags into festival season,” February 2026. axios.com
  • Fox 8 WVUE / NOLA.com β€” HB1243 passage and Senate vote coverage, 2026.
  • Black Source Media β€” Essence Wants $12 Million From New Orleans β€” Ask This First
  • Black Source Media β€” Louisiana’s Insurance Crisis Is Destroying Black Wealth

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