NOLA:
Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Mike Brown called Katrina one of the worst disasters he has seen, exceeded only by California wildfires.“This is a catastrophic storm,” he said. “People will not get back to their homes for several weeks — if not longer.”
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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Jeanne Meserve is on CNN, talking about stranded people in New Orleans who can’t get help. She’s breaking down. She can barely hold herself together enough to talk to Aaron Brown.
“We [reporters] are wacky thrill-seekers sometimes, but when you stand in the dark, and you hear people yelling for help and no one can get to them, it’s a totally different experience.”
One of the reasons they can’t get to people is because some of the natural-gas and electrical lines are still “live,” and it’s too dangerous to take boats around in those areas, according to CNN photojournalist Mark Biello.
“Could be hundreds of deaths by tomorrow.” –Biello
Water still rising — slowly, not dramatically like before, but still rising.
Lots of dogs and cats also stranded on rooftops, along with humans, Biello says. (An important question: what about the snakes?)
There has been looting in New Orleans. Assholes.
Meanwhile, WSDU is reportedly showing footage of a fire spreading from house to house in Metairie.
Also… CNN is now reporting that conditions at the Superdome are getting “progressively worse.” There is some considerable “tension” among the population inside, according to Ray Bias, an emergency worker at the dome, and he’s not sure how much longer the current situation will remain tenable.
In comments, Chris writes:
People will NOT be going back home for a long long time to much of New Orleans, even if the water drops, which will take a long time because three of the huge pumps are out, there is now sewage, waste, pollution, disease carring agents and vectors of all kinds EVERYWHERE….many of the older houses will have to be condemned, many of the people living in them before will not be able to afford to rebuild, the roads, rail system and infrastructre of all kinds is severely damaged, I heard at least one major bridge on 10 is “comprimised”
That sounds right to me. He also criticizes news anchors for constantly saying “people are asking when they can go home,” as if the big story here is the impatience of the evacuees. “Don’t they realize that this just delays the reality of what all those people must face, they will be in camps or refugees possibly for many months?”
UPDATE: I-10 bridge story confirmed: “Sections of the Interstate 10 twin bridges linking St. Tammany and Orleans parishes over Lake Pontchartrain have been ’severely damaged’ in both directions, some probably knocked out, Louisiana’s highway boss said.”
NOLA: “Jefferson Parish’s Chief Administrative Assistant Tim Whitmer said the damage from Hurricane Katrina was almost equally split between the east bank and the West Bank. ‘We have widespread devastation in the parish,’ he said.” Details, and lots of other good info, on the NOLA breaking-news blog.
Meanwhile, off to the east in Mississippi, “things are very bad” in the Gulfport/Biloxi area, according to the Sun-Herald storm blog:
I’ve gotten several hundred specific queries about friends, families and neighborhoods. I’ve told several people that it is easier to list the things that are undamaged than those that have been pounded. That’s the honest truth.We’ve got significant loss of life, with around 40 dead in Biloxi alone. We’re trying to glean other information from Coast municipalities and counties, but communications are brutal here at the moment. Shortly, we’ll be posting some stories that will be appearing in tomorrow’s edition, which will be printed in Columbus, Ga., and flown by helicopter for distribution as best we can in the area.
Now CNN is reporting that one, maybe two oil rigs are “adrift” and missing in the Gulf of Mexico. The Coast Guard is aerially searching for them.
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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“Officials reported at least 55 deaths, with 50 alone in Harrison County, Miss., which includes Gulfport and Biloxi. Emergency workers feared that they would find more dead among people believed to be trapped underwater and in collapsed buildings.”
Also: “Insurance experts said that damage could exceed $9 billion, which would make it one of the costliest storms on record.”
P.S. A commenter notes: “55 . . . that’s a high death toll to start with in the US. Highest starting death toll I’ve heard since 9/11. These natural disaster tolls only tend to go up. Not good.” My thoughts exactly.
Adam Stone speculates via e-mail, “I think the death toll will be in the hundreds.” He comments, “I just talked to my friend in Ocean Springs, MS who works for the city. He told me that they have been pulling bodies out of houses all day. The surge in Ocean Springs (on the east side of Biloxi) was in excess of 20 feet. This is worse than I could imagine ever happening. Lots of missing people.”
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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The New York Times has some great pictures and video, including these shots:


Meanwhile, here’s a picture from AFP of the runaway oil drilling platform that collided with Mobile’s Cochrane-Africatown USA Bridge, which is closed until further notice:
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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Matt Drachenberg at overtaken by events writes via e-mail:
My wife is going insane. Her mom is 82, recovering from a broken pelvis and stuck in the Jefferson Healthcare nursing home in Metairie. I cannot find anything about the conditions in the area (it’s around Ochsner). If any of your contacts have any info, I would be eternally grateful.
If anyone knows anything, please leave it in comments. Thanks!
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco on Larry King Live: “We believe we’ve lost some lives.” No idea how many, but various reports here and there.
NOLA: “unconfirmed reports of dead bodies in floodwaters.”
Also: “Gentilly, Treme, Bywater and the 9th Ward [have] been swallowed.”
Meanwhile, in Mississippi, “we have a report that portions of U.S. 90 are under seven feet of water.” Evacuees are being told NOT to come back.
Here’s a summary of the Mississippi damage: “Hurricane Katrina brought catastrophic damage from the Coast to Hattiesburg. Gulfport Fire Chief Pat Sullivan said downtown buildings were ‘imploding’ or collapsing, particularly in the 19th street area. Coastwide there were reports of homes and buildings knocked off their foundations by storm surges as high as 28 feet.”
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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Let’s be clear about something. I don’t want to hear any of this crap about how the media and local officials overhyped this storm. First of all, the damage along the Mississippi coastline was catastrophic! The storm surge was worse than Camille, and basically, entire sections of coastline are GONE. And that was from a weakened Katrina!!! Secondly, New Orleans was hit very, very hard, at least in terms of property damage. (It’s too soon to say what the human toll will be.) But it could have been much, much worse — unimaginably worse — and that is not just hype.
There are two reasons New Orleans was not destroyed (but merely devastated), two reasons this was not an apocalyptic lost-city-of-Atlantis scenario (but merely a really bad flood). Those reasons are: 1) a last-minute northward turn, and 2) a last-minute sudden weakening the likes of which I have rarely seen before. (Yes, several recent hurricanes have weakened as they approached the Gulf coast, but this one really weakened FAST, particularly the left-hand side of the eyewall. And look at all the damage it still did!!) I watched both things happen in the wee hours of this morning, and believe me, neither of them were pre-ordained to happen. Both of them happened in the final 6-9 hours before landfall, and if either one of them had not happened, we’d be looking at a very different situation right now. We wouldn’t be rescuing people from their rooftops because the rooftops would be submerged, along with the rest of the city up to 20-30 feet. This is not a hypothetical scenario. IT ALMOST HAPPENED.
Anyone who suggests that this storm was “overhyped” is contributing to a DEADLY CULTURE OF COMPLACENCY that will dissuade people from evacuating the next time around. For there will be a next time around. New Orleans was spared “The Big One” today — this was a big one, but not the Big One — but someday, the worst will happen. It is inevitable; it’s a matter of when, not if. THIS SHOULD BE A WAKE-UP CALL, not an excuse to become complacent and arrogant. New Orleans should learn from this storm and actually come up with a viable plan to deal with a direct hit from Cat. 4-5 hurricane, which this ultimately was not. Shore up the levees, wall off a portion of the city, whatever — something has to be done. And sitting around, carping about how this storm was “overhyped” is obscenely counterproductive.
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Woohoo! :) I was also interviewed by a USA Today reporter earlier. And 26,051 unique hits today, and counting. Wow. Thanks for reading, everybody!
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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I’m back. Katrina is now a tropical storm, but it’s still causing all sorts of problems, particularly torrential rain and tornadoes — at least 15 so far, and that number is sure to rise, according to The Weather Channel. Thankfully, she’s moving pretty fast, and is now over the Alabama-Mississippi border.
New Orleans evacuees are being told not to return for at least a week.
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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The Red Cross will, of course, be busy for months helping victims of this disaster. You can donate here.
UPDATE: Or the Salvation Army, if your prefer.
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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…but I need to take a little break. I’ve been up all night and morning, and I’m having trouble keeping my eyes open at this point.
I’ll try to keep my nap brief. In the mean time, Metroblogging New Orleans has a good summary of known damage in the Big Easy. And of course, there are a ton of links, including other blogs, at left.
P.S. 14,416 hits today. 3,269 in the last hour alone. Crazy. By the time I wake up, I’ll have a new daily traffic record (old mark: 15,931). Thanks, everyone! And stay tuned; I’ll be back. :)
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Categories: Hurricane Katrina
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