Hurricane Katrina
This article is
about the Atlantic hurricane of 2005. For other storms of the same name, see Tropical Storm Katrina.
Hurricane
Katrina
|
||
Category
5 hurricane (SSHS)
|
||
Hurricane
Katrina at peak strength on August 28, 2005
|
||
Formed
|
August 23, 2005
|
|
Dissipated
|
August 30, 2005
|
|
Highest
winds
|
1-minute
sustained:
175 mph (280 km/h) |
|
Lowest
pressure
|
||
Fatalities
|
1,833 confirmed[1]
|
|
Damage
|
||
Areas
affected
|
Bahamas, South
Florida, Cuba,
Louisiana
(especially Greater New Orleans), Mississippi,
Alabama, Florida Panhandle, most of eastern North
America
|
|
Hurricane
Katrina was the
deadliest and most destructive Atlantic hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. It
was the costliest natural disaster,
as well as one of the five deadliest hurricanes,
in the history of the United States.[3]
Among recorded Atlantic hurricanes, it was the sixth strongest overall.
At least 1,833 people died in the hurricane and subsequent floods, making
it the deadliest U.S. hurricane since the 1928 Okeechobee hurricane; total property
damage was estimated at $81 billion (2005 USD),[3]
nearly triple the damage brought by Hurricane
Andrew in 1992.[4]
Hurricane
Katrina formed over the Bahamas on August 23, 2005 and crossed southern Florida as a
moderate Category 1 hurricane, causing
some deaths and flooding there before strengthening rapidly in the Gulf
of Mexico. The hurricane strengthened to a Category 5 hurricane over the
warm Gulf water, but weakened before making its second landfall as a Category 3 hurricane on the
morning of Monday, August 29 in southeast Louisiana. It caused severe
destruction along the Gulf coast from central Florida to Texas, much of it due
to the storm
surge. The most significant number of deaths
occurred in New Orleans, Louisiana,
which flooded as the levee
system catastrophically failed, in many cases hours
after the storm had moved inland.[5]
Eventually 80% of the city and large tracts of neighboring parishes became flooded, and the
floodwaters lingered for weeks.[5]
However, the worst property damage occurred in coastal areas, such as all Mississippi beachfront towns,
which were flooded over 90% in hours, as boats and casino barges rammed
buildings, pushing cars and houses inland, with waters reaching 6–12 miles
(10–19 km) from the beach.
The hurricane
surge protection failures in New Orleans are considered the worst civil
engineering disaster in U.S. history[6]
and prompted a lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE),
the designers and builders of the levee system as mandated by the Flood Control Act of 1965. Responsibility
for the failures and flooding was laid squarely on the Army Corps in January
2008 by Judge Stanwood Duval, U.S. District Court,[7]
but the federal agency could not be held financially liable due to sovereign immunity in the Flood Control Act of 1928. There was also
an investigation of the responses from federal, state and local governments,
resulting in the resignation of Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) director Michael D. Brown, and of New Orleans Police Department (NOPD)
Superintendent Eddie Compass.
Several
agencies including the United States Coast Guard (USCG), National Hurricane Center (NHC), and National Weather Service (NWS) were
commended for their actions. They provided accurate hurricane weather tracking
forecasts with sufficient lead time.[8]
Unfortunately, even the most insistent appeals from national, state and local
public officials to residents to evacuate before the storm did not warn that
the levees could breach and fail.[9]
Meteorological history
Main article: Meteorological history of
Hurricane Katrina
Storm path
Hurricane
Katrina formed as Tropical Depression Twelve over the southeastern Bahamas on
August 23, 2005 as the result of an interaction of a tropical
wave and the remains of Tropical Depression Ten. The system
was upgraded to tropical storm status on the morning of August 24 and
at this point, the storm was given the name Katrina. The tropical storm
continued to move towards Florida, and became a hurricane only two hours before
it made landfall between Hallandale Beach and Aventura
on the morning of August 25. The storm weakened over land, but it regained
hurricane status about one hour after entering the Gulf of Mexico.[3]
Katrina near Florida landfall.
The storm rapidly
intensified after entering the Gulf, growing from a Category 3
hurricane to a Category 5 hurricane in just nine hours. This rapid growth
was due to the storm's movement over the "unusually warm" waters of the Loop
Current, which increased wind speeds.[10]
On Saturday, August 27, the storm reached Category 3 intensity on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale,
becoming the third major hurricane of the season. An eyewall replacement cycle disrupted the
intensification, but caused the storm to nearly double in size. Katrina again
rapidly intensified, attaining Category 5 status on the morning of August
28 and reached its peak strength at 1800 UTC that day, with maximum sustained
winds of 175 mph (280 km/h) and a minimum central pressure of 902 mbar
(26.6 inHg). The pressure measurement made Katrina the
fourth most intense Atlantic hurricane on record at the time, only to be
surpassed by Hurricanes Rita and Wilma
later in the season; it was also the strongest hurricane ever recorded in the Gulf
of Mexico at the time. However, this record was later broken by Hurricane
Rita.[3]
Katrina on
August 28, nearing the Gulf Coast.
Katrina made
its second landfall at 1110 UTC (6:10 a.m. CDT) on Monday, August 29 as a
Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 125 mph (205 km/h)
near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana. At landfall,
hurricane-force winds extended outward 120 miles (190 km) from the
center and the storm's central pressure was 920 mbar (27 inHg). After
moving over southeastern Louisiana and Breton
Sound, it made its third landfall near the Louisiana/Mississippi border
with 120 mph (195 km/h) sustained winds, still at Category 3
intensity. Katrina maintained strength well into Mississippi, finally losing
hurricane strength more than 150 miles (240 km) inland near Meridian, Mississippi. It was downgraded to a
tropical depression near Clarksville, Tennessee, but its remnants
were last distinguishable in the eastern Great Lakes
region on August 31, when it was absorbed by a frontal boundary. The resulting extratropical
storm moved rapidly to the northeast and affected eastern Canada.[3]
Preparations
Main article: Preparations for Hurricane Katrina
Federal government
Flanked by Michael
Chertoff, Secretary of Homeland Security,
left, and Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, President George W. Bush meets with members of the White House
Task Force on Hurricane Katrina Recovery on August 31, 2005, in the Cabinet
Room of the White House.
On the morning
of Friday, August 26, at 10 am CDT (1500 UTC), Katrina had
strengthened to a Category 3 storm in the Gulf of Mexico. Later that
afternoon, the NHC realized that Katrina had yet to make the turn toward the
Florida Panhandle and ended up revising the predicted track of the storm from
the panhandle to the Mississippi coast.[11][12]
The NHC issued a hurricane watch for southeastern Louisiana, including the New
Orleans area at 10 am CDT Saturday, August 27. That afternoon the NHC
extended the watch to cover the Mississippi and Alabama coastlines as well as
the Louisiana coast to Intracoastal City.
The United States Coast Guard began
prepositioning resources in a ring around the expected impact zone and
activated more than 400 reservists. On August 27, it moved its personnel
out of the New Orleans region prior to the mandatory evacuation.[13]
Aircrews from the Aviation Training Center, in Mobile, staged rescue aircraft
from Texas to Florida.[14]
All aircraft were returning towards the Gulf of Mexico by the afternoon of
August 29. Air crews,
many of whom lost their homes during the hurricane, began a round-the-clock
rescue effort in New Orleans, and along the Mississippi and Alabama coastlines.[15]
President of the United States George
W. Bush declared a state of emergency in selected regions of Louisiana,
Alabama, and Mississippi on Saturday, the 27th, two days before the hurricane
made landfall.[16]
That same evening, the NHC upgraded the storm alert status from hurricane watch
to hurricane warning over the stretch of coastline between Morgan City, Louisiana to the
Alabama-Florida border, 12 hours after the watch alert had been issued,
and also issued a tropical storm warning for the westernmost Florida Panhandle.[3]
During video
conferences involving the president on August 28 and 29, the director of the
National Hurricane Center, Max Mayfield, expressed concern that Katrina might
push its storm surge over the city's levees and flood walls. In one conference,
he stated, "I do not think anyone can tell you with confidence right now
whether the levees will be topped or not, but that's obviously a very, very
great concern."[17]
On Sunday,
August 28, as the sheer size of Katrina became clear, the NHC extended the
tropical storm warning zone to cover most of the Louisiana coastline and a
larger portion of the Florida Panhandle. The National Weather Service's
New Orleans/Baton Rouge office issued a vividly worded
bulletin predicting that the area would be "uninhabitable for
weeks" after "devastating damage" caused by Katrina, which at
that time rivaled the intensity of Hurricane
Camille.[18]
"On Sunday, August 28, President Bush spoke with Governor Blanco to
encourage her to order a mandatory evacuation of New Orleans." (Per page
235 of Special Report of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs)[19]
Voluntary and
mandatory evacuations were issued for large areas of southeast Louisiana as
well as coastal Mississippi and Alabama. About 1.2 million residents of
the Gulf Coast were covered under a voluntary or mandatory evacuation order.[3]
Investigation of State of Emergency declaration
In a September
26, 2005 hearing, former FEMA chief Michael
Brown testified before a U.S. House subcommittee about FEMA's response.
During that hearing, Representative Stephen
Buyer (R-IN) inquired as to why President Bush's declaration of state of
emergency of August 27 had not included the coastal parishes of Orleans,
Jefferson, and Plaquemines.[20]
(In fact, the declaration did not include any of Louisiana's coastal
parishes, whereas the coastal counties were included in the declarations for
Mississippi[21]
and Alabama.[22])
Brown testified that this was because Louisiana Governor
Blanco had not included those parishes in her initial request for aid, a
decision that he found "shocking." After the hearing, Blanco released
a copy of her letter, which showed she had requested assistance for "all
the southeastern parishes including the City of New Orleans" as well
specifically naming 14 parishes including Jefferson, Orleans and Plaquemines.[23]
Gulf Coast
Radar image of
Hurricane Katrina approaching landfall in Louisiana
On August 26,
the state of Mississippi activated its National Guard in preparation for the
storm's landfall. Additionally, the state government activated its Emergency
Operations Center the next day, and local governments began issuing evacuation
orders. By 6:00 pm CDT on August 28, 11 counties and
eleven cities issued evacuation orders, a number which increased to 41 counties
and 61 cities by the following morning. Moreover, 57 emergency shelters were
established on coastal communities, with 31 additional shelters available to
open if needed.[8]
Louisiana's hurricane evacuation plan calls for local governments in areas
along and near the coast to evacuate in three phases, starting with the
immediate coast 50 hours before the start of tropical storm force winds.
Persons in areas designated Phase II begin evacuating 40 hours before the
onset of tropical storm winds and those in Phase III areas (including New
Orleans) evacuate 30 hours before the start of such winds.[24]
Many private
caregiving facilities that relied on bus companies and ambulance services for
evacuation were unable to evacuate their charges because they waited too long.
Louisiana's Emergency Operations Plan Supplement 1C(Part II, section II
paragraph D) calls for use of school and other public buses in evacuations.[25]
Although buses that later flooded were available to transport those dependent
upon public transportation, not enough bus drivers were available to drive them
as Governor Blanco did not sign an emergency waiver to allow any licensed
driver to transport evacuees on school buses.[26]
However, 20 year old Jabbar Gibson armed with only a standard operator's
permit took it upon himself to take a school bus and drive it to Houston with
50 to 70 evacuees.[27][28]
Some estimates claimed that 80% of the 1.3 million residents of the
greater New Orleans metropolitan area evacuated, leaving behind substantially
fewer people than remained in the city during the Hurricane
Ivan evacuation.[29]
By Sunday,
August 28, most infrastructure along the Gulf Coast had been shut down,
including all freight and Amtrak rail traffic into the evacuation areas as well as the Waterford Nuclear Generating
Station.[30]
The NHC maintained the coastal warnings until late on August 29, by which time
Hurricane Katrina was over central Mississippi.[3]
City of New Orleans
See also: Hurricane preparedness for New
Orleans
Vertical
cross-section of New Orleans, showing maximum levee height of 23 feet
(7 m). Vertical scale exaggerated.
By August 26,
the possibility of unprecedented cataclysm was already being considered. Many
of the computer models had shifted the potential path of Katrina 150 miles
(240 km) westward from the Florida Panhandle, putting the city of New
Orleans directly in the center of their track probabilities; the chances of a
direct hit were forecast at 17%, with strike probability rising to 29% by
August 28.[31]
This scenario was considered a potential catastrophe because some parts of New
Orleans and the metro area are below sea level. Since the storm surge produced
by the hurricane's right-front quadrant (containing the strongest winds) was
forecast to be 28 feet (8.5 m), emergency management officials in New
Orleans feared that the storm surge could go over the tops of levees protecting
the city, causing major flooding.[32]
At a news
conference at 10 am on August 28, shortly after Katrina was upgraded to a
Category 5 storm, New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin
ordered the first-ever mandatory evacuation of the city, calling
Katrina "a storm that most of us have long feared."[33]
The city government also established several "refuges of last resort"
for citizens who could not leave the city, including the massive Louisiana Superdome, which sheltered
approximately 26,000 people and provided them with food and water for
several days as the storm came ashore.[34][35]
Florida
Many people
living in the South Florida area were unaware when Katrina strengthened from a
tropical storm to a hurricane in one day and struck southern Florida near the Miami-Dade – Broward county line. The hurricane struck
between the cities of Aventura, in Miami-Dade County, and Hallandale, in Broward County, on Thursday,
August 25, 2005. However, National Hurricane Center (NHC) forecasts had
correctly predicted that Katrina would intensify to hurricane strength before
landfall, and hurricane watches and warnings
were issued 31.5 hours and 19.5 hours before landfall, respectively —
only slightly less than the target thresholds of 36 and 24 hours.[3]
Florida
Governor Jeb
Bush declared a state of emergency on August 24 in advance of
Hurricane Katrina's landfall in Florida. Shelters were opened and schools
closed in several counties in the southern part of the state. A number of
evacuation orders were also issued, mostly voluntary, although a mandatory
evacuation was ordered for vulnerable housing in Martin County.[36]
Impact
Main article: Hurricane Katrina effects by region
In Katrina's
Wake - short film
by NASA
Deaths by state
|
|
2
|
|
14
|
|
2
|
|
1
|
|
1,577*
|
|
238
|
|
2
|
|
Total
|
1,836
|
Missing
|
135[37]
|
*Includes out-of-state evacuees
counted by Louisiana |
On August 29,
Katrina's storm
surge caused 53 different levee breaches in greater New Orleans, submerging
eighty percent of the city. A June 2007 report by the American Society of Civil Engineers
indicated that two-thirds of the flooding were caused by the multiple failures
of the city's floodwalls.[38]
Not mentioned were the flood gates that were not closed.[citation needed] The storm
surge also devastated the coasts of Mississippi and Alabama, making Katrina the
most destructive and costliest natural
disaster in the history of the United States, and the deadliest hurricane
since the 1928 Okeechobee Hurricane. The total damage from Katrina is estimated
at $81.2 billion (2005 U.S. dollars), nearly double the cost of the
previously most expensive storm, Hurricane
Andrew, when adjusted for inflation.[3][39]
The confirmed
death toll (total of direct and indirect deaths) is 1,836, mainly from
Louisiana (1,577) and Mississippi (238).[37][40]
However, 135 people remain categorized as missing in Louisiana,[37]
and many of the deaths are indirect, but it is almost impossible to determine
the exact cause of some of the fatalities.
Federal disaster
declarations covered 90,000 square miles (233,000 km2) of
the United States, an area almost as large as the United Kingdom. The hurricane left
an estimated three million people without electricity. On September 3, 2005, Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff described the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina as "probably the worst catastrophe, or set of
catastrophes," in the country's history, referring to the hurricane itself
plus the flooding of New Orleans.[41]
Even in 2010,
debris remained in some coastal communities.[42]
South Florida and Cuba
Damage to a
mobile home in Davie, Florida following Hurricane Katrina
Main article: Effects of Hurricane Katrina in
Florida
Hurricane
Katrina first made landfall on August 25, 2005 in South
Florida where it hit as a Category 1 hurricane, with 80 mph
(130 km/h) winds. Rainfall was heavy in places and exceeded 14 inches
(350 mm) in Homestead, Florida,[3]
and a storm surge of 3 – 5 feet (1.5 m) was measured in parts of Monroe County.[39]
More than 1 million customers were left without electricity,
and damage in Florida was estimated from $1 – $2 billion, with most
of the damage coming from flooding and overturned trees. There were 14
fatalities reported in Florida as a result of Hurricane Katrina.[3]
Most of the Florida
Keys experienced tropical-storm force winds from Katrina as the storm's
center passed to the north, with hurricane force winds reported in the Dry
Tortugas. Rainfall was also high in the islands, with 10 inches
(250 mm) falling on Key
West. On August 26, a strong F1 tornado formed
from an outer rain band of Katrina and struck Marathon.
The tornado damaged a hangar at the airport there and caused an estimated
$5 million in damage.[43]
Although
Hurricane Katrina stayed well to the north of Cuba, on August 29 it
brought tropical-storm force winds and rainfall of over 8 inches
(200 mm) to western regions of the island. Telephone and power lines were
damaged and around 8,000 people were evacuated in the Pinar del RÃo Province. According to Cuban
television reports the coastal city of Surgidero de Batabano was 90%
underwater.[44]
Louisiana
Flooding in Venice,
Louisiana
On August 29,
Hurricane Katrina made landfall near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana with 125 mph
(205 km/h) winds, as a strong Category 3 storm. However, as it had
only just weakened from Category 4 strength and the radius of maximum
winds was large, it is possible that sustained winds of Category 4 strength
briefly impacted extreme southeastern Louisiana. Although the storm surge to
the east of the path of the eye in Mississippi was higher, a very significant
surge affected the Louisiana coast. The height of the surge is uncertain
because of a lack of data, although a tide gauge in Plaquemines Parish indicated a storm tide in
excess of 14 feet (4.3 m) and a 12-foot (3 m) storm surge was
recorded in Grand Isle. Hurricane Katrina made final
landfall near the mouth of the Pearl River, with the eye
straddling St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana and
Hancock County, Mississippi, on the morning of August 29 at about 9:45M CST.[3]
Hurricane
Katrina also brought heavy rain to Louisiana, with 8 – 10 inches
(200 – 250 mm) falling on a wide swath of the eastern part of the
state. In the area around Slidell, the rainfall was even higher, and the
highest rainfall recorded in the state was approximately 15 inches
(380 mm). As a result of the rainfall and storm surge the level of Lake Pontchartrain rose and caused significant
flooding along its northeastern shore, affecting communities from Slidell to Mandeville. Several bridges were destroyed,
including the I-10 Twin Span Bridge connecting Slidell to
New Orleans.[3]
Almost 900,000 people in Louisiana lost power as a result of Hurricane
Katrina.[45]
Katrina’s storm
surge inundated all parishes surrounding Lake Pontchartrain, including St. Tammany,
Tangipahoa, St. John the Baptist and St. Charles Parishes. St. Tammany
Parish received a two-part storm surge. The first surge came as Lake
Pontchartrain rose and the storm blew water from the Gulf of Mexico into the
lake. The second came as the eye of Katrina passed, westerly winds pushed water
into a bottleneck at the Rigolets Pass, forcing it farther inland. The range of
surge levels in eastern St. Tammany Parish is estimated at 13 to 16 feet
(4.9 m), not including wave action.[46]
Hard-hit St. Bernard Parish was flooded due to breaching
of the levees that contained a navigation channel called the Mississippi River
Gulf Outlet (MR-GO) and the breach of the Levee Board designed and built 40
Arpent canal levee. The search for the missing was undertaken by the St.
Bernard Fire Department due to the assets of the United States Coast Guard being diverted
to New Orleans. Many of the missing in the months after the storm were tracked
down by searching flooded homes, tracking credit card records, and visiting
homes of family and relatives.[47]
Hurricane
Katrina making landfall in New Orleans, Louisiana.
According to
the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, in St. Bernard Parish, 81%
(20,229) of the housing units were damaged. In St. Tammany Parish, 70% (48,792)
were damaged and in Placquemines Parish 80% (7,212) were damaged.[48]
In addition,
the combined effect of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita
was the destruction of an estimated 562 square kilometres (217 sq mi)
of coastal wetlands in Louisiana.[49]
New Orleans
Main articles: Effects of Hurricane
Katrina in New Orleans and 2005 levee failures in
Greater New Orleans
Flooded
I-10/I-610/West End Blvd interchange and surrounding area of northwest
New Orleans and Metairie, Louisiana
As the eye of
Hurricane Katrina swept to the northeast, it subjected the city to hurricane
conditions for hours. Although power failures prevented accurate measurement of
wind speeds in New Orleans, there were a few measurements of hurricane-force
winds. From this the NHC concluded that it is likely that much of the city
experienced sustained winds of Category 1 or Category 2 strength.
Katrina's storm
surge led to 53 levee breaches in the federally built levee system protecting
metro New Orleans and the failure of the 40 Arpent Canal levee. Nearly every
levee in metro New Orleans was breached as Hurricane Katrina passed just east
of the city limits. Failures occurred in New Orleans and surrounding
communities, especially St. Bernard Parish. The Mississippi River Gulf Outlet (MR-GO)
breached its levees in approximately 20 places, flooding much of east New
Orleans, most of Saint Bernard Parish and the East
Bank of Plaquemines Parish. The major levee
breaches in the city included breaches at the 17th
Street Canal levee, the London Avenue Canal, and the wide, navigable Industrial
Canal, which left approximately 80% of the city flooded.[50]
Most of the
major roads traveling into and out of the city were damaged. The only routes
out of the city were the westbound Crescent City Connection and the Huey P.
Long Bridge, as large portions of the I-10 Twin Span Bridge traveling eastbound
towards Slidell, Louisiana had collapsed. Both the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway and the
Crescent City Connection only carried emergency traffic.[51]
On August 29,
at 7:40 am CDT, it was reported that most of the windows on the north side
of the Hyatt Regency New Orleans had been blown
out, and many other high rise buildings had extensive window damage.[52]
The Hyatt was the
most severely damaged hotel in the city, with beds reported to be flying out of
the windows. Insulation tubes were exposed as the hotel's glass exterior was
completely sheared off.[53]
A U.S. Coast
Guardsman searches for survivors in New Orleans in the aftermath of Katrina
The Superdome,
which was sheltering many people who had not evacuated, sustained significant
damage.[54]
Two sections of the Superdome's roof were compromised and the dome's waterproof
membrane had essentially been peeled off. Louis Armstrong New
Orleans International Airport was closed before the storm but did not
flood. On August 30, it was reopened to humanitarian and rescue operations.
Limited commercial passenger service resumed at the airport on September 13 and
regular carrier operations resumed in early October.[55]
Levee breaches
in New Orleans also caused a significant amount of deaths, with over 700 bodies
recovered in New Orleans by October 23, 2005.[56]
Some survivors and evacuees reported seeing dead bodies lying in city streets
and floating in still-flooded sections, especially in the east of the city. The
advanced state of decomposition of many corpses, some of which were left in the
water or sun for days before being collected, hindered efforts by coroners to identify
many of the dead.[57]
The first
deaths reported from the city were reported shortly before midnight on August
28, as three nursing home patients died during an evacuation to Baton Rouge, most likely from dehydration.
While there were also early reports of fatalities amid mayhem at the Superdome,
only six deaths were confirmed there, with four of these originating from natural
causes, one from a drug overdose, and one a suicide. At the
Convention Center, four bodies were recovered. One of the four is believed to
be the result of a homicide.[58]
Mississippi
Main article: Effects of Hurricane
Katrina in Mississippi
U.S.
Route 90's Bay St. Louis Bridge on Pass Christian was destroyed as a result
of Katrina.
The Gulf coast
of Mississippi suffered massive damage from the impact of Hurricane Katrina on
August 29, leaving 238 people dead, 67 missing, and billions of
dollars in damage: bridges, barges, boats, piers, houses and cars were washed
inland.[59]
Katrina traveled up the entire state, and afterwards, all 82 counties in
Mississippi were declared disaster areas for federal assistance, 47 for full
assistance.[59]
After making a
brief initial landfall in Louisiana, Katrina had made its final landfall near
the state line, and the eyewall passed over the cities of Bay St. Louis and
Waveland as a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 120 mph
(195 km/h).[3]
Katrina's powerful right-front quadrant passed over the west and central
Mississippi coast, causing a powerful 27-foot (8.2 m) storm surge, which
penetrated 6 miles (10 km) inland in many areas and up to
12 miles (20 km) inland along bays and rivers; in some areas, the
surge crossed Interstate 10 for several miles.[3]
Hurricane Katrina brought strong winds to Mississippi, which caused significant
tree damage throughout the state. The highest unofficial reported wind gust
recorded from Katrina was one of 135 mph (217 km/h) in Poplarville, in Pearl River County.[3]
Damage to Long Beach, Mississippi following Hurricane
Katrina
The storm also
brought heavy rains with 8 – 10 inches (200 – 250 mm)
falling in southwestern Mississippi and rain in excess of 4 inches
(100 mm) falling throughout the majority of the state. Katrina caused
eleven tornadoes in Mississippi on August 29, some of which damaged trees and
power lines.[3]
Battered by
wind, rain and storm surge, some beachfront neighborhoods were completely
leveled. Preliminary estimates by Mississippi officials calculated that 90% of
the structures within half a mile of the coastline were completely destroyed,[60]
and that storm surges traveled as much as six miles (10 km) inland in
portions of the state's coast.[39]
One apartment complex with approximately thirty residents seeking shelter
inside collapsed. More than half of the 13 casinos in the state, which were
floated on barges to comply with Mississippi land-based gambling laws, were
washed hundreds of yards inland by waves.[60]
Storm surge
damage along Highway 90 on the Mississippi
Gulf Coast (early September 2005).
A number of
streets and bridges were washed away. On U.S.
Highway 90 along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, two major bridges were
completely destroyed: the Bay St. Louis — Pass Christian[3]
bridge, and the Biloxi - Ocean Springs bridge. In addition, the
eastbound span of the I-10 bridge over the Pascagoula
River estuary was damaged. In the weeks after the storm, with the
connectivity of the coastal U.S. Highway 90 shattered, traffic traveling
parallel to the coast was reduced first to State Road 11 (parallel to I-10)
then to two lanes on the remaining I-10 span when it was opened.
Surge damage in
Pascagoula, Mississippi
All three
coastal counties of the state were severely affected by the storm. Katrina's
surge was the most extensive, as well as the highest, in the documented history
of the United States; large portions of both Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson Counties were inundated by the
storm surge, in all three cases affecting most of the populated areas.[61]
Surge covered almost the entire lower half of Hancock County, destroying the
coastal communities of Clermont Harbor and Waveland, much of
Bay St. Louis, and flowed up the Jourdan River, flooding Diamondhead and Kiln.
In Harrison County, Pass Christian was completely inundated, along with
a narrow strip of land to the east along the coast, which includes the cities
of Long Beach and Gulfport; the flooding was more extensive in communities such
as D'Iberville, which borders Back Bay. Biloxi, on a
peninsula between the Back Bay and the coast, was particularly hard hit,
especially the low-lying Point Cadet area. In Jackson County, storm surge
flowed up the wide river estuary, with the combined surge and freshwater flooding
cutting the county in half. Remarkably, over 90% of Pascagoula, the easternmost
coastal city in Mississippi, and about 75 miles (121 km) east of Katrina's
landfall near the Louisiana-Mississippi border, was flooded from surge at the
height of the storm. Other large Jackson County neighborhoods such as Porteaux
Bay and Gulf Hills were severely damaged with large portions being completely
destroyed, and St. Martin was hard hit; Ocean Springs, Moss Point, Gautier, and Escatawpa
also suffered major surge damage.
Mississippi
Emergency Management Agency officials also recorded deaths in Forrest, Hinds, Warren, and Leake counties. Over 900,000 people
throughout the state experienced power outages.[45]
Southeast United States
Flood waters
come up the steps of Mobile's federal courthouse.
Although
Hurricane Katrina made landfall well to the west, Alabama and the Florida
Panhandle were both affected by tropical-storm force winds and a storm surge
varying from 12 to 16 feet (3–5 m) around Mobile Bay,[3]
with higher waves on top. Sustained winds of 67 mph (107 km/h) were
recorded in Mobile, Alabama, and the storm surge there was
approximately 12 feet (3.7 m).[3]
The surge caused significant flooding several miles inland along Mobile Bay.
Four tornadoes were also reported in Alabama.[3]
Ships, oil rigs, boats and fishing piers were washed ashore along Mobile Bay: the cargo ship M/V Caribbean
Clipper and many fishing boats were grounded at Bayou
La Batre.
An oil rig
under construction along the Mobile River broke its moorings and floated
1.5 miles (2 km) northwards before striking the Cochrane Bridge just
outside Mobile. No significant damage resulted to the bridge and it was soon
reopened. The damage on Dauphin Island was severe, with the surge destroying
many houses and cutting a new canal through the western portion of the island.
An offshore oil rig also became grounded on the island. As in Mississippi, the
storm surge caused significant beach erosion along the Alabama coastline.[3]
More than 600,000 people lost power in Alabama as a result of Hurricane
Katrina and two people died in a traffic accident in the state. Residents in
some areas, such as Selma, were without power for several days.[45]
Bayou
La Batre: cargo ship and fishing boats were grounded
Along the
Florida Panhandle the storm surge was typically about five feet
(1.5 m) and along the west-central Florida coast there was a minor surge
of 1 – 2 feet (0.3 – 0.6 m). In Pensacola, Florida 56 mph (90 km/h)
winds were recorded on August 29. The winds caused damage to some trees and
structures and there was some minor flooding in the Panhandle. There were two
indirect fatalities from Katrina in Walton County as a result of a traffic
accident.[3]
In the Florida Panhandle, 77,000 customers lost power.[62]
Northern and
central Georgia were affected by heavy rains and
strong winds from Hurricane Katrina as the storm moved inland, with more than
3 inches (75 mm) of rain falling in several areas. At least 18
tornadoes formed in Georgia on August 29, the most on record in that state for
one day in August. The most serious of these tornadoes was an F2 tornado which
affected Heard County and Carroll County. This tornado caused 3
injuries and one fatality and damaged several houses. In addition this tornado
destroyed several poultry barns, killing over 140,000 chicks. The other
tornadoes caused significant damages to buildings and agricultural facilities.
In addition to the fatality caused by the F2 tornado, there was another
fatality in a traffic accident.[63]
Other U.S. States and Canada
Total rainfall
from Katrina in the United States. Data for the New Orleans
area is not available.
Hurricane
Katrina weakened as it moved inland, but tropical-storm force gusts were recorded
as far north as Fort Campbell, Kentucky on August 30, and
the winds damaged trees in New York. The remnants of the storm brought high levels of
rainfall to a wide swath of the eastern United States, and rain in excess of
2 inches (50 mm) fell in parts of 20 states.[64]
A number of tornadoes associated with Katrina formed on August 30 and August
31, which caused minor damages in several regions. In total, 62 tornadoes
formed in eight states as a result of Katrina.[39]
Eastern Arkansas received
light rain from the passage of Katrina.[65]
Gusty winds downed some trees and power lines, though damage was minimal.[66]
In Kentucky,
a storm that had moved through the weekend before had already produced flooding
and the rainfall from Katrina added to this. As a result of the flooding, Kentucky Governor Ernie
Fletcher declared three counties disaster areas and a statewide state of
emergency.[67][68]
One person was killed in Hopkinsville, Kentucky and part of a high
school collapsed.[69]
Flooding also prompted a number of evacuations in West
Virginia and Ohio,
the rainfall in Ohio leading to two indirect deaths. Katrina also caused a
number of power outages in many areas, with over 100,000 customers affected in Tennessee,
primarily in the Memphis and Nashville areas.[70]
The remnants of
Katrina were absorbed by a new cyclone to its east across Pennsylvania.
This second cyclone continued north and affected Canada on August
31. In Ontario
there were a few isolated reports of rain in excess of 100 mm
(4 inches) and there were a few reports of damage from fallen trees.[71]
Flooding also occurred in both Ontario and Quebec, cutting off
a number of isolated villages in Quebec, particularly in the Côte-Nord
region.[72]
Aftermath
See also: Social effects of Hurricane Katrina,
Political effects of Hurricane
Katrina, Hurricane Katrina disaster relief, and
IDPs in the United States
Economic effects
|
Main article: Economic effects of Hurricane
Katrina
The economic
effects of the storm were far-reaching. The Bush Administration sought
$105 billion for repairs and reconstruction in the region,[73]
which did not account for damage to the economy caused by potential
interruption of the oil supply, destruction of the Gulf Coast's highway
infrastructure, and exports of commodities such as grain. Katrina damaged or
destroyed 30 oil platforms and caused the closure of nine refineries;[39]
the total shut-in oil production from the Gulf of Mexico in the six-month
period following Katrina was approximately 24% of the annual production and the
shut-in gas production for the same period was about 18%.[74]
The forestry industry in Mississippi was also affected, as 1.3 million
acres (5,300 km2) of forest lands were destroyed.[75]
The total loss to the forestry industry from Katrina is calculated to rise to
about $5 billion.[75]
Furthermore, hundreds of thousands of local residents were left unemployed,
which will have a trickle-down effect as fewer taxes are paid to
local governments. Before the hurricane, the region supported approximately one
million non-farm jobs, with 600,000 of them in New Orleans. It is estimated
that the total economic impact in Louisiana and Mississippi may exceed $150 billion.[76]
Katrina
redistributed over one million people from the central Gulf coast elsewhere
across the United States, which became the largest diaspora in the
history of the United States.[77]
Houston,
Texas, had an increase of 35,000 people; Mobile,
Alabama, gained over 24,000; Baton Rouge, Louisiana, over 15,000; and Hammond, Louisiana received over 10,000, nearly
doubling its size. Chicago received over 6,000 people, the most of any
non-southern city.[78]
By late January 2006, about 200,000 people were once again living in New
Orleans, less than half of the pre-storm population.[79]
By July 1, 2006, when new population estimates were calculated by the U.S. Census Bureau, the state of Louisiana showed
a population decline of 219,563, or 4.87%.[80]
Additionally, some insurance companies have stopped insuring homeowners in the
area because of the high costs from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, or have raised
homeowners' insurance premiums to cover their risk.[81]
Environmental effects
See also: Murphy Oil USA refinery spill
The Chandeleur Islands, before Katrina (left) and
after (right), showing the impact of the storm along coastal areas.
Katrina also
had a profound impact on the environment. The storm surge caused substantial beach
erosion, in some cases completely devastating coastal areas. In Dauphin
Island, approximately 90 miles (150 km) to the east of the point
where the hurricane made landfall, the sand that comprised the barrier
island was transported across the island into the Mississippi
Sound, pushing the island towards land.[82]
The storm surge and waves from Katrina also obliterated the Chandeleur Islands, which had been affected by
Hurricane Ivan the previous year.[83]
The US Geological Survey has estimated 217 square miles (560 km2)
of land was transformed to water by the hurricanes Katrina and Rita.[84]
The lands that
were lost were breeding grounds for marine mammals, brown pelicans, turtles, and fish, as well as
migratory species such as redhead ducks.[75]
Overall, about 20% of the local marshes were permanently overrun by water as a result of the
storm.[75]
The damage from
Katrina forced the closure of 16 National Wildlife Refuges. Breton National
Wildlife Refuge lost half its area in the storm.[85]
As a result, the hurricane affected the habitats of sea turtles,
Mississippi sandhill cranes, Red-cockaded woodpeckers and Alabama Beach mice.[85]
Spill Location
|
Quantity
|
|
(US
gal)
|
(L)
|
|
Bass Enterprises (Cox Bay)
|
3,780,000
|
14,300,000
|
Shell (Pilot Town)
|
1,050,000
|
4,000,000
|
Chevron (Empire)
|
991,000
|
3,750,000
|
819,000
|
3,100,000
|
|
Bass Enterprises (Pointe à la Hache)
|
461,000
|
1,750,000
|
Chevron (Port Fourchon)
|
53,000
|
200,000
|
Venice Energy Services (Venice)
|
25,000
|
95,000
|
Shell Pipeline Oil (Nairn)
|
13,440
|
50,900
|
Sundown Energy (West Potash)
|
13,000
|
49,000
|
The storm
caused oil
spills from 44 facilities throughout southeastern Louisiana, which resulted
in over 7 million U.S. gallons (26 million L) of oil being leaked. Some
spills were as small as a few hundred gallons; the largest are tabulated to the
right. While most of the spills were contained on-site, some oil entered the
ecosystem, and the town of Meraux
was flooded with a blend of water and oil.[86]
Unlike Hurricane Ivan no offshore oil spills were
officially reported after Hurricane Katrina. However, Skytruth reported some
signs of surface oil in the Gulf of Mexico.[86]
Finally, as
part of the cleanup effort, the flood waters that covered New Orleans were
pumped into Lake Pontchartrain, a process that took 43 days to complete.[39]
These residual waters contained a mix of raw sewage, bacteria, heavy
metals, pesticides,
toxic chemicals, and oil,
which sparked fears in the scientific community of massive numbers of fish
dying.[75]
Prior to the
storm, subsidence
and erosion
caused erosion in the Louisiana wetlands and bayous. This, along
with the canals built in the area, allowed for Katrina to maintain more of its
intensity when it struck.[87]
Looting and violence
Further
information: Effects of Hurricane
Katrina on New Orleans
A Border Patrol Special Response Team
searches a hotel room-by-room in New Orleans in response to Hurricane Katrina.
Shortly after
the hurricane moved away on August 30, 2005, some residents of New Orleans who
remained in the city began looting stores. Many were in search of food and water that
were not available to them through any other means, as well as non-essential
items.[88]
Reports of carjacking,
murders, thefts, and rapes in New Orleans
flooded the news. Some sources later determined that many of the reports were
inaccurate, because of the confusion.[89]
Thousands of National Guard and federal troops were mobilized (the total went
from 7,841 in the area the day Katrina hit to a maximum of 46,838 on September
10) and sent to Louisiana along with numbers of local law enforcement agents
from across the country who were temporarily deputized by the state. "They
have M16s
and are locked and loaded. These troops know how to shoot and kill and I expect
they will," Louisiana Governor Kathleen
Blanco said. Congressman Bill
Jefferson (D-LA) told ABC News: "There was shooting going on. There was
sniping going on. Over the first week of September, law and order were
gradually restored to the city."[90]
Several shootings occurred between police and New Orleans residents, some involving
police misconduct; including a fatal incident at Danziger
Bridge.[91]
A number of arrests were made
throughout the affected area, including some near the New Orleans Convention
Center. A temporary jail was constructed of chain link cages in the city train
station.[92]
In Texas, where
more than 300,000 refugees were located, local officials ran 20,000 criminal
background checks on the refugees, as well as on the relief workers helping
them and people who opened up their homes. The background checks found that 45%
of the refugees had a criminal record of some nature, and that 22% had a
violent criminal record.[93]
The number of homicides in Houston from September 2005 through February 22, 2006 went up
by 23% relative to the same period a year before; 29 of the 170 murders
involved displaced Louisianans as victims or suspects.[94]
Government response
Chart showing
some common uses of the FEMA marking system in New Orleans
after Hurricane Katrina
President Bush
stands with Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld, Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao
and Secretary of Health and Human
Services Mike Leavitt during a press conference from the Rose Garden, regarding the devastation
along the Gulf Coast caused by Katrina.
President Bush
examines the flooded areas from Air Force One.
Within the
United States and as delineated in the National Response Plan, disaster response
and planning is first and foremost a local government responsibility. When
local government exhausts its resources, it then requests specific additional resources
from the county level. The request process proceeds similarly from the county
to the state to the federal government as additional resource needs are
identified. Many of the problems that arose developed from inadequate planning
and back-up communications systems at various levels.[95]
Some disaster
recovery response to Katrina began before the storm, with Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) preparations that ranged from logistical
supply deployments to a mortuary team with refrigerated trucks. A network of
volunteers began rendering assistance to local residents and residents emerging
from New Orleans and surrounding parishes as soon as the storm made landfall
(even though many were directed to not enter the area), and continued for more
than six months after the storm.[95]
Of the
60,000 people stranded in New Orleans, the Coast Guard rescued more than
33,500.[96]
Congress recognized the Coast Guard's response with an official entry in the
Congressional Record,[97]
and the Armed Service was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation.[98]
The United States Northern Command
established Joint Task Force (JTF) Katrina based out
of Camp
Shelby, Mississippi, to act as the military's on-scene response on Sunday,
August 28, with US
Army Lieutenant General Russel L. Honoré as commander.[99]
Approximately 58,000 National Guard personnel were activated to deal with the
storm's aftermath, with troops coming from all 50 states.[100]
The Department of Defense also
activated volunteer members of the Civil
Air Patrol.
Michael
Chertoff, Secretary of the Department of Homeland
Security, decided to take over the federal, state, and local operations
officially on August 30, 2005, citing the National Response Plan.[101]
This was refused by Governor Blanco who indicated that her National Guard could
manage. Early in September, Congress authorized a total of $62.3 billion
in aid for victims.[102]
Additionally, President Bush enlisted the help of former presidents Bill
Clinton and George H.W. Bush to raise additional voluntary
contributions, much as they did after the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.[103]
American flags were also ordered to be half-staff
from September 2, 2005 to September 20, 2005 in honor of the victims.[104]
FEMA provided
housing assistance (rental assistance, trailers,
etc.) to more than 700,000 applicants—families and individuals. However, only
one-fifth of the trailers requested in Orleans Parish were supplied, resulting
in an enormous housing shortage in the city of New Orleans.[105]
Many local areas voted to not allow the trailers, and many areas had no
utilities, a requirement prior to placing the trailers. To provide for
additional housing, FEMA has also paid for the hotel costs of 12,000
individuals and families displaced by Katrina through February 7, 2006, when a
final deadline was set for the end of hotel cost coverage. After this deadline,
evacuees were still eligible to receive federal assistance, which could be used
towards either apartment rent, additional hotel stays, or fixing their ruined
homes, although FEMA no longer paid for hotels directly.[106]
As of March 30, 2010, there were still 260 families living in FEMA-provided
trailers in Louisiana and Mississippi.[107]
Law enforcement
and public safety agencies, from across the United States, provided a "mutual aid" response to
Louisiana and New Orleans in the weeks following the disaster. Many agencies
responded with manpower and equipment from as far away as California,
Michigan, Nevada, New York,
and Texas. This
response was welcomed by local Louisiana authorities as their staff were either
becoming fatigued, stretched too thin, or even quitting from the job.[108]
Two weeks after
the storm, more than half of the states were involved in providing shelter for
evacuees. By four weeks after the storm, evacuees had been registered in all
50 states and in 18,700 zip codes—half of the nation's residential
postal zones. Most evacuees had stayed within 250 miles (400 km), but
240,000 households went to Houston and other cities over 250 miles
(400 km) away and another 60,000 households went over 750 miles
(1,200 km) away.[109]
Criticism of government response
Main article: Criticism of
government response to Hurricane Katrina
USNS Comfort
takes on supplies at Mayport, Florida en route to the Gulf Coast.
The criticisms
of the government's response to Hurricane Katrina primarily consisted of
criticism of mismanagement and lack of leadership
in the relief efforts in response to the storm and its aftermath. More
specifically, the criticism focused on the delayed response to the flooding of
New Orleans, and the subsequent state of chaos in the Crescent City.[58]
The neologism
Katrinagate
was coined to refer to this controversy, and was a runner-up for "2005
word of the year."[110]
Within days of
Katrina's August 29, 2005 landfall, public debate arose about the local, state
and federal governments' role in the preparations for and response to
the hurricane. Criticism was initially prompted by televised images of
visibly shaken and frustrated political leaders, and of residents who remained
stranded by flood waters without water,
food or shelter.
Deaths from thirst,
exhaustion, and violence, days
after the storm had passed, fueled the criticism, as did the dilemma of the
evacuees at facilities such as the Louisiana Superdome (designed to handle 800,
yet 30,000 arrived) and the New Orleans Civic Center (not designed as an
evacuation center, yet 25,000 arrived). Some alleged that race, class,
and other factors could have contributed to delays in government response.
In accordance
with federal law, President George W. Bush directed the Secretary of the Department of Homeland
Security, Michael Chertoff, to coordinate the Federal response. Chertoff
designated Michael D. Brown, head of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, as the Principal Federal Official to lead the deployment and
coordination of all federal response resources and forces in the Gulf Coast
region. However, the President and Secretary Chertoff initially came under
harsh criticism for what some perceived as a lack of planning and coordination.
Brown claimed that Governor Blanco resisted their efforts and was unhelpful.
Governor Blanco and her staff disputed this.[111]
Eight days later, Brown was recalled to Washington and Coast Guard Vice Admiral
Thad
W. Allen replaced him as chief of hurricane relief operations.[112]
Three days after the recall, Michael D. Brown resigned as director of FEMA in
spite of having received recent praise from President Bush.[113]
During A Concert for Hurricane Relief,
a benefit concert for victims of the hurricane, rapper Kanye West
veered off script and harshly criticized the government's response to the
crisis, stating that "George Bush doesn't care about black
people." Although the camera quickly cut away, and the scene was
deleted from delayed broadcasts, West's comments still reached the East Coast
broadcasts, and were replayed and discussed afterwards.[114]
Bush later called West's remarks 'the worst moment in his presidency', feeling
he was unjustly accused of racism.[115]
Criticism from
politicians, activists, pundits and journalists of all stripes was directed at
the local and state governments headed by Mayor Ray Nagin of New Orleans and
Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco. Nagin and Blanco were criticized for
failing to implement New Orleans' evacuation plan and for ordering residents to
a shelter of last resort without any provisions for food, water, security, or
sanitary conditions. Perhaps the most important criticism of Nagin was that he
delayed his emergency evacuation order until 19 hours before landfall, which
led to hundreds of deaths of people who (by that time) could not find any way
out of the city.[8]
The destruction
wrought by Hurricane Katrina raised other, more general public policy issues
about emergency management, environmental policy, poverty, and unemployment.
The discussion of both the immediate response and of the broader public policy
issues may have affected elections and legislation
enacted at various levels of government. The storm's
devastation also prompted a Congressional investigation, which found that FEMA
and the Red Cross "did not have a logistics capacity sophisticated enough
to fully support the massive number of Gulf coast victims." Additionally,
it placed responsibility for the disaster on all three levels of government.[8]
An ABC News poll
conducted on September 2, 2005, showed more blame was being directed at state
and local governments (75%) than at the Federal government (67%), with 44%
blaming Bush's leadership directly.[116]
A later CNN/USAToday/Gallup poll
showed that respondents disagreed widely on who was to blame for the problems
in the city following the hurricane — 13% said Bush, 18% said federal agencies,
25% blamed state or local officials and 38% said no one was to blame.[117]
Five former
police officers have pleaded guilty to charges connected to the Danziger Bridge shootings in the
aftermath of the hurricane. Six other former or current officers appeared in
court in June 2011. Two unarmed civilians were killed and four others seriously
wounded when police opened fire on people attempting to cross the bridge.[118]
International response
Main article: International response to
Hurricane Katrina
United States Navy personnel unload Canadian relief
supplies from a Canadian Air Force transport aircraft
in Pensacola, Florida.
Over seventy
countries pledged monetary donations or other assistance. Notably, Cuba and Venezuela
(both considered as hostile to US government interest) were the first countries
to offer assistance, pledging over $1 million, several mobile hospitals,
water treatment plants, canned food, bottled water, heating oil, 1,100 doctors
and 26.4 metric tons of medicine, though this aid was rejected by the U.S.
government.[119][120][121][122]
Kuwait made the
largest single pledge, $500 million; other large donations were made by Qatar and United Arab Emirates (each $100 million),
South
Korea ($30 million), Australia ($10 million), India, China (both $5 million), New Zealand
($2 million),[123]
Pakistan
($1.5 million),[124]
and Bangladesh
($1 million).[125]
India sent
tarps, blankets and hygiene kits. An Indian
Air Force IL-76 aircraft delivered 25 tonnes of relief supplies for the
Hurricane Katrina victims at the Little Rock Air Force Base, Arkansas on
September 13, 2005.
Israel sent an IDF delegation to New Orleans to transport
aid equipment including 80 tons of food, disposable diapers, beds,
blankets, generators and additional equipment which were donated from different
governmental institutions, civilian institutions and the IDF.[126]
The Bush Administration announced in mid-September that it did not need Israeli
divers and physicians to come to the United States for search and rescue
missions, but a small team landed in New Orleans on September 10 to give
assistance to operations already under way. The team administered first aid to
survivors, rescued abandoned pets and discovered hurricane victims.[127]
Countries like Sri Lanka,
which was still recovering from the Indian Ocean Tsunami, also
offered to help. Countries including Canada, Mexico, Singapore, and Germany sent
supplies, relief personnel (like Technisches Hilfswerk), troops, ships and
water pumps to aid in the disaster recovery. Belgium sent in a
team of relief personnel. Britain's
donation of 350,000 emergency meals did not reach victims because of laws
regarding mad cow disease.[128]
Russia's initial offer of two jets was
declined by the U.S. State Department but accepted later. The French offer was also declined and
requested later.[129]
In addition to
receiving aid from around the world, there was criticism to go along with it,
including accusations of racism. Quoted from the UK Mirror, "Many things
about the United States are wonderful, but it has a vile underbelly which is
usually kept well out of sight. Now in New Orleans it has been exposed to the
world."[130]
Non-governmental organization response
The American Red Cross, America's Second Harvest
(now known as Feeding America), Southern Baptist Convention, Salvation
Army, Oxfam, Common Ground Collective, Emergency Communities, Habitat for Humanity, Catholic Charities, Service International,
"A River of Hope", The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints,[131][132][133]
and many other charitable organizations provided help to the victims of the
storm. They were not allowed into New Orleans proper by the National Guard for
several days after the storm because of safety concerns. These organizations
raised US$4.25 billion in donations by the public, with the Red Cross
receiving over half of the donations.[134]
Some smaller organizations and individuals ignored the access restrictions and
provided early relief. For example, two privately chartered planes from FasterCures
evacuated 200 patents from Charity Hospital in New Orleans.[135]
Volunteers from
amateur
radio's emergency service wing, the Amateur Radio Emergency Service,
provided communications in areas where the communications infrastructure had
been damaged or totally destroyed, relaying everything from 911 traffic to
messages home.[136]
In Hancock County, Mississippi, ham radio operators provided the only
communications into or out of the area, and even served as 911 dispatchers.[137]
Many
corporations also contributed to relief efforts. On September 13, 2005, it was
reported that corporate donations to the relief effort were $409 million,
and were expected to exceed $1 billion.[138]
During and
after the Hurricanes Katrina, Wilma and Rita, the American Red Cross had opened
1,470 different shelters across and registered 3.8 million overnight
stays. None were allowed in New Orleans however. A total of 244,000 Red Cross
workers (95% of which were non-paid volunteers) were utilized throughout these
three hurricanes. In addition, 346,980 comfort kits (such as toothpaste, soap,
washcloths and toys for children) and 205,360 cleanup kits (containing brooms,
mops and bleach) were distributed. For mass care, the organization served 68 million
snacks and meals to victims of the disasters and to rescue workers. The Red
Cross also had its Disaster Health services meet 596,810 contacts, and Disaster
Mental Health services met 826,590 contacts. Red Cross emergency financial
assistance was provided to 1.4 million families. Hurricane Katrina was the
first natural disaster in the United States in which the American Red Cross
utilized its "Safe and Well" family location website.[139][140]
In the year
following Katrina's strike on the Gulf Coast, The Salvation Army allocated
donations of more than $365 million to serve more than 1.7 million
people in nearly every state. The organization's immediate response to
Hurricane Katrina included more than 5.7 million hot meals served in and
around New Orleans, 8.3 million sandwiches, snacks & drinks. Its
SATERN network of amateur radio operators picked up where modern communications
left off to help locate more than 25,000 survivors. Salvation Army
pastoral care counselors were on hand to comfort the emotional and spiritual
needs of 277,000 individuals. As part of the overall effort, Salvation Army
officers, employees and volunteers contributed more than 900,000 hours of
service.[141]
Analysis of New Orleans levee failures
Main article: 2005 levee failures in
Greater New Orleans
View of the
eyewall of Hurricane Katrina taken on August 28, 2005, as seen from a NOAA WP-3D hurricane
hunter aircraft before the storm made landfall on the United States Gulf Coast.
A June 2007
report released by the American Society of Civil Engineers
states that the failures of the locally built and federally funded levees in
New Orleans were found to be primarily the result of system design flaws.[38]
The US Army Corps of Engineers who by
federal mandate is responsible for the conception, design and construction of
the region's flood-control system failed to pay sufficient attention to public
safety.
According to
modeling and field observations by a team from Louisiana State University, the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet
(MRGO), a 200-meter-wide (660-foot-wide) canal designed to provide a
shortcut from New Orleans to the Gulf of Mexico, helped provide a funnel for
the storm surge, making it 20% higher and 100%-200% faster as it crashed into
the city. St. Bernard Parish, one of the more devastated areas, lies just south
of the MRGO. The Corps of Engineers disputes this causality and maintains
Katrina would have overwhelmed the levees with or without the contributing
effect of the MRGO.[142]
The water flowing west from the storm surge was perpendicular to MRGO, and thus
the canal had a negligible effect.
There was
unfounded speculation made by residents concerning a possible planned levee
breach. Many references are made to the 1927 flood in which a levee was
breached south of New Orleans in order to divert floodwater to the Gulf of
Mexico.[143]
Recently,[when?] the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Nature Conservancy have developed a
floodplain reconnection project in which the Ouachita River would be connected
to its floodplain and the Gulf of Mexico.[144]
A breach in the levee[vague] caused the water level
downstream to drop six inches (152 mm) in a previous event in the early
1990s. Both cases show the many benefits of allowing the river to run its
course.[improper synthesis?]
On April 5,
2006, months after independent investigators had demonstrated that levee
failures were not caused by natural forces beyond intended design strength,
Lieutenant General Carl Strock, Chief of Engineers and Commander of the Corps of
Engineers, testified before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Energy and
Water that "We have now concluded we had problems with the design of the
structure."[145]
He also testified that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers did not know of this
mechanism of failure prior to August 29, 2005. The claim of ignorance is
refuted, however, by the National Science Foundation investigators hired by the
Corps of Engineers, who point to a 1986 study by the Corps itself that such
separations were possible in the I-wall design.[146]
Many of the
levees have been reconstructed since the time of Katrina. In reconstructing
them, precautions were taken to bring the levees up to modern building code
standards and to ensure their safety. For example, in every situation possible,
the Corps of Engineers replaced I-walls with T-walls. T-walls have a horizontal
concrete base that protects against soil erosion underneath the floodwalls.[147]
However, there
are funding battles over the remaining levee improvements. In February 2008,
the Bush administration requested that the state of Louisiana pay about
$1.5 billion of an estimated $7.2 billion for Corps of Engineers
levee work (in accordance with the principles of local cost sharing required by
Congress as early as the Flood Control Act of 1928), a proposal
which angered many Louisiana leaders.[148]
On May 2, 2008,
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal used a speech to The National Press Club to request
that President Bush free up money to complete work on Louisiana's levees. Bush
promised to include the levee funding in his 2009 budget, but rejected the idea
of including the funding in a war bill, which would pass sooner.[149]
Media involvement
Main article: Media coverage of Hurricane Katrina
Many
representatives of the news media reporting on the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina became directly involved in the unfolding events, instead of simply
reporting. Because of the loss of most means of communication, such as
land-based and cellular telephone systems, field reporters in many cases became
conduits for information between victims and authorities.
The
authorities, who monitored local and network news broadcasts, as well as
internet sites, would then attempt to coordinate rescue efforts based on the
reports. One illustration was when Geraldo
Rivera of Fox
News tearfully pleaded for authorities to either send help or evacuate the
thousands of evacuees stranded at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center.[150]
The storm also
brought a dramatic rise in the role of Internet sites—especially
blogging and
community journalism. One example was the
effort of NOLA.com, the web affiliate of New Orleans' Times-Picayune. A group of reporters from
the paper including Doug MacCash, Manuel Torres, Trymaine
Lee, and Mark Schleifstein were awarded the Breaking News Pulitzer
Prize,[151]
and the Times-Picayune shared the Public Service Pulitzer with the Biloxi-based
Sun
Herald.[152]
The newspaper's coverage was carried for days only on NOLA's blogs, as the
newspaper lost its presses and evacuated its building as water rose around it
on August 30. The site became an international focal point for news by local
media, and also became a vital link for rescue operations and later for
reuniting scattered residents, as it accepted and posted thousands of
individual pleas for rescue on its blogs and forums. NOLA was monitored
constantly by an array of rescue teams—from individuals to the Coast
Guard—which used information in rescue efforts. Much of this information was
relayed from trapped victims via the SMS functions of their cell phones, to
friends and relatives outside the area, who then relayed the information back
to NOLA.com. The aggregation of community journalism, user photos and the use
of the internet site as a collaborative response to the storm attracted
international attention, and was called a watershed moment in journalism.[153]
In the wake of these online-only efforts, the Pulitzer Committee for the first
time opened all its categories to online entries.[154]
The role of AM
radio was of importance to the hundreds of thousands of persons with no other
ties to news. AM
radio provided emergency information regarding access to assistance for
hurricane victims. Immediately after Hurricane Katrina, radio station WWL-AM (New
Orleans) was one of the few area radio stations in the area remaining on the
air. The 870 kHz frequency has a clear channel high power designation and the
on-going nighttime broadcasts continued to be available up to 500 miles
(800 km) away. Announcers continued to broadcast from improvised studio
facilities after the storm damaged their main studios.[155]
During the
period of several weeks when most area radio stations were off the air,
WWL-AM's emergency coverage was simulcast on the frequencies of other area
radio stations. This emergency service was named "The United Radio Broadcasters
of New Orleans." To reach emergency radio operators in storm-ravaged
areas, many of whom made their volunteer services available to the Red Cross
and government entities, WWL-AM was simulcast on shortwave outlet WHRI, owned by World
Harvest Radio International. The cellular
phone antenna network was severely damaged and completely inoperable for
several months.
As the U.S.
military and rescue services regained control over the city, there were
restrictions on the activity of the media. On September 9, the military leader
of the relief effort announced that reporters would have "zero
access" to efforts to recover bodies in New Orleans. Immediately following
this announcement, CNN filed a lawsuit and obtained a temporary restraining
order against the ban. The next day the government backed down and reversed
the ban.[156]
Retirement
See also: List of retired Atlantic
hurricane names
Because of the
large death toll and destruction of property along the Gulf Coast,
the name Katrina was officially retired on April 6, 2006 by the World Meteorological Organization
at the request of the U.S. government. The name will never again be used for
another North Atlantic hurricane. It was replaced
by Katia on List III of the Atlantic hurricane naming lists,
which was used in the 2011 Atlantic hurricane season.[157]
Reconstruction
Main article: Reconstruction of New Orleans
Reconstruction
of each section of the southern portion of Louisiana has been addressed in the
Army Corps LACPR (Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration) Final Technical
Report, which identifies areas to not be rebuilt and areas where buildings need
to be elevated.[158]
The Technical
Report includes:
- locations of possible new levees to be built
- suggested existing levee modifications
- "Inundation Zones", "Water depths less than 14 feet, Raise-In-Place of Structures", "Water depths greater than 14 feet, Buyout of Structures", "Velocity Zones" and "Buyout of Structures" areas for five different scenarios.
The U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers submitted the report to the U.S. Congress for consideration,
planning, and response in mid-2009.
In popular culture
Hurricane
Katrina has also been the centerpiece of several documentary films, including Spike Lee's
film, When the Levees Broke, and Darren Martinez's film, Hellp.[159]
An episode of the Fox TV series House first broadcast on May 16, 2006, featured a
teenage victim of Hurricane Katrina at the center of the main medical
storyline. An episode of the BBC show Top Gear was praised by some for being
one of the first to show the total scale of the destruction once the waters had
receded.
No comments:
Post a Comment