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To: fooman
I also think people should be let home, with the usual be safe warnings (dont touch power lines)

There's a cost to that, though. When they're not in the affected areas they're not crowding the infrastructure and requiring additional logistical support (e.g., food, water, emergency services). I'm not sure that normal property-rights considerations necessarily apply at the beginning of a serious crisis management effort.

4,020 posted on 08/29/2005 1:23:30 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: r9etb

Howard Ave. area, New Orleans

Monday, 3 p.m.

Reporters didn't have to travel far from The Times-Picayune offices on Howard Ave., to witness the storm's destructive force.

Within four blocks of the office, the storm scenes were still raw and astonishing. A handful of cars in the parking lot had their windows and sky roofs blown out. One sportscar had its hatchback glass blown out, the back-seat head rest protruding from the back window like a shark's fin.

Several concrete light poles along I-10 were snapped in half. Billboard signs were shredded and flailing in the wind. Dozens of sheets of aluminum siding were twisted around tree trunks and fences. Street signs were bent at 45-degree angles. Several trees were uprooted. Several large tree branches littered both lanes of Howard Ave. Windows at a General Electric maintenance building were blown out on both the first and second floors.

Dozens of buses and vans at the New Orleans Tours depot appeared to be in good shape, their windows intact thanks to owners who left the front doors and side doors open to reduce the pressure on the glass.

The wind was still gusting to tropical storm strength, churning the flood water to white caps along open roads.

The flood water was as deep as four feet in some places, rendering roads in and and out of the area impassible to all but the highest-riding trucks and SUVs.

The flood water was knee-deep under the Jeff Davis overpass near Xavier University.

A middle-aged Mid-City couple who had evacuated to Baton Rouge was stranded in their Honda Envoy under the overpass. The couple had evacuated to Baton Rouge for the night but could not reach their house because more than 5 feet of water surrounded it. Fortunately, the house was raised above the water level and appeared dry, the man said. The couple had chosen to wait out the storm in the relative safety of the overpass.


4,045 posted on 08/29/2005 1:29:13 PM PDT by BurbankKarl
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To: r9etb

good point. they would have to bring their own supplies.

We have a biz that was looted three times.


4,054 posted on 08/29/2005 1:30:37 PM PDT by fooman (Get real with Kim Jung Mentally Ill about proliferation)
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