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Posted on 08/30/2005 6:51:27 AM PDT by NautiNurse
Catastrophic damage occurred to Mississippi, Louisiana and Alabama as a result of Hurricane Katrina. Major bridges are destroyed. Mobile AL suffered its worst flooding in 90 years. In New Orleans, a large section of concrete levee broke last night. Water continues to rise, threatening, among many things, Tulane Hospital with 1000 patients. New Orleans officials: Do not attempt to return to the city at this time if you evacuated. It is too dangerous.
WLOX TV Biloxi, Gulfport, Pascagula
Gulfport News via Topix.net WAFB Baton Rouge
Slidell, Mandeville, and Covington Updates Warning: website is overloaded due to heavy traffic
Mississippi updates via Jackson Ledger
oh no.
The human toll for this could possibly top 9-11 if the number of Bay St. Louis people did not evacuate like the Gulf Coast.
The scariest thing to me is that New Orleans area has yet to report their first fatality even with the reports of floating bodies.
Perhaps he believed it was going to help his network attract viewers, which sells advertising, which pays network salaries.
We may never know.
I don't find it too technical - and find it pertinent.
Whoops - now here's a reporter from Bay St. Louis. Severe devastation, no power, Coast Guard copter present. Too much info to type. People described as war refugees. I don't think he mentioned anything about caualties, but there are survivors, for sure.
Reporting on tornado damage in Carrol County, Georgia....
WDSU reports that the patients in threatened hospitals are being moved (I'd assume by boat) to the SuperDome.
WDSU is reporting two confirmed levee breaches, one on the East, one on the West. Further evacuations are being ordered and performed.
Western breach was one that appeared yesterday and is growing.
But dealing with a catastrophe is exactly what insurance companies do. And make no mistake about it . . . a disaster like this doesn't just cost insurance companies a lot of money in claims -- it also presents them a marvelous opportunity to show their potential customers just how good they are at dealing with these situations.
In fact, I would venture to guess that within two weeks every major insurance carrier in the U.S. will convene a team of marketing specialists to craft television commercials for next year's Super Bowl -- showing people how quickly these companies responded in a time of distress.
Hank , I found r9's post informative. Let's all try to be patient. We all have various things that are important to us here and all of us bring from our backgrounds/expertise good things.
Oh yeah. We had a storm blow through here a week ago Friday that was one of the most spectacular thunder boomers I've seen. A friend and I sat on the patio of our local pub on Eglinton Ave East (under an awning) and watched violent sheets of rain sweep across the area. Major flooding in lowlying areas and lots of trees down. The kind of storm you would not want to be caught in when out camping.
LAFAYETTE CAJUN DOME WILL BE OPENING IN ONE HOUR TO START TAKING IN EVACUEES.
For more info: 337-406-1021
" Time to put aside the misgivings and let them do what they do best."
Use a disaster's charity response to plan funding for a new headquarters?
From T-P
http://www.nola.com/newslogs/breakingtp/index.ssf?/mtlogs/nola_Times-Picayune/archives/2005_08.html#075048
"T-P EVACUATING
Tuesday, 9:40 a.m.
The Times-Picayune is evacuating it's New Orleans building.
Water continues to rise around our building, as it is throughout the region. We want to evaucate our employees and families while we are still able to safely leave our building.
Our plan is to head across the Mississippi River on the Pontchartrain Expressway to the west bank of New Orleans and Jefferson Parish. From there, we'll try to head to Houma.
Our plan, obviously, is to resume providing news to our readers ASAP. Please refer back to this site for continuing information as soon as we are able to provide it."
I looked at their link, and couldn't find a live streaming link.
Seeking answers to rising watersTuesday, 8:05 a.m.
The Broussard recovery planJefferson Parish President Aaron Broussard began laying out a recovery plan this morning for "the horrific tragedy" that Hurricane Katrina visited upon his jurisdiction. It starts, he told WWL-AM radio, with "Operation Lockdown" using Louisiana State Police and military police to seal off Jefferson's borders until a target of Monday at 6 a.m. to reopen them. "I will be looking to secure and lockdown this parish," he said. "It is like a ghost town out there. That is the way we want it. If I can keep it a ghost town for the next five days, the looters will stand out and shine like a bright light." Next, he said, is "Operation Snowplow," using National Guard bulldozers, cranes, trucks and other heavy equipment to clear the major east-west thoroughfares on both side of the Mississippi River. Concurrently, he will seek state help removing trees, traffic signals, signs and debris from north-south roads. "We have to establish at least a functional grid," Broussard said. Neighborhoods must wait. "The residential streets are off my map right now," said Broussard, who gamely toured the parish Monday evening. "I almost didn't get back, and I have Expedition with a blue light on top. We could hardly find a route to get us back that wasn't flooded." Broussard said he will seek a crackdown on looting, calling in more military police to work with sheriff's deputies and local police. Looters arrested in Jefferson Parish might have to be taken to jails elsewhere to ensure they are houses in sanitary and humane surroundings, he said. Also important is raising water pressure, now so low in Broussard's view that toilets can't be flushed and firefighters can't douse flames. "There was a business on the West Bank that burned to the ground yesterday," Broussard said. Water pressure has plunged because Katrina uprooted old trees through Jefferson Parish, and in the process their roots ripped open buried water lines, Broussard said. He said sewerage infrastructure seems to be in good shape but that wasterwater can't get to treatment plants because of lower water pressure in homes. Other aspects of the recovery plan are: -- Establishing traffic control once streets are clear, for many signals and signs have vanished. -- Using parish government's website (www.jeffparish.net) to give evacuees information about their neighborhoods. -- Bring all drainage pumping stations back online. Broussard said crews are working west to east on East Jefferson pumping stations -- from Kenner to New Orleans -- and in the opposition direction in West Jefferson.
Only way out of New Orleans is WestThe only way people can leave the city of New Orleans is to get on Crescent City Connection, head to the West Bank and take Highway 90 to Interstate 310 or I-10 on to Lafayette, authorities said this morning. Interstate-10 eastbound, toward Slidell and the Gulf Coast, can't be traveled. Several sections of the Twin Spans have washed away and other sections of the bridge are structurally unsound. The Lake Pontchartrain Causeway has been opened to police, fire and other emergency vehicles after an initial inspection concluded the 24-mile long bridge was sound, WWL Radio reported this morning. No other vehicles will be allowed on the bridge; and access to St. Tammany Parish remains restricted. The condition of U.S. Highway 11 across the Lake is not known.
The overview: 'Look, look man: Its gone'By Bruce Nolan Staff writer Hurricane Katrina struck metropolitan New Orleans on Monday with a staggering blow, far surpassing Hurricane Betsy, the landmark disaster of an earlier generation. The storm flooded huge swaths of the city, as well as Slidell on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain, in a process that appeared to be spreading even as night fell. A powerful storm surge pushed huge waves ahead of the hurricane, flooding much of St. Bernard Parish and New Orleans Lower 9th Ward, just as Betsy 40 years ago. But this time the flooding was more extensive, spreading upriver as well to cover parts of the Bywater, Marigny and Treme neighborhoods. As with Betsy, people scrambled into their attics or atop their roofs, pleading for help from the few passers-by. The powerful Category 4 storm crossed the coast near the mouth of the Pearl River shortly after daybreak with winds of 135 mph. Naval Air Station-Joint Reserve Base in Belle Chasse reported an early morning gust of 105 mph. With the power out throughout the area and fierce winds raging throughout the day, officials barely began Monday to assess the full damage of the monstrous storm, which was expected to leave thousands homeless and many more coping with damage from the wind and water. Meantime, five miles to the west, engineers worked to close a breach along the New Orleans side of the 17th Street Canal. Huge drainage pumps ordinarily can drive millions of gallons of rainwater uphill through the canal, as it takes water from the low-lying city into Lake Pontchartrain. But the breach turned the canal into a major threat. Lake water flowed back through the breach, hemorrhaging into Lakeview and beyond. Across Lake Pontchartrain and closer to the site of Katrinas landfall, thousands of homes in Slidell flooded. From the Interstate 10 overpass at Slidells Old Spanish Trail, the only visible structure from the dense commercial intersection was a boat bobbing on the waves. This is Lake Pontchartrain, said St. Tammany deputy sheriff Kenny Kreeger. |
http://www.wwltv.com/perl/common/video/wmPlayer.pl?title=beloint_khou&props=livenoad
A facility with no power. No ventilation. An open roof. No food. No water. Toilets out of service.
These patients should be helicoptered out. Assuming there are helicopters available.
Thanks!
Thank you. Might be a few days before it's all put together, since we haven't started. But I would think those children down there could use some "comfort" things too.
I just saw that new video on Fox... couldn't believe it. I saw chicken farms - anything else hit?
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