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Posted on 08/30/2005 1:34:04 PM PDT by NautiNurse
Looting a hospital?
STK.
the folks in the hospital are in a bad way...
the druggies know they rule the situation, with a breakdown of authority they'll get their dope no matter who they have to take out. This will be the longest night for the docs and nurses....
AGREED!
Sorry, all of the police are busy looting wal-mart. /sarc
"To: jeffers
Where is the evidence that the lake is rising. Where did you read that? I am just asking. If it is, it is."
Well...it's only been a few hundred posts, but if memory servers, you said that somebody else said it was supposed to rise five more feet and that you didn't believe it.
I know it was high earlier because "the gulf now reaches to Old Spanish Trail" in Slidell, and there were several reports stating that it was at least 9" high.
All I can figure is that they have prioritized getting persons into any shelter first, and then moving persons from worst-case shelters (such as the SD) into better ones.
To stay alive. It's hard for me to believe with what is happening that not one staff member went to the car and got her gun today.
Yes. I checked back and the story looks very suspect to me. I wa going to alert the moderator but don't know how!
They didn't.
The "good" news is that the tides in the area are roughly 1.1-1.3 feet between high and low tide.
***This nightmare is about 10 different movies rolled into one calamity. Where is the Super Action Hero to save the day?????????***
In the White House....
But Hollywood will NEVER make that movie...
Oh good lord, Rita is on now showing the "looting" of Wal-Mart in NO. Actually, Wal-Mart closed down a number of stores in the area and told folks to come and get what they needed. They also donated a million bucks to the area.
Somebody else used that reference. Can't remember who but they talked about how it was like Zombies walking around. People were just dazed. It may have been a reporter in MS.
If nobody's armed, which they probably aren't...Doctors and nurses could arm themselves with hypodermics loaded with whatever they have to knock out (or worse) any looters. I won't say what I'm thinking that they should use in those needles - when they run out of drugs to incapacitate the looters.
12:14 AM CDT on Wednesday, August 31, 2005
12:12 A.M. Info on parish and road access:
St. Charles: Only St. Charles parish residents can return to their homes. There is no power, low fuel and no food. If you must return home, please bring supplies with you. Hwy 90, I-10, Hwy 3127 and Airline are all open. However, there is water on Airline near the St. Charles/Jefferson Parish line.
Terrebonne: No road closures. Use Hwy 90 or the Sunshine Bridge.
Lafourche : As of 2 p.m. Monday, the curfew was lifted. Go directly to your homes. Hwy 1 is closed between Golden Meadow and Grande Isle.
St. James: Open to residents only.
St. John: Open to residents only. You need your ID.
Jefferson: You can return Monday with your ID. You will be allowed to collect your belongings and will not be allowed to return for a month.
Orleans: Closed. The Highrise is not safe to cross. Many parts of I-10 are flooded.
Plaqeumines: Closed.
St. Bernard: Closed.
St. Tammany: I-10 and the Twinspans are destroyed, but the Hwy 11 bridge is intact.
Washington: No information available. Lines are busy!
Tangiphoa: No information available. Lines are busy.
Other road information:
--Hwy 90 between Lafayette and St. Charles Parish line/Lafourche parish line is open.
--Hwy 308/Valentine, south of that area is closed.
--Hwy 3185 (Thibodeaux Bypass) is closed.
--La Bourg Larose Hwy is closed.
11:28 P.M. - (AP) LAFAYETTE, La. -- Parents who had to evacuate because of Hurricane Katrina will be able to register their children for school in Lafayette Parish starting tomorrow.
Burnell Lemoine, deputy superintendent and chief academic officer for the Lafayette Parish School System, says registration ends Thursday and parents will be contacted Friday to let them know what school their children should attend.
He says students should be in classes by Tuesday. The children will be assigned to current schools depending on where they are in homes or shelters.
9:23 P.M. - FEMA bringing 2,000 officials to town. Bringing in food, water, ice, tarps. Setting up offices where you can get grants and loans.
9:21 P.M. - (AP) One Mississippi county alone said its death toll was at least 100, and officials are "very, very worried that this is going to go a lot higher," said Joe Spraggins, civil defense director for Harrison County, home to Biloxi and Gulfport.
Thirty of the victims in the county were from a beachfront apartment building that collapsed under a 25-foot wall of water as Katrina slammed the Gulf Coast with 145-mph winds.
9:19 P.M. - Lt. Governor Landrieu: Asking hotels in neighboring states to extend stays of refugees and to give them first priority and to possibly offer discounts for extended stays.
9:18 P.M. - Lt. Governor Mitch Landrieu: 3000 rescued to date. People taken from rooftops, attics and from water, clinging to inner tubes.
9:17 P.M. - New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin says hundreds, if not thousands, of people may still be stuck on roofs and in attics, and so rescue boats were bypassing the dead.
8:04 P.M. - Mayor Nagin: Unhappy that the helicopters slated to drop 3,000-pound bags into the levee never showed up to stop the flow of water. Too many chiefs calling shots he says.
7:59 P.M. - Mayor Nagin: Pumps at 17th street canal has failed and water will continue pouring into the city. Nine feet of water is expected on St. Charles Avenue that will be nine feet high. Water is expected to spread throughout the east bank of Orleans and possibly Jefferson Parish.
7:39 P.M. - WWL-TV's Karen Swensen - Algiers has downed trees and power lines but for the most part no water in homes. Some roof damage to some homes.
7:35 P.M. - Swensen: Camps on Highway 11 in Slidell are gone.
7:24 P.M. - John Marie of Plaquemines Parish Sheriff's Office: No one is allowed back into parish. Marshall law in effect. Forty-seven people were rescued by parish officials Monday and several dozen were rescued Tuesday.
7:22 P.M. - Marie: Belle Chasse suffered severe damage. South of Myrtle Grove completely under water. There are some, though unknown number, of dead bodies.
7:20 P.M. - Marie: Those rescued are airlifted to parish's highest point at the levee, dropped there with food and water and then the National Guard picks them up and sends them to the Belle Chasse auditorium. No looting reported.
Luckily, I think the water will flow back towards NO and not towards the west towards cleary/clearview. If I remember correctly, that area is near the saints training camp and also a huge cemetary down there near Airline Hwy. My best guess is that its underwater or at best up halfway. I saw footage of the clearview mall and surrounding parts it was swamped.
Go to www.wwltv.com and go over the video clips. There was one that did a extensive helicopter tour of metarie. If you have someone with you then you can show them the footage. its not good though. Let me know if I can be of any other help and be sure to check out wwl website as they start back up in the morning with streaming webcasts of the nes at 10:30am
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