Posted on 11/29/2005 2:09:18 PM PST by Libloather
Hurricane season finally ending, but next year could be bad, too
By JOHN PAIN
Associated Press Writer
November 29. 2005 4:27PM
The busiest and costliest Atlantic hurricane season on record officially - and mercifully - draws to a close Wednesday, with hundreds of thousands of Americans still dealing with the devastation wrought by Katrina, Rita and Wilma.
Despite the end of the June 1-to-Nov. 30 season, hurricanes could still form over the next few months. In fact, a tropical storm took shape in the Atlantic on Tuesday. But no hurricane has been known to hit the United States between December and May.
And that is welcome news, particularly along the Gulf Coast, where Katrina hit three months ago, plunging New Orleans into the kind of chaos usually seen in the Third World, exposing the gap between rich and poor, and raising serious doubts about the country's readiness for another catastrophe, caused by man or nature.
The relief may not last very long: Forecasters say 2006 could be another brutal year, because the Atlantic is in a period of frenzied hurricane activity that began in 1995 and could last at least another decade.
Government hurricane experts say the increase is due to a natural cycle of higher sea temperatures, lower wind shear and other factors, though some scientists blame global warming.
The 2005 season obliterated many long-standing records:
-In 154 years of record-keeping, this year had the most named storms (26, including Tropical Storm Epsilon, which formed Tuesday), the most hurricanes (13), the highest number of major hurricanes hitting the U.S. (4), and the most top-scale Category 5 hurricanes (3).
-Katrina was the deadliest U.S. hurricane since 1928 (more than 1,300 dead) and replaced 1992's Andrew as the most expensive one on record ($34.4 billion in insured losses).
-Total insured losses from hurricanes this year were put at $47.2 billion, above the previous record of $22.9 billion set last year when four hurricanes also hit the U.S., according to risk-analysis firm ISO.
-Wilma was briefly the most intense Atlantic hurricane on record in terms of minimum central pressure (882 millibars). It also was the fastest-strengthening storm on record - its top sustained winds increased 105 mph in 24 hours in the Caribbean.
-Forecasters exhausted their list of 21 proper names (Arlene, Bret, Cindy and so on) and had to use the Greek alphabet to name storms for the first time.
The worst damage, of course, was inflicted by Katrina. Miles of coastal Mississippi towns such as Waveland and Gulfport were smashed. Eighty percent of New Orleans was under water after its levees broke. The world saw families stranded on roofs and hungry and thirsty refugees stuck in the Superdome and Convention Center. Bodies lay on streets for days or floated in the fetid floodwaters. Hundreds of thousands of people have yet to return to their homes - or have no homes to return to.
So far, Congress has approved $62 billion in mostly short-term relief aid, and estimates put the cost of rebuilding at up to $200 billion.
The Bush administration was bitterly criticized for its slow response to Katrina. Michael Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, lost his job, and the president's approval ratings sank.
Wilma, Dennis and Rita, the other hurricanes that hit the U.S., were not as deadly or destructive, but they also exposed weaknesses: There were 14-hour traffic jams as Houston emptied out ahead of Rita, which struck the Texas-Louisiana coast on Sept. 24, and South Florida was crippled for days after Wilma knocked out power to more than 6 million people on Oct. 24.
The president has ordered the Homeland Security Department to review disaster plans for every major metropolitan area. FEMA is also pledging to manage the flow of personnel and supplies better.
"We have to make it a much more nimble, more adaptable organization. ... We've got good people in place to make it happen," said R. David Paulison, FEMA's acting director. He added: "As long as I'm here, I can tell you, we will not have another Superdome."
Despite government warnings that people be prepared to survive on their own for three days after a catastrophe, polls found that a majority of Americans are no better prepared for a disaster than they were before Katrina.
"The biggest thing that can be done to prevent loss of life is to motivate people to develop their own individual hurricane plan and know what to do before the next hurricane," said Max Mayfield, director of the National Hurricane Center, which won praise for its accurate forecasts. "Some of these folks, take Mississippi in Katrina, they died because they didn't have a hurricane plan."
But some Americans have learned their lesson.
"Next time they say evacuate, I'm gone," said Tracy Haywood, 38, of New Orleans, who spent three days stranded on a roof during the storm before being rescued.
Possibly a once-in-a-lifetime event - and he'll do it right next time. Nagin and Blanco could take lessons from this guy...
Has anyone told the hurricanes?
Nah, what's the sense? The never listen.
Clinton's fault?
*chuckling*
-Total insured losses from hurricanes this year were put at $47.2 billion, above the previous record of $22.9 billion set last year when four hurricanes also hit the U.S., according to risk-analysis firm ISO.
I don't get this...
I think everybody would be better off if Nagin and Blanco took a hike.
In order to help determine who or what is behind the recent outbreak of killer hurricanes, ABC News, in conjunction with MoveOn.Org, CNN, Michael Moore and Cindy Sheehan, has conducted a scientific poll to help assess blame. This poll was given 1,439 participants at a recent WTO protest. To ensure that right-wing bias was eliminated from this survey, only participants that had voted for either the democratic or socialist-worker parties in the last 4 elections were allowed to participate. This poll has a margin of error of plus or minus .0000009%.
What specific failure of the Bush administration has most contributed to the recent dramatic increase in the number of strong, killer, racist hurricanes?
A. Bush's miserable failure to ratify the all-important Kyoto treaty. - 11%
B. Bush's war in Iraq. - 9 %
C. Bush's stealing of both the 2000 and 2004 elections. - 7%
D. Bush's hatred of black people. - 6%
E. Bush's cocaine use in the 1970's - 6%
F. Haliburton - 4%
G. Karl Rove - 3%
H. Red States - 2%
I. Christians - 1%
J. ALL OF THE ABOVE ABJECT FAILURES OF THIS
DISGUSTING AND EMBARRASSING ADMINISTRATION
HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO THE UNPRECEDENTED RISE
OF STRONG, KILLER, RACIST HURRICANES! - 51%
Hurricane vs. hurricanes. The first is talking individual costs, the second is talking total cost for the year.
Sure... but wouldn't 1992 have been more expensive as a year (with Andrew included in the sum) than last year's "record" total?
what a minute. on second read, I don't get it either. Looks like they messed up their numbers.
Told ya!
We all know that the eeevil W. controlled the path of Katrina to disenfranchise dem voters in NO.The proof is obvious. He no longer needed Hurricane Delta, so he sent it back to Africa, from whence it came. IRMC
Worst year since 1931...It was all Hoover's fault!!!
No.
That Karl Rove Weather Machine is a stunning piece of hardware ... able to differentiate between the rich and poor.
(sinister laugh)
You stole my line!
Forecasters say 2006 could be another brutal year
---Let's see how many evacuate when they are told to this time.
I just checked weather underground 5 day forecast track and it looks like it might be coming around for another try. I don't know that I've ever seen a hurricane loop around like that but if it heads into the usual storm track, it should be real interesting to watch.
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