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Posted on 08/28/2005 9:35:34 AM PDT by NautiNurse
Red Cross just sent out a memo saying that this could be the biggest hurricane disaster that they have ever had to respond to.
This is one scary looking storm...
~shudder~
Katrina is ranked #4 in all history.
The west side WILL get damage. It IS a Cat 5, after all. But, yes, the damage on the west side will be much less than the east.
That's what I heard they did do - now it's back to traffic both ways.
To say nothing of what it will be like once electricity goes out, A/C stops running, will plumbing be able to handle all those people for an extended period? Not where I would want to be.
I've said it before, but last time there was a mandatory evacuation in Savannah, they used school buses to take elderly and those without transportation to school gyms about 150 miles west.
I don't know why in the world they didn't begin doing that in N.O. yesterday.
I'm late getting on the thread, but been watching the TV a bit, and just eyeballing it, I am wondering if the Models may be off slightly, they already have shifted the track to the west some.
Very sobering assessment here:
http://quote.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=10000006&sid=aF9SxgEvDm.Y&refer=home
Wind is too strong for C5-A's or -Bs to get in and out.
That said, with NO being a major commerce center, why isn't everyone remaining being loaded on buses, taken to the nearest train terminal, loaded on the next train and hauled out? The trains don't have to stop for road crossings and I'd bet the rail system isn't real busy right now.
As the Indians and Pakistanis have demonstrated, you can load thousands of people on a train - even ones that are only boxcars and flatbeds.
It could get really ugly. A lot of people keep saying God help them but that is about all we can do at this point.
God help them.
Because of the cuvature of the exterior, any lateral energy winds will be transferred verticaly literally taking the roof off. You heard it here first. They are being evacuated into a death trap IMHO.
That's what I was thinking. Who has that photo of it? Any engineer types who are reading this care to opine?
The amazing thing is, had it not been for that Hurricane, Galveston would probably have grown into the metropolis that Houston ultimately did.
Correct; Plaquemines is getting hit now along with southern Jeffeson; as the hurricane tracks north Orleans and northern Jefferson get hit along with St. Bernard, which is on the northeast side of Plaquemines (St. B. abuts the Gulf on its' eastern side, northern side and southeast side).
Per WWL---
Officials are planning ways to collect and store bodies; will be a long time getting back to normal;expecting severe structual damage to buildings, etc. The goal of officials now is to see that people LIVE TO SEE TUESDAY.
Mark for the facts!
At this point, you can't possibly get 20-30 thousand people from downtown to an airport -- much less get enough planes in and out in the next 6 hours or so. That option was probably off the table 2 days ago.
During WWII Londoners sent their children sans parents to safety in the countryside. With time so short surely Dome's guards would let the children standing in lines outside the SuperDome go inside right away. As a parent myself, I know their parents would hate to be separated from their children, but if it is a question of the children's survival, surely some of the parents might think differently about that separation, don't you think?
Probably what is taking so long is it is post 9-11 and if a loonie terrorist got in there it could be like 10 or 15 9-11's. Then there are the people that have to scrutinize the people and make sure they don't bring in drugs, alcohol, etc. If these are City or County or State Workers they want to be home with their families instead of at ground zero.
And a great song by Glen Campbell.
HTML fu is weak, but I think the 32mb drop -- if it happened within the last six hours -- would meet the criteria for "explosive deepening".
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