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WSWS : News
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Hurricane Katrina bears down on New Orleans
By Naomi Spencer
29 August 2005
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Residents of New Orleans, Louisiana braced Sunday night for
a potentially catastrophic hurricane headed for the southern US
city. On Friday August 26, seven people in southern Florida were
killed, four struck by uprooted trees, by the category three Hurricane
Katrina as it scraped the coast and moved west. Once into the
pocket of the Gulf of Mexico, the hurricane gained strength and
bore directly toward the antiquated and impoverished city of New
Orleans.
Early Sunday, August 28, the hurricane was upgraded by the
National Weather Service to category five, the strongest possible
storm. Category five storms are capable of winds in excess of
200 miles per hour and a storm surge of 35 feet, as with Hurricane
Camille in 1969.
As has happened so often in the past, the most vulnerable layers
of the city will be most at risk as the hurricane approaches.
It is expected to hit New Orleans sometime Monday morning. On
Sunday afternoon, the citys mayor, Ray Nagin, ordered a
mandatory evacuation of the city, an unprecedented step. Many
thousands remain behind, unable to leave for lack of transportation,
because they are too sick or for other reasons. Lines stretched
out of the Louisiana Superdome, which is being used as a temporary
shelter, but an unknown number of residents remain in their homes.
More than 100,000 of the nearly half a million residents lack
vehicles, and were without means to heed the calls to evacuate.
Traffic was at a standstill with out-going traffic filling all
four lanes of the west- and northbound Interstates.
The National Hurricane Center issued a statement on Sunday
saying the hurricane had reached potentially catastrophic
strength. In addition to New Orleans, other regions along the
Gulf Coast, including parts of Alabama and northern Florida, are
on guard. If Katrina hits ground as a category five storm, it
will be only the fourth storm of this strength to hit the United
States since records have been kept.
We are facing a storm that most of us have long feared,
said Nagin on Sunday. This is a once-in-a-lifetime event.
However, very little has been done by city officials to prepare
for what has been seen as inevitable.
The city of New Orleans was settled on soft, silty, low-lying
land that sinks at an average rate of three feet per century.
In 2005, the city stands at eight feet below sea level, although
some neighborhoods are twenty feet below sea level. Flanked by
the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi River and the shore of Lake
Pontchartrain, New Orleans is extremely vulnerable to inundation
during hurricane season.
Water that pours into the city during a hurricanes surge
must be pumped out at great effort and cost over the very levees
built to hold back the water. Near misses in the last few years
prompted engineers and meteorologists to issue warnings and recommendations
to rebuild crumbling barrier islands and develop emergency shelters
before the inevitable next strike.
Computer simulations of a category four hurricane striking
New Orleans projected more than twenty feet of standing water
made into a cesspool by chemical spills, the flotsam of destroyed
homes, and even caskets washed out from the citys enormous
historic cemeteries.
In 1965, Hurricane Betsy, a category three storm, submerged
almost half of New Orleans, leaving 60,000 residents homeless.
The death toll for the Gulf region reached 74, prompting calls
for better preparedness plans and flood barriers.
Of the residents remaining, a feeling of profound, almost surreal
anxiety prevailed. The World Socialist Web Site received
updates from New Orleans residents as the situation developed
Sunday.
Judith, who suffers from chronic back pain, wanted to leave
her Warehouse District apartment but had nowhere to go, and no
one to help her leave. Her apartment is on the third floor of
a concrete building built in 1911, three blocks from the east
bank of the Mississippi River. It survived Betsy and Camille,
she said. She is hopeful that if the river floods, the massive
Morial Convention Center between her home and the river will shield
her neighborhood from the brunt of the surge.
Myself and a few neighbors are here for the duration.
I just couldnt see being trapped in bumper-to-bumper traffic
with no set destination for who knows how many hours. The gas
stations along the evacuation route are sooner or later going
to run out of gas and then were screwed on the road.
She described the dysfunctional and dream-like town as she
saw it Sunday morning: All but two gas stations along Magazine
Street were closed; all the businesses are closed with boarded
up windows. There were people riding their bicycles and a man
selling the Sunday paper on Saint Charles Avenue like it was a
regular Sunday. What I did notice is that most of the businesses
with hanging store-front signs left them out to flap around and
turn into missiles.
Judith has considered the alternatives to staying in her apartment.
She told the WSWS, Supposedly, the National Guard is set
up in the Superdome along with emergency supplies. Im a
ten-minute walk from the French Quarter full of fancy hotels with
alleged back-up generators. Im hoping that if and when the
power goes, I can make my way over to one of them just to sit
tight once the storm passes.
She is highly critical of the conduct of city officials and
considers them partly to blame for the potential human catastrophe
tomorrow. The city, parish, and state should have started
the contra-flow on the highways early Saturday. That probably
would have gotten me to leave town... But then again, I dont
have $100 plus a night for a room.
The teenage son of a doctor who had badly wanted to leave town
declared, We didnt evacuate. Im in Memorial
Hospital right now and Im hoping thats enough. We
couldnt leave because my dad was on call. I hope I dont
die. Seriously.
Like many residents left in New Orleans, he was skeptical of
the integrity of the citys scant emergency precautions in
the face of a record hurricane. This is like the biggest
storm thats ever been in the Atlantic. I dont know.
Theyre saying the storm surge might be around 25-50 feet,
and the levees only support 7 feet.
He told the WSWS, There are a good number of people [camped
in the hospital], but theyre mostly calm and watching TV.
Most people have left, because this is obviously going to be a
huge storm, but the TV still shows a few people, and one of my
friends is still in town. Its just scary.
Kas, a long-time resident of New Orleans, related her immense
uncertainty Sunday afternoon. By this time in the AM, well
be in the storm and by this time tomorrow, we may not be here
at all. It is hard to fathom words like Catastrophic Damagethe
sun is shining and the wind is currently mild. Its 92 degrees.
Its a perfect summer day.
When Hurricane Andrew hit Miami, Florida in 1992, Kas was terrified
that New Orleans was next. I am reminding myself that anything
is still possible. I am preparing as much as possible though the
only real thing you can do in this situation is either stay and
pray or run and pray for those who didnt. So Im praying...
that this thing weakens, that it turns a little more, that I still
have a roof come tomorrow afternoon, that the speed it is picking
up will hold so at least if it does hit, it will move through
quickly. Weve always been told here to fear the water not
the wind, but these winds are moving at 175 miles per houra
far cry from the 75-90 that we know not to be too worried about.
Then she became almost despondent, reflecting on whether or
not she would be alive tomorrow. I live in a flood zone.
This area was under water with Betsy and Camille. I am afraid
and okay at the same time.
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