Phtotographs copyright 2007 by Ride Hamilton

 


Hurricane Katrina 2007
Your Go-To Page
Everything you need and need to know is right here.

 

We present here the latest articles of note, and include a brief synopsis and quotes from each below its link, so you need not go any further unless you want to delve deeper about a particular subject. This is not a site not of outdated, archived news items. These pieces include breaking news, highlighting the ongoing debates, resources to better understand the hurricane—what we can do about both healing its wounds and preventing a future disaster—as well as resources for those still in need. Sadly, despite the fact that the storm's second anniversary is approaching on August 29, 2007, Hurricane Katrina's devastation is far from over.

Katrina made landfall just before dawn on August 29, 2005, seventy miles south of New Orleans. Largely because the wetlands that make up Louisiana’s coast had been eroded, the storm surge pushed unabated into southern Louisiana, breaching New Orleans' levees at multiple points, leaving 80 percent of the city submerged, tens of thousands of victims clinging to rooftops, and hundreds of thousands scattered to shelters around the country. Many have yet to return. The devastation to Mississippi and Louisiana by hurricanes Katrina and Rita has been called the greatest disaster in our nation's history.

The images of anguish and anger from Hurricane Katrina have been forever burned into the hearts and minds of all Americans. They must be the catalyst for change. Prevention of a future disaster of similar proportions is both possible and practical. But the United States must act now to restore the wetlands.

 

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THE LATEST NEWS

Disaster is only one marsh away (August 31, 2007) - On Katrina's second anniversary, we must revisit New Orleans, yes, but it is the regions south of the city that hold the key to its survival, as well as the economic and ecological well-being of the whole country. None are perhaps so vital as Plaquemines Parish, the county that begins five miles down the Mississippi River from the city and runs into the Gulf of Mexico. Just as Plaquemines was ground zero for Katrina, it is too for wetlands erosion. It is the fastest-disappearing landmass on the face of the earth, a national crisis that America can avoid.

Fact Sheet: The Two-Year Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina - The Federal Government (claims it) Is Fulfilling Its Commitment To Help The People Of The Gulf Coast Rebuild

The Lower Ninth is rising from Katrina's awful ashes - Two years after the hurricane devastated New Orleans, an influx of volunteers is fortifying an inspirational regeneration.

The word "will" comes up constantly in the Lower Ninth Ward. "We Will Rebuild" is spray-painted on empty houses. "It will happen," one organiser told me. Will itself may achieve the ambitious objective of bringing this destroyed inner-city African-American neighbourhood back to life, and for many New Orleans citizens a ferocious determination seems the only alternative to being overwhelmed and becalmed. But the fate of the neighbourhood is still up in the air, from the question of whether enough people can and will make it back, to the nagging questions of how viable a city they will be part of. The majority of houses in this isolated area are still empty, about a tenth of the residents are back - some already living in rehabilitated houses, some camped in stark white trailers, some living elsewhere while getting their houses ready.

The place has come a long way already. Even seven months after the storm it was spookily unpopulated and almost untouched since the catastrophe. Cars that had been flipped and tossed by the waters still stood up against buildings, hung over fences and laid on their backs. Houses that had been shoved by the force of the water into the middle of the street or that had been smashed into splinters looked untouched, except by sardonic graffiti: "Thanks for Nothing Fema", was the message to the national emergency agency on one dislodged building; a simple "Baghdad" was emblazoned on another. Debris was everywhere.

Today, two years after Hurricane Katrina, the wrecked cars, smashed houses and debris are gone, for the most part, and a lot of the remaining houses look pretty good. People have made their own street signs, further evidence of social strength and institutional weakness. Nena, the Neighbourhood empowerment network association of the Lower Ninth, keeps a map in its office with a green pin for every returnee. The green dots are scattered everywhere, though they represent only a small percentage of homes and residents.

Unlike mostly middle-class, white Lakeview, or New Orleans East, home to many Vietnamese-Americans, the Lower Ninth is not a new neighbourhood nor one on exceptionally low ground, and its ecological precariousness is relatively recent. There were inhabitants here in the early 19th century, long before the Industrial canal cut off the Lower Ninth along its western edge from the rest of the city. This canal, dug in the 1920s to provide a direct waterway between Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi river, which forms the neighbourhood's southern border, is penned in by levees that had failed catastrophically before, in Hurricane Betsy in 1965.

Another watery border, this time in the bayou to the north, was gouged out in the 1960s and named the Mississippi river Gulf Outlet canal, or MR-GO. It created a shorter route for shipping traffic - and for storm surges, salinisation and the loss of some 27,000 acres of wetlands, making yet another unnatural edge of vulnerability for the place. Breaches of the MR-GO canal's levees were responsible for much of the flooding of the Lower Ninth in 2005, and water that surged up this "hurricane highway" may have been responsible for the even more devastating breaches of the Industrial canal. It is a murderous piece of engineering, and even its builders, the US army corps of engineers, agreed that it should be closed.

Restoring the wetlands at the Lower Ninth's northern edge is a challenge that has been taken up by a local neighbourhood association, with the University of Wisconsin's water resources management doing the research. One of the first facts that emerged is that a forest had died there, in Bayou Bienvenue. The cypress forest that could still be seen in photographs from the 1950s died of the salinity from the MR-GO canal, and with it went one layer of protection against storm surges. A forest buffers a storm surge, and trees would help hold the wetlands as land rather than open water.

Two Years Later: Katrina's Economic Impact - The near total loss of New Orleans and the counties surrounding the grand Creole city was not a regional tragedy, it was a national one, with long-term economic costs to every American.

In the weeks after Hurricane Katrina, oil and gasoline prices spiked, as nearly a third of the nation's refineries and the entire domestic oil production of the Gulf of Mexico were shut down. Retail gas prices rocketed up 46 cents in a single week to a new nominal record high. Almost immediately, the American consumer started cutting back. Economists say that the storm likely took a full percentage point out of the U.S. gross domestic product in the quarter immediately after the storm.

Federal Official Defends Katrina Effort - Barely half the money set aside for recovery and rebuilding has flowed from the state to the local level, Powell said. He also referred to the Road Home program, which has disbursed more than $3 billion to help homeowners rebuild or relocate, but faces a projected multibillion-dollar shortfall and has been criticized for being been too slow to give out grants. Local leaders must have plans and priorities and act, not just in rebuilding but also in reforming such areas as health care and the criminal justice system, Powell said.

"Ladies and gentlemen, I still believe that when history writes the book on Hurricane Katrina, it's not merely going to be a story of tragedy," he said. "It's going to be a story of renewal, rebirth and redemption. But this kind of transformation will not happen without leadership without local leadership. Heroic leadership."

Surviving Katrina - An article from Malaysia... at least they haven't forgotten about our neighbors on the Gulf Coast

A survivor of Hurricane Katrina, who lost almost everything of value in the 2005 floods, returns to his newly-repaired home a different man. The catastrophe was hard on the body, but even harder on the spirit. On Aug 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina left a trail of destruction in Biloxi, Mississippi, the United States. When the waters subsided, the seaside casino city was submerged by piles of debris.

Life is different now for Richer, even though he moved back into his newly repaired house four months ago. “What’s normal?” he asked. For one, he no longer collects antiques, stamps and books because Katrina swept all his stuff away. “I don’t feel like collecting anymore. People matter more than things. Your value system becomes clearer.”

Two Years After Katrina, Revisiting New Orleans, and Its Struggles - Listen or read the transcript from Voices of America

Progress continues, but concerns are raised about the physical as well as the mental recovery from the floods. 'There's no way you can tell me to get over it,' says one man.

Pay Heed to New Orleans' Plight - A great American city is withering. The people with power must be made to care. And you should care - that it could be your hometown that is abandoned when the crisis is yours.

Beyond the happy mayhem of the French Quarter, entire neighborhoods are in ruins and the business district sags from the shattered economy. Thousands of people are homeless and squatting in vacant and storm-damaged properties, some just a few blocks from City Hall. More than 160,000 residents never returned. For those who did dare to come back home, little resembles normalcy.

President Bush, the city's self-declared savior, has been here 10 times since Katrina, half the visits in the first six weeks after the storm. In the past year, as the true scope of the failure of the recovery unfolded, Bush visited only twice. The city didn't even get a mention in his State of the Union address last January.

Many of the 270,000 people now living in New Orleans wonder how the nation can spend a half-trillion dollars in Iraq while this city remains wrecked. ``I can't believe this is the United States and after so long, so much is still not fixed,'' said Melanie Ehrlich, a Tulane University researcher. ``It's scandalous, unforgivable.'' It's worse than that. Not far from the Ehrlich home, the 6000 block of Paris Avenue is deserted. Weeds obscure gutted houses. Gruesome gang-like symbols painted on their doors tell cryptic tales of what rescuers found when they pushed through Katrina's floodwater. ``It's like looking at the rapture,'' said the Rev. Jeremy Evans, 31, as he gazed out from the nearby Edgewater Baptist Church. Like the biblical call of the faithful to Heaven, people seem to have vanished.

Information about new Hurricane Katrina book Heart Like Water by Joshua Clark - The only memoir from a resident who never left New Orleans.

"In the growing constellation of Katrina stories, Joshua Clark's masterful tale shines brightest. The Apocalypse destroyed a city and ripped to shreds lives, but the legibility of its profound inner impact had to wait for this book, which is a love story. Clark's book is our 'Love in a Time of Cholera,' but, even more than Marquez' novel, it is immediate and wrenching and true, while its rhythms, like Marquez', are nothing short of majestic. Josh Clark has written the great non-fiction New Orleans novel, a book that's here to stay." --Andrei Codrescu

Hurricane Katrina just won't go away - Rebuilding hard, scattered in New Orleans (August 26, 2007)

As Hurricane Katrina unleashed floodwaters that swirled and rose around his Lower Ninth Ward home, Robert Green, his three granddaughters, his mother and two other family members clung to their roof as it floated for blocks. His mother, already ailing, died on that roof. His 3-year-old granddaughter fell from it and disappeared under the water.

"It's really important to me to have what was," said Green, sitting in the tiny FEMA trailer parked where his home once stood. His trailer, and the neighboring one that houses his 62-year-old mentally handicapped cousin, are among a handful of inhabited dwellings amid the overgrown weeds, empty lots and rubble of lives past. That's fine, Green said. "It may seem like it's lonely, but sometimes I get tired of the company coming by," he said. "I'm not afraid to be down here. I'm home."

Two years have passed since Aug. 29, 2005, when Katrina devastated the gulf coast, making a mockery of the human engineering designed to keep the city of New Orleans safe. Rebuilding has been slow -- even now, visitors who see the devastated city for the first time say it seems as if nothing has changed.

Interested in Hosting a House Party to Help Restore Louisiana's Coast? The second anniversary of Katrina's devastating landfall is August 29, yet the people of Louisiana are still in hot water. The extensive levee system protecting southern Louisiana is slowly being repaired, but levees are just one aspect of complete storm protection. The Gulf Coast's wetlands and cypress forest are an essential buffer zone between powerful storms and the humans and wildlife which reside along the Gulf Coast. Unfortunately, these natural defenses are disappearing at an alarming rate due to oil and gas activity, logging and even some of the levees which also protect us.

The Next Energy Crisis - More than a quarter of America's oil flows through southern Louisiana. Too bad the land is slowly sinking into the sea.

Without Port Fourchon and its fleet of vessels bringing food, supplies, equipment, and reinforcements to platforms in the gulf, the U.S. would lose access to nearly a fifth of all the oil and gas it uses.....Some 25 square miles of Louisiana have been collapsing into the gulf each year for three-quarters of a century. A total of 1,900 square miles, roughly the area of Delaware, disappeared between the 1930s and 2005, and another 217 square miles were pulverized into liquid by Katrina and Rita. And that land loss poses a growing threat not only to the people who live here but also to the U.S. energy supply.

Show us the money - Billions have been spent to rebuild New Orleans, but not enough is reaching the local economy. Residents wonder where the funds are being spent.

Bank deposits have skyrocketed, indicating that the insured haven't decided whether to reinvest in their community. Just 22 percent of the funds Washington has set aside for rebuilding Louisiana have been spent. For example, the program that compensates uninsured homeowners for their losses took more than a year to establish and only recently has begun distributing checks in significant quantities.....The population of Greater New Orleans is roughly 200,000 below its pre-Katrina level, which has triggered a labor shortage. Private-sector investors, in turn, have scaled back or postponed development plans, furthering a vicious circle of inaction.

Army Corps not planning Category 5 protection for New Orleans area ...be sure to look at the comments beneath the article... wow!

The Army Corps of Engineers has backed away from using a worst-case Category 5 hurricane as the design standard for long-term flood control projects, instead designing projects to protect against a "Katrina-like event" -- a hurricane with a 1-in-400 chance of hitting Louisiana in a given year....The difference, in many ways, involves mere semantics. The corps and most scientists rejected using the numerical categories of the Saffir-Simpson Scale -- which measures only wind speed -- to describe the effects of hurricane storm surge on the New Orleans area because it fails to account for the complicated combination of water depths, wetlands and levee heights. Katrina provides the best example: Though it hit land as a Category 3 storm, its destructive surge and waves -- churned up while the massive storm reached Category 5 strength in the Gulf -- caused far more damage than, for instance, Hurricane Camille, a more compact storm that hit land with Category 5 wind speeds.

Louisiana elected officials react to Bush's threat to veto the WRDA bill - Louisiana congressional delegation members are criticizing President Bush over his threat to veto a massive $21 billion water resources bill that would authorize more than $3 billion in projects throughout the state.

A Bush rejection of the Water Resources Development Act would wipe out $1.8 billion support for coastal restoration and an $886 million storm protection system in Terrebonne and Lafourche parishes. U.S. Sen. David Vitter said Thursday he will help squash any presidential veto. Vitter, who sat on the committee that drafted the bill and the conference committee that negotiated it, said he was stunned by the White House stance. “I will enthusiastically work to override his veto,” Vitter, R-La., said in a statement. A possible override appears to be an option for members of Congress, who have projects in their districts affected. The U.S. House of Representatives passed the WRDA conference bill late Wednesday by a vote of 381-40, well within the two-thirds majority needed to reject a Bush veto.

First Report on Migration Patterns Across South caused by Hurricane Katrina

* Orleans parish had the largest out-migration in total numbers. 222,359 (49%) moved away by 2006 because of the storms.
* Migrants from Orleans parish tended to be dispersed further away with about two-thirds of the out-migrants moving beyond the surveyed parishes or out of state.
* Percentage-wise, St Bernard had an even greater loss with about three-fourths of its pre-Katrina population leaving the parish. About one-third of those displaced out of parish went to St Tammany parish and approximately another third went outside of the survey area or out of state.
* The more rural parishes of Plaquemines and Cameron also had significant losses. However, in these parishes a higher percentage was able to relocate within the same parish and more were able to relocate elsewhere in Louisiana.
* There were a high number of migrations within each parish; an estimated 46,000 Orleans parish residents moved elsewhere in Orleans due to Katrina; Plaquemines and St Bernard both had about 5,000 residents each move within the parish boundaries. Cameron parish had about 2,000 residents move within the parish; compared to 2,600 residents that relocated outside the parish due to the hurricanes.
* Jefferson parish ranked second in overall storm-related out-migrations with about 70,000. Like Orleans, Jefferson parish evacuees were generally dispersed further. In addition, they had significant challenges with 35,000 displacements within parish while picking up approximately 51,000 in-migrants from other devastated parishes such as Orleans, St Bernard and Plaquemines.
* Despite losing an estimated 10,000 residents due to the storms, St Tammany parish actually experienced a population gain with an influx of about 15,000 from the southern impacted parishes. A larger number of these in-migrants came from St Bernard parish than the much larger Orleans parish.
* Simultaneously they had over 15,000 residents move within parish due to the storms and they picked up another 5,000 or so residents not related to the storms.

August 2007 National Geographic article on Hurricane Katrina - (ed's note: Though it provides some interesting background and viewpoints, this is a flawed article that gives the false impression that New Orleans is far below sea level, that Katrina’s surge was not as strong as that of a Category-5 storm, and that Katrina was a “natural” disaster.)

With seas rising, storms getting stronger, and ground subsiding, another disaster like Katrina seems inevitable. Yet some residents would rather run that risk than leave the place they call home.

Torbjörn Törnqvist, a Dutch coastal geologist now at Tulane, is a rare scientist who is bullish about the future, seeing New Orleans' struggles with rising seas and stronger storms as a preview of what other coastal cities will soon face. He envisions a new urban landscape perfectly adapted to climate change, with restored wetlands, high-tech floodgates similar to those in the Netherlands, and a cleaner, greener, denser city. The entire pre-Katrina population, he contends, could live quite comfortably in the parts of the city that did not flood, transforming warehouses and blighted districts into new walkable, sustainable neighborhoods on the high ground. "The situation here is a huge opportunity for the city and the nation," says Törnqvist, who says he can't imagine Holland turning its back on Amsterdam, or Italy giving up on Venice. "If we walk away, we'll miss a fantastic opportunity to learn things that will be useful in Miami, or Boston, or New York in 50 years."

TIME magazine Katrina Anniversary series - The most important thing to remember about the drowning of New Orleans is that it wasn't a natural disaster. It was a man-made disaster, created by lousy engineering, misplaced priorities and pork-barrel politics.

New Orleans wasn't always a city in a bowl. The French founded it in 1718 on high ground along the Mississippi, a "natural levee" of sediment deposited by the river. That's why tourists in the French Quarter stayed dry during Katrina. And that's how all of south Louisiana was built—by the Mississippi River mutinying its banks and rambling around its floodplain like an unruly teenager, dropping mud around its delta and creating roughly 4.5 million acres (1.8 million hectares) of wetlands between New Orleans and the Gulf. So while the French built an earthen levee 1 mile long and 3 ft. high (1.6 km long, 1 m high) to block the river's annual tantrums, they didn't bother trying to block the occasional hurricanes that swept up the Gulf. "They didn't need hurricane levees," says Kerry St. Pe, a marine biologist whose ancestors arrived in 1760. "They had wetlands to protect them." New Orleans wasn't on the coast, and hurricanes wilt over land.

Podcasting New Orleans -Download into iTunes exclusive interviews and footage, hilarious and horrific alike, during Katrina's immediate aftermath from Ride Hamilton.

NPR: New Memoir Tells Stories of Katrina Survival Author Joshua Clark rode out Hurricane Katrina in his home in the French Quarter, and became our eyes and ears in New Orleans. On the night of the storm, he nailed down the shutters, took some sleeping pills, and watched Silence of the Lambs. In the morning, he realized he was one of the few hundred people left in the waste and silence of the Quarter. Clark discusses his memoir, Heart Like Water, and his life the in the aftermath of the storm.

 

 

HURRICANE KATRINA INFORMATION CENTRAL:
Who, What, Where, Why and When

 

Katrina's path from the National Hurricane Center

Step by step graphic of how the flooding happened in each neighborhood of New Orleans and region of the Gulf

Katrina Timeline - A comprehensive hour-by-hour play-by-play of who was doing what when

The Slow Drowning of New Orleans - Comprehensive article from October 2005 about EXACTLY what was done (how little), when and why to protect New Olreans from a hurricane.

Two months before Hurricane Katrina, Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) gave a chilling preview of its rampage. "This isn't a simulation of World War III, or 'The Day After Tomorrow,' or Atlantis -- but one day, it may be Atlantis," Vitter warned at a hearing. Then he displayed a computer model of a Category 4 hurricane smashing New Orleans and flooding the city under 18 feet of water. "It's not a question of if," Vitter said. "It's a question of when." Vitter accused the federal government of neglecting the city's man-made and natural protections -- by underfunding levees that were designed only for a Category 3 storm and stalling a massive plan to restore Louisiana's tattered web of coastal marshes. "Instead of spending millions now, we are going to spend billions later," he said.

The drowning of New Orleans was caused by complex factors of weather, geography, history, politics and engineering, but it was at heart a tragedy of priorities -- not just Vitter's, but America's. For years, it was common knowledge in Louisiana and Washington that New Orleans could be destroyed by a hurricane. But decision makers turned away from the long-term investments that might have averted a catastrophe, pursuing instead projects with more immediate payoffs. Some of those projects made the city more vulnerable. Saving New Orleans from the inevitable storm was a priority. But it was rarely the top priority. "I don't think anybody threatened to hold their breath until they turned blue about it," recalled lobbyist Jan Schoonmaker, an aide to former representative Lindy Boggs (D-La.). The story of how New Orleans ended up underwater begins with its founding nearly 300 years ago, at the liquid crossroads of the Mississippi River and the Gulf of Mexico. But that precarious geography was not destiny. A review of several decades of decisions by officials responsible for defending New Orleans -- especially the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Congress -- shows that the nation's dysfunctional system for selecting, funding and designing water projects helped seal the city's fate.

 

 

LESSONS LEARNED

 

Study busts myth that New Orleans is sunken city - A yearlong topographic and demographic study of New Orleans arrives this month like the latest installment of the television series "MythBusters" -- and may forever change the notion of the Big Easy as a below-sea-level city.

"Contrary to popular perceptions, half of New Orleans is at or above sea level," according to the study by Tulane and Xavier universities' Center for Bioenvironmental Research. Only 49% of New Orleans is below sea level, with the more densely populated areas generally on higher ground. The mean (average) elevation of the city is currently between 1 and 2 feet below sea level, with some portions of the city as high as +16 feet and others as low as -10 feet.

New Orleans is not a city ten feet below sea level - Three weeks ago Utah Senator Bob Bennett, who has yet to visit New Orleans or the any of the Gulf Coast, made the following public statement concerning the rebuilding of the city: "Building a city ten feet below sea level does not strike me as inherently, basically a good idea ... "

THE TRUTH: The majority of the City of New Orleans and its immediate Southshore suburbs are built within a few feet above sea level, at sea level, or below sea level. However, the only areas ten feet below sea level in the New Orleans area--despite what Senator Bennett blindly assumes--are limited to drainage canal embankments, roadway underpasses of bulwarked railroad corridors (I-10, Canal Boulevard, Orleans Avenue, etc.), and retention lakes and ponds (primarily in New Orleans East).

The White house report on what was learned during the Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina - The magnitude of Hurricane Katrina does not excuse our inadequate preparedness and response, but rather it must serve as a catalyst for far-reaching reform and transformation. To do this, we must understand Hurricane Katrina in its proper context.

Hurricane Katrina was the most destructive natural disaster in U.S. history. The overall destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina, which was both a large and powerful hurricane as well as a catastrophic flood, vastly exceeded that of any other major disaster, such as the Chicago Fire of 1871, the San Francisco Earthquake and Fire of 1906, and Hurricane Andrew in 1992.

Katrina was anything but a “normal” hurricane. First, Katrina was larger than most. Hurricane Camille, a Category 5 storm that devastated the Gulf Coast in 1969, had top wind speeds that exceeded those of Katrina upon landfall, but Camille’s hurricane force winds only extended seventy-five miles from its center, whereas Katrina’s extended 103 miles from its center. As a result, Hurricane Katrina’s storm surge affected a larger area than did Hurricane Camille’s. In all, Hurricane Katrina impacted nearly 93,000 square miles across 138 parishes and counties. The extreme intensity that Hurricane Katrina reached before landfall on the Gulf Coast, as well as its size, meant that its storm surge was consistent with a more powerful storm. In fact, the National Hurricane Center concluded that the height of Hurricane Katrina and Camille’s respective storm surges were comparable to each other. Hurricane Katrina’s winds and a storm surge that crested up to twenty-seven feet high dealt a ferocious blow to homes, businesses, and property on the coast and for many miles inland. This storm surge overwhelmed levees all along the lowest reaches of the Mississippi River and the edges of Lake Pontchartrain. The consequences for New Orleans were dire. Significant levee failures occurred on the 17th Street Canal, the Industrial Canal, and the London Avenue Canal. Approximately 80 percent of the city was flooded.

2005 hurricanes will cost federal government billions in years to come - The federal government has already given $116 billion to the states affected by the 2005 hurricanes and it will have to continue spending money for years to pay for Gulf Coast states' recovery from hurricanes Katrina and Rita, experts testified at a House Budget Committee hearing Thursday.

Learn how the country could prevent making the same mistake again by paying the relatively small sum to rebuild the Louisiana coast....

 

 

WETLANDS
The reason Katrina was not a natural disaster for Louisiana

 

In 75 years the United States has undone 2500 years of land-building by the Mississippi River. Many experts agree we have a decade to restore the coast before it is too late. Learn why Louisiana is the fastest disappearing landmass on the face of the Earth, and how stopping wetlands erosions is the key to New Orleans' survival...

Graphics of wetland loss

The fight to save a disappearing coast - Experts agree we have 10 years to act before the problem is too big to solve.

The basics on Wetlands from the EPA - What are Wetlands? Why Protect Wetlands? How are Wetlands Protected? What You Can Do to Protect our Vital Resource.

Generally, wetlands are lands where saturation with water is the dominant factor determining the nature of soil development and the types of plant and animal communities living in the soil and on its surface (Cowardin, December 1979). Wetlands vary widely because of regional and local differences in soils, topography, climate, hydrology, water chemistry, vegetation, and other factors, including human disturbance. Indeed, wetlands are found from the tundra to the tropics and on every continent except Antarctica. For regulatory purposes under the Clean Water Act, the term wetlands means "those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs and similar areas."

Good interview with two experts on the fundamentals and necessity of wetlands - There are a number of engineering plans on the drawing board that aim to give New Orleans and the Gulf Coast the level of protection they need to fend off hurricanes. This interview examines the feasibility, practicality, and cost to implement some of the major proposals.

"What we know is that a wetland reduces the storm surge because of the frictional effects as the surge moves through it. This is especially true when the surge is going through a Cyprus swamp because now you have trees that are at least 60 feet high, very well rooted, very well packed. So you imagine trying to push water through that forest, it slows down dramatically."

Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana - Citizens working to save America's Wetland.

America's Wetland - Great non-profit resource for all things Wetland.

Integrated Ecosystem Restoration and Hurricane Protection: Louisiana's Comprehensive Master Plan for a Sustainable Coast - The Louisiana Legislature approved this master plan for coastal restoration and hurricane protection on May 30, 2007. The plan is the first document to completely incorporate hurricane protection projects with projects aimed at rebuilding Louisiana's rapidly eroding coastal wetlands. It reflects more than 18 months of research, stakeholder and scientific review and writing. It will be the guide for all coastal restoration and hurricane protection efforts in Louisiana over the next several decades.

Barataria Terrebonne National Estuary Program 2007 Calendar of Volunteer Events -Time to get your hands dirty! Come out and make a difference.

Gulf Restoration Network - United for a Healthy Gulf.

Oyster harvesters sue over the Caernarvon Diversion - The complications: When it comes to wetlands restoration, there are ecological, conservation, policy, and legal issues intertwined with each other. The unfortunate reality is that some face short term losses for Louisiana's long-term gain. For example, river diversions are one way to bring new sediment into eroded wetland areas. The bayou communities in particular need these to survive, and yet it's a hard sell when a river diversion runs though their land or their oyster beds.

Coastal Planning, Protection and Restoration Act (CWPPRA) 17th Priority Project List (PPL) Public Meetings (August)

 

 

RESOURCES

 

Levees.org - Information about levees and flood protection in New Orleans and nationwide.

LouisianaRebuilds.info - Information to help rebuild.

Hurricane Katrina Recovery Resources from the American Lung Association - Information on Asbestos, Biological Pollutants, Carbon Monoxide, various lung diseases (asthma, COPD, tuberculosis), Lead, Lung Health Risks from the Hurricane Katrina Emergencies (water-borne, emergency power risks), Pesticides, and treatment options

Army Corps of Engineers DECISION-MAKING CHRONOLOGY FOR THE LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN & VICINITY HURRICANE PROTECTION PROJECT - The specifics, if you want to wade through them.

 

GOVERNMENT RESOURCES

Louisiana Recovery Authority

The Road Home Program

Disaster Recovery Unit - The Disaster Recovery Unit is a new section within the Division of Administration's Office of Community Development created by the Commissioner of Administration to administer the CDBG Disaster Recovery funds allocated to Louisiana after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. On December 23, 2005, Congress approved a $29 billion package of Gulf Coast hurricane relief before adjourning for the year. That aid package included $6.2 billion of CDBG funds for Louisiana. On June 15th, 2006, Congress approved an additional $4.2 billion for housing in Louisiana, fully funding The Road Home program. The Disaster Recovery Unit and the Louisiana Recovery Authority are tasked with developing programs through which to administer these funds.

Louisiana Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness

Parish Homeland Security & Emergency Preparedness Contact Numbers

Louisiana Emergency Communications Systems

Special Needs

FEMA

Contact New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin

Contact Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco


Emergency phone numbers:

Louisiana State Emergency Number: 1-800-469-4828

Department of Health and Hospital Triage Phone Numbers:

Alexandria: 800-841-5778

Baton Rouge: 225-2190821

Houma/Thibodaux: 800-228-9409

Lafayette: 800-901-3210

Lake Charles: 866-280-2711

New Orleans: 504-658-2500

Monroe: 866-280-7287

Shreveport: 800-841-5776

Slidell/Hammond: 866-280-7724

 

 

TO HELP
Hurricane Katrina Charities

 

Coalition to Restore Coastal Louisiana

New Orleans Literary Institute KARES- Working with Light of New Orleans Publishing, the Institute is raising funds to support the rebirth of New Orleans' rich literary community.

MuttShack - Volunteers from across the United States rescued 3,000 pets in New Orleans in the first eight months after Hurricane Katrina. Even two years after Hurricane Katrina, they are still rescuing, caring for, and checking up on animals left behind. Now MuttShack has been assigned the vital task job of pet rescue for all of Louisiana's and New Orleans' natural disasters. However, they must still fund most of it themselves. Please donate to MuttShack and support animal rescue. (Watch the video here. Directed by Ride Hamilton.)

American Red Cross -- 800-435-7669 / 800-HELP-NOW / 800-257-7575 (Spanish) / hotline 800-GET-INFO / RedCross.org

Bush-Clinton Katrina Fund

Habitat for Humanity -- (866) 720-2800

Salvation Army -- (800) SAL-ARMY

The United Way -- (800) 272-4630

 

 

THE LIGHTER SIDE

 

The New Orleans Levee

Nola Fugees

 

 

WORDS

 

President Bush's September 15, 2005 speech from Jackson Square

Mayor Nagin's September 2, 2005 interview with Garland Robinette

 

Hurricane Katrina in the Gulf of Mexico

Credit: GOES 12 Satellite, NASA, NOAA

The original caption, taken from NASA's "Astronomy Picture of the Day" for August 29, 2005 read:
Where will Hurricane Katrina go? One of the stronger storm systems of modern times appears headed for landfall somewhere in the southern USA sometime today. Katrina was designated yesterday a rare Category 5 Hurricane, the strongest designation for a storm on Earth, and one that indicates sustained winds greater than 250 kilometers per hour. Pictured above is a digitally processed image from the orbiting GOES-12 weather satellite that shows the massive storm system yesterday in the Gulf of Mexico. Starting as a slight pressure difference, hurricanes grow into large spiraling storm systems of low pressure, complete with high winds and driving rain. A hurricane is powered by evaporating ocean water, and so typically gains strength over warm water and loses strength over land. Much remains unknown about hurricanes and cyclones, including how they are formed and the exact path they will take.