Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

I wouldn't blame the mayor on the bus situation, he simply didn't have the resources to evacuate 100,000 people, where are you going to take them? What needs to be uncovered is why was there such a poor FEMA response. Did the focus on terror dry up its funds? When the terror level rises massive preparations are made why weren't proper preparations made days before this massive Hurricane made landfall? A Congressional investigation on the breakdown and lack of response will hopfully find the answers.

And Bush needs to answer why he decided to stay on vacation and in Texas when he found out that a massive Hurricane was coming? That's really mind boggling.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

No UTD, he chose not to evacuate them, and there never was even a plan created on how to evacuate. See the following photo. He had plenty of resources:

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/050901/480/flpc21109012015

Once a disaster is declared he is eligible for full reimbursement of his costs. The development of a disaster plan is a local responsibility, and that is not a terribley expensive proposition to create a plan.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Somebody did try, here is an excerpt from a Slate article:

Blizter is such a douche bag. He only growls when interviewing Palestianians.

Newscasters, sick of official lies and stonewalling, finally start snarling.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Please take note, the paln all the way along was local and state efforts for the first 3 to 5 days before Federal help arrives:

Hurricane Pam Exercise Concludes

Release Date: July 23, 2004
Release number: R6-04-093

BATON ROUGE, La. – Hurricane Pam brought sustained winds of 120 mph, up to 20 inches of rain in parts of southeast Louisiana and storm surge that topped levees in the New Orleans area. More than one million residents evacuated and Hurricane Pam destroyed 500,000-600,000 buildings. Emergency officials from 50 parish, state, federal and volunteer organizations faced this scenario during a five-day exercise held this week at the State Emergency Operations Center in Baton Rouge.

The exercise used realistic weather and damage information developed by the National Weather Service, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the LSU Hurricane Center and other state and federal agencies to help officials develop joint response plans for a catastrophic hurricane in Louisiana.

“We made great progress this week in our preparedness efforts,” said Ron Castleman, FEMA Regional Director. “Disaster response teams developed action plans in critical areas such as search and rescue, medical care, sheltering, temporary housing, school restoration and debris management. These plans are essential for quick response to a hurricane but will also help in other emergencies.”

“Hurricane planning in Louisiana will continue,” said Colonel Michael L. Brown, Deputy Director for Emergency Preparedness, Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness. “Over the next 60 days, we will polish the action plans developed during the Hurricane Pam exercise. We have also determined where to focus our efforts in the future.”

A partial summary of action plans follows:

Debris

The debris team estimates that a storm like Hurricane Pam would result in 30 million cubic yards of debris and 237,000 cubic yards of household hazardous waste
The team identified existing landfills that have available storage space and locations of hazardous waste disposal sites. The debris plan also outlines priorities for debris removal.
Sheltering

The interagency shelter group identified the need for about 1,000 shelters for a catastrophic disaster. The shelter team identified 784 shelters and has developed plans for locating the remaining shelters.
In a storm like Hurricane Pam, shelters will likely remain open for 100 days. The group identified the resources necessary to support 1000 shelters for 100 days. They planned for staff augmentation and how to include shelterees in shelter management.
State resources are adequate to operate shelters for the first 3-5 days. The group planned how federal and other resources will replenish supplies at shelters.
Search and Rescue

The search and rescue group developed a transportation plan for getting stranded residents out of harm’s way.
Planners identified lead and support agencies for search and rescue and established a command structure that will include four areas with up to 800 searchers.
Medical

The medical care group reviewed and enhanced existing plans. The group determined how to implement existing immunization plans rapidly for tetanus, influenza and other diseases likely to be present after a major hurricane.
The group determined how to re-supply hospitals around the state that would face heavy patient loads.
The medical action plan includes patient movement details and identifies probable locations, such as state university campuses, where individuals would receive care and then be transported to hospitals, special needs shelters or regular shelters as necessary.
Schools

The school group determined that 13,000-15,000 teachers and administrators would be needed to support affected schools. The group acknowledged the role of local school boards and developed strategies for use by local school officials.
Staffing strategies include the use of displaced teachers, retired teachers, emergency certified teachers and others eligible for emergency certification. Displaced paraprofessionals would also be recruited to fill essential school positions.
The group discussed facility options for increasing student population at undamaged schools and prioritizing repairs to buildings with less damage to assist in normalizing operations
The school plan also calls for placement or development of temporary schools near temporary housing communities built for hurricane victims.
The Hurricane Pam scenario focused on 13 parishes in southeast Louisiana-Ascension, Assumption, Jefferson, Lafourche, Orleans, Plaquemines, St. Bernard, St. Charles, St. James, St. John, St. Tammany Tangipahoa, Terrebonne. Representatives from outside the primary parishes participated since hurricane evacuation and sheltering involve communities throughout the state and into Arkansas, Mississippi and Texas.

http://www.fema.gov/news/newsrelease.fema?id=13051

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Who was going to drive those buses, myvoice? Where were they going to go? This goes way beyond the mayor.

Why did FEMA fail, they were designated to lead the response to Katrina two days before the storm hit shore. We know that members of FEMA warned a year ago that they would not be prepared for a major disaster due to changes being made by the Bush administration, I don’t think you can ignore that

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Too little too late.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

This is a summary of the action plan from the Hurricane Pam exercise:

LSU Researchers Assist State Agencies with Hurricane Response Plans

It is possibly the most exciting season of the year in South Louisiana. No, not LSU football season. Hurricane season, that June-through-November observance of satellite images of the tropics; of panicked citizens racing to grocery stores at the 11th hour to find shelves emptied of bread, bottled water, and flashlight batteries; of TV reporters dodging airborne trash cans in 100 miles per hour winds, yelling, “It stings!” as flying sand hits their wet, squinting faces.

Yes, it’s that time again. Are you ready?

Thanks to LSU’s hurricane experts, South Louisiana’s emergency officials are better prepared than ever to respond to the all-too-familiar threat of severe tropical weather.

This is Only a Test

Last summer, staff from the LSU Hurricane Center participated in the “Hurricane Pam Exercise,” a 10-day event designed to help emergency officials develop a response plan should a major hurricane threaten the greater New Orleans area.

Realistic weather and damage data generated by the National Weather Service, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the LSU Hurricane Center showed, with winds of 120 mph, the fictional Hurricane Pam would be a Category Three storm that would pour 20 inches of rain on parts of southeast Louisiana. In addition, more than one million residents would be forced to evacuate and nearly 600,000 buildings would be destroyed.

LSU Hurricane Center staff worked with the** Louisiana Office of Emergency Preparedness**, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), and emergency officials from several parish, state, and federal agencies to help disaster response teams plan for search and rescue missions, medical care, sheltering, temporary housing, school restoration, and debris management.

“The exercise had enormous educational value to state and federal emergency managers,” said Ivor van Heerden, director of LSU’s Center for the Study of Public Health Impacts of Hurricanes.” It showed the scope of potential problems they will face and made them far more aware of the help they will need.”

Aftermath
From the simulation, officials estimate that a storm like Hurricane Pam would:

**cause flooding that would leave 300,000 people trapped in New Orleans, many of whom would not have private transportation for evacuation; **
send evacuees to 1,000 shelters, which would likely remain open for 100 days;
require the transfer of patients from hospitals in harm’s way to hospitals in other parts of the state;
trigger outbreaks of tetanus, influenza, and other diseases likely to be present after a storm;
create 30 million cubic yards of debris and 237,000 cubic yards of household hazardous waste.
As a result of the Hurricane Pam Exercise, agencies are in the process of applying what they learned to their emergency response plans. Those changes include:

assisting people without transportation – the American Red Cross is developing a program that would ask private citizens to collect people at area churches and transport them.
identifying more than 700 shelters and planning the locations for the remaining sites.
outlining patient movement details and determining how to set in motion existing immunization plans.
establishing a command structure that would employ up to 800 searchers.
identifying existing landfills capable of accepting hazardous waste and outlining debris removal plans.
One important result of the exercise was the understanding among agencies at all levels of the seriousness of such an event. “A White House staffer was briefed on the exercise,” said van Heerden. “There is now a far greater awareness in the federal government about the consequences of storm surges.”
http://www.lsu.edu/highlights/052/pam.html

Basicly the plan collapsed, but all of the problems were anticipated. It appears as if the plan was not taken seriously, and nobody pulled the book off the shelf. They all just assume FEMA would charge to the rescue.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

This is from the Louisiana Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness Center on the Hurricane Pam simulation. Please note that only one guy fromt he city of NO attended the Hurricane simulation, and his conclusion was that the only thing that will help is advance evacuation. Nobody was listening to this guy. Not as if this was not pretty obvious.

July 20, 2004

Courtesy of the The Times-Picayune
BATON ROUGE – It’s a recipe for appalling destruction, and it could happen here:
A hurricane packing winds of 120 mph and a storm surge that tops 17-foot levees slams into New Orleans, killing an untold number of people and trapping half the area’s residents in attics, on rooftops and in makeshift refuges in a variety of public and office buildings.

Parts of the city are flooded with up to 20 feet of water, and 80 percent of the buildings in the area are severely damaged from water and winds.

On Monday, at the outset of an eight-day tabletop exercise, more than 250 emergency preparedness officials from more than 50 federal, state and local agencies and volunteer organizations began using that catastrophic scenario – dubbed Hurricane Pam – to develop a recovery plan for the 13 parishes in the New Orleans area.

The plan will provide a “bridge” between local and state short-term evacuation and emergency response plans, and a longer-term federal disaster response plan, said Ron Castleman, Federal Emergency Management Agency regional director.

Officials are focusing on six major issues they expect to face in the aftermath of a catastrophic storm like Pam:

– Developing an effective search-and-rescue plan to find survivors and move them to safety.

– Identifying short-term shelters for those who evacuated, or those rescued in the storm’s aftermath.

– Creating housing options, including trailer or tent villages, for the thousands likely to be left homeless for months after the storm.

– Removing floodwater from New Orleans, Metairie and other bowl-like areas where levees will capture and hold storm surge, possibly for days or weeks.

– Disposing of the thousands of tons of debris left behind by the storm, which will include the remains of homes and businesses; human and animal corpses, including bodies washed out of cemeteries; and a mix of toxic chemicals likely to escape from businesses, industries, trucks and rail cars in the flooded areas.

– Recreating school systems for public and private school students.

The ultimate dread

The Hurricane Pam scenario is the nightmare local emergency preparedness officials dread: a hurricane that slows as it reaches the Louisiana coast, battering much of the area with hurricane-force winds for as much as 38 hours. Historically, such an intense hurricane, a Category 3 like Pam or stronger, hits somewhere in Louisiana every eight years.

In advance of such a storm, officials expect public pleas for evacuation to be only half successful.

In New Orleans, when evacuees from other areas who seek shelter in the city are accounted for, only a third of the population will leave before the storm hits, according to the Pam scenario. That’s partly a recognition of the city’s poor population: As many as 100,000 live in households in which no one owns a car, officials say.

FEMA spokesman David Passey hesitated before answering a question about how many people could die in such a storm.

“We would see casualties not seen in the United States in the last century,” he said.

Two years ago, officials with the American Red Cross estimated that the death toll from a catastrophic hurricane in the New Orleans area could be between 25,000 and 100,000, which would be more than any hurricane in the U.S. has caused.

Walt Zileski, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service’s Southern Region headquarters in Fort Worth, Texas, said Hurricane Pam was fashioned after Hurricane Georges, which in 1998 turned east only hours before it would have followed the path chosen for Pam.

Funneled floodwaters

Flooding caused by storm surge would cover an area stretching from lower Plaquemines Parish to the middle of St. Tammany Parish, Ponchatoula in Livingston Parish, and parts of Ascension Parish.

The water would be high enough in parts of New Orleans to top 17-foot levees, including some along Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet, Zileski said. Some of the water pushed into Lake Pontchartrain would flow through a gap in the hurricane levee in St. Charles Parish, flow across land to the Mississippi River levee and be funneled south into Jefferson and Orleans parishes.

Sean Fontenot, chief of preparedness for the state Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said as much as 87 percent of the area’s housing would be destroyed. That would be the result of a one-two combination of floodwaters and 120-mph winds, said Marc Levitan, director of the Louisiana State University Hurricane Center.

“And there would be hurricane-force winds over a very large area, all the way up to Baton Rouge and even farther north,” Levitan said.

Complicating recovery would be the long-lasting effects of the storm, said Col. Michael Brown, deputy director of the state emergency preparedness department.

“This particular scenario shows that Plaquemines Parish will be out from under the effects of the storm much earlier than people in Alexandria or New Orleans, but our ability to respond will be reduced because you can’t drive through the effects of the storm to get there,” Brown said. “So people are going to have to prepare to sustain themselves for two or three days before help arrives.”

Floating caskets

In a room set aside for those working on a plan to return youngsters to school as soon as possible, officials debated where the schools might be located and who should run them.

Terry Tullier, director of the city’s Office of Emergency Preparedness and the only city official in attendance Monday, moved among groups at the state emergency preparedness office, State Police headquarters building and training academy buildings, addressing various issues. He said his staff at the city’s emergency center was also answering questions from the groups by telephone.

“What’s critically important about this is that so many different agencies, and all three levels of government are here, all singing from the same sheet of music, so that when we do come out with a working document, everybody will have bought into it,” Tullier said.

One stop was in the room dedicated to debris cleanup.

“We have a very old housing stock in New Orleans, what most consider as historic,” Tullier said. "But how many will stand up to the forces of the storm is anybody’s guess.

“The other concern is that we’ve been fighting this Formosan termite battle,” he said. "How many infested oak trees are going to be standing in the city after 120-mph winds?

“And the other question is, how many caskets and carcasses are going to be floating through the streets?” Tullier said. “Those are all aspects of debris removal. What are we going to do with all that stuff?”

An equally thorny question is where to put people as they wait for what could be months before it’s safe to begin rebuilding.

Evacuation stressed

Brown said his staff has tried to identify potential sites for tent or trailer towns in areas as close as possible to the city, but keeping everyone satisfied is going to be a problem.

“It’s going to be situation-dependent on the ground available after such a catastrophic storm,” he said. “The bottom line is that a lot of people are going to be inconvenienced.”

**For Tullier, going through the recovery exercise reinforces his belief that New Orleans residents must evacuate before such a storm. **

**“I’m always asked what’s my worst nightmare, and I talk about the generations of New Orleanians who have no historical reference in their brain about how bad this will be,” Tullier said. "And when I preach the gospel of evacuation, they won’t take it seriously. **

**“Evacuation, that’s such a tough decision for our officials to make, so once they make that decision, to have people say, ‘Ah, I ain’t going to go,’ that scares me,” he said. **
http://www.ohsep.louisiana.gov/newsrelated/incaseofemrgencyexercise.htm

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

^
Makes you really question the wisdom of canceling federal funded pre-disaster programs doesn't it?

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Actaully Louisiana has a complete list of disaster plans, shelter plans and evacuation plans at its own Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness. FEMA sponsored and funded the Hurricane Pam ten day Exercise in 2004.

Here is a list of all the disaster plans, complete with a detaile dlist of responsibilities, including sample emergency delaration forms, and marital law orders.

http://www.ohsep.louisiana.gov/plans/plansindex.htm

Focusing only on FEMA is an error, and shows little understanding of multi tier governments.

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Department of Homeland Security Website

Preparing America

In the event of a terrorist attack, natural disaster or other large-scale emergency, the Department of Homeland Security will assume primary responsibility on March 1st for ensuring that emergency response professionals are prepared for any situation. This will entail providing a coordinated, comprehensive federal response to any large-scale crisis and mounting a swift and effective recovery effort. The new Department will also prioritize the important issue of citizen preparedness. Educating America’s families on how best to prepare their homes for a disaster and tips for citizens on how to respond in a crisis will be given special attention at DHS.

http://www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/theme_home2.jsp

Re: Bush administration forced cuts in flood protection in N.O. ($ went to Iraq)

Can anyone provide probabilities with timelines, with a basis, for these major US risks:

Volcano eruption
Major earthquake
Dirty bomb attack
Another New Orleans

may be then we can cancel all other foreign policy actions and try to fully mitigate these