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Gustav joined Ivan as another New Orleans near miss that extracted a
vicious toll on the people of New Orleans and the neighboring
communities.
By Saturday August 30, 2008 evacuation of the city
was underway again. Dangerous Hurricane Gustav had New Orleans clearly
in his sights. The storm formed in the Caribbean, doused Haiti,
pummeled Jamaica and the Caymans then crossed western Cuba, aimed
directly for New Orleans. As it neared, the storm veered slightly west.
Wind shear in the upper atmosphere prevented strengthening over the
Loop Current. Cooler waters near the shore took their toll. The
weakened storm came ashore at Cocodrie, just southwest of Houma, and
sixty miles west of New Orleans. This thin margin reduced what looked
like a monumental tragedy for New Orleans to a memorable inconvenience.
This city which hasn't recovered from 2005 will live to remember Labor
Day 2008.
Even as the threat developed and waned the TV could
cover nothing else. Every storm that threatens the city from now on
will undoubtely be called "the one" by some pundit or another. The
Mayor called this one the "Mother of All Storms." Public officials and
other public figures who feel it is their responsibility to protect the
populace, have settled on the notion that they are within their
capacities to incite fear and even impose hardship on those they seek
to protect.
Gridlock emerged early. Contraflow started at 4am on
Saturday and was judged a stunning success even before the city was
empty. The reality on the roads was harsher. Thirty and forty mile long
traffic jams inched forward on I59 averaging under ten miles per hour.
Plans changed unpredictably as coordination among the states involved
in the evacuation was not up to the task.
Traffic headed east
from New Orleans was initially expected to use all four lanes of I10 to
exit the city. Both sides of the twin spans were used to get folks out
of town before Katrina, but someone changed the plans. Mississippi
requested that Louisiana block I10 east at Slidell. This meant the
contraflow plan which had two lanes of I 10 going east and four lanes
north was restricted to go north alone. Traffic headed WEST from
Mississippi joined the flow to the north. Traffic backed up across the
high rise, past the 610 merge and all the way back to the Superdome.
Getting out of the city to the east took a minimum of four hours if you
started at 4 am on Saturday.
Once you crossed the twin spans you
found yourself heading east on I 10, but not for long. Police closed I
10 east at Slidell and diverted all traffic north on I59. I 10 was not
closed, just that access point. If you could gain access to I 10 east
(as you could from I 12 or US 90) you'd find smooth sailing all the way
to Pascagoula.
Then the Mississippi State police closed exits on
Interstate 59 forcing evacuees forward on that road even when they
needed to stop for health and safety. Approximately 20 miles into
Mississippi, contraflow ended as abruptly as it began. Four lanes
merged into to two. The predictable backup trapped motorists all the
way back to Slidell. Inexplicably traffic from US highway 11 was routed
onto I59 at McNeill increasing the mess. What should have been a 40
minute drive took four or more hours to navigate. Cars stopped on the
side of the road borken down and out of fuel. Accidents emerged as
miles of stop and go traffic took its toll a few were serious and
caused more congestion. Drivers and passengers took to the woods to
find comfort. The elderly and infirm suffered. Frustration, anger and
fear shared the day with patience and compassion.
Then just
before mile marker 25 there was a change. Four lanes merged abruptly
into to two under the watchful eye of Mississippi State Troopers.
Traffic thinned and accelerated to 70 miles per hour. The first exit
created a quarter mile jam up on the highway as motorists attempted to
exit for fuel and relief. The second exit had crowds of the slightly
more patient. Traffic flowed smoothly into Hattiesburg and beyond. But
the nightmare was not over.
Further north, at the point where
I59 merged into I20 at Meridian there was another monumental choke
point. Traffic going north on 59 had to shrink from two lanes into one
for about 100 yards before it merged with traffic headed east on I20.
Traffic backed up on 59 for thirty miles to the south. State police
could have rearranged the traffic cones and prevented this mess, but
that much foresight was not in the cards on this day.
Gustav
missed New Orleans the next day by a slim margin. The mayor reopened
the city two days later on the 4th. By midday on the 6th, the National
Weather service began to predict the New Orleans was within the cone of
probabilities for landfall by Hurricane Ike.
What did we learn
from Gustav? People are willing to evacuate. Public officials should
not exaggerate threats. Traffic must be managed across state lines.
Ships and barges should not be allowed to get loose during a storm.
Electrical power systems are vital and vulnerable. Reentry should not
be denied even if risks and hardships could ensue.
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A week later Hurricane Ike threatened New Orleans. Storm weary residents contemplated another evacuation. Many planned to make it their last, vowing never to return. Others made plans to stay no matter what!
As Ike tracked west, New Orleans breathed a sigh of relief. We all watched in horror as Galveston took a direct hit. Less damaging than it could have been the surge and wave action caused massive flooding bringing back memories of the 1900 storm that took 8,000 lives. Houston and the surrounding communities suffered one of the greatest power outages in American history. Gasoline prices spiked nationwide on concerns that refineries had been affected.
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