#150 Postby Steve » Mon Jan 23, 2006 11:52 am
>>For the record, I have friends who live in NOLA, Slidell, Pearl River, and all along the MS Gulf Coast. I've been in NOLA quite a bit since the storm hit--largely because the nightlife has been resurrected there and all there was on the MS coast has been wiped out. I know how bad it is there and how some parts have come back to life. And I will still maintain that the physical damage is far worse in Mississippi.
Not a chance. Maybe in the first look when you drive south of the railroad tracks and see the flatness and slabs. But then as you get above the tracks and see where the water washed through homes and businesses leaving many in tact (with possible structural faults), you start thinking of Lower St. Bernard and Lower Plaquemines Parish - which btw, were both wiped out. But when you get to New Orleans, or in my case parts of Metairie, and you realize that even though many homes are standing, they exist rotting in fully abandoned neighborhoods (zip codes even), then it just can't possibly compare. There are well over 200k damaged homes here with potentially 100k of them literally useless. My dad's house took 9' of water. We're almost finished gutting it. Yeah, the house is still standing but everything inside was completely ruined (unsure about the studs and such). Or you can get to my house which appears fine and dandy on the outside. But with 22" of water that sat for 2 weeks, that's all it took to rot everything inside of it and create mold stalagmites (!). So the question becomes one of numbers of structures and displacements and dollars of damage. No way MS or AL combined can compare. That was lost on Alabama Governor Riley, while in congressional testimony, attempted to compare Katrina with Ivan as if the two were even kin (although perhaps they were in Alabama with one side of the bay being hit in Ivan and the other in Katrina). Additionally, I spent 9/15-11/15 living on Dauphin Island. And I'll admit, it was in shreds and tatters. I drove Highway 90 a couple of times and was privy to damage in Long Beach and Pass Christian due to certain security clearances. But at that level, combining south Mobile County, Downtown Mobile near the River, and all of Jackson, Harrison and Hancock Counties along with wind damage further up, you might come to a few square miles of New Orleans. And once you realize 90% of everything north of the Interstate when you first hit civilization (Paris Road/510/Chalmette exit perhaps) all the way to the Orleans/Jefferson Parish line is uninhabitable, we're talking tens of thousands upon tens of thousands of houses. And then their is the other, human side of things, most of us share. In my case, my kids moved to SW NY State. I got to see them for Christmas and New Years. My two sisters are living together with all their kids. My dad lost everything and is living in Lafourche Parish with my nephew. My 2 brothers and their kids rent and got lucky. So outside of me, most of my family is relatively close by. But that's not the case with everyone around here. Many families have split up out of necessity or are living with friends and relatives on the outskirts or north of town. I think we technically still have something like 350,000 displaced residents, but with some FEMA trailers having been delivered, some people are back camping on their front lawns (like me).
Anyway, West End of New Orleans looks pretty much like coastal Hancock and Harrison Counties. All those old seafood restaurants have been reduced to slabs. We've got a lot more in common with one another with the exception of floodwaters with staying power. Ultimately, it's all of our problems in LA/MS and AL. I think some of the outskirts got short-changed in early coverage, but ultimately, the dollars of damage here will dwarf anything else. Whether many people return or businesses reopen and what neighborhoods will be condemned will determine how Louisiana gets out of this. My guess is that we alone will end up quadrupling the damage courtesy of Hurricane Andrew in Miami circa 1992, and including MS and Alabama, probably quintupling (rough estimates btw).
Hope everything is going good for you otherwise.
Steve
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