HURRICANE GUSTAV HEADING TO Louisiana

DAHITMAN

Rising Star
Gulf Coast Prepares to Evacuate Ahead of Hurricane Gustav

Gulf Coast Prepares to Evacuate Ahead of Hurricane Gustav
BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, August 28, 2008 (ENS) - Nearly three years to the day after Hurricane Katrina forced the evacuation of thousands of people from New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, residents and emergency managers in Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas are preparing again to cope with another major storm heading across the Caribbean in their direction.

Late this afternoon local time, the center of Tropical Storm Gustav was located about 15 miles west of Kingston, Jamaica, moving west at about seven miles per hour. The storm made landfall on the eastern tip of Jamaica earlier today and Kingston was swept by winds of 50 mph with higher gusts.

The center of Gustav is expected to cross Jamaica tonight and turn to the west-northwest, moving near or over the Cayman Islands on Friday. Gustav is forecast to rapidly strengthen in the northwestern Caribbean Sea on Friday and Saturday before entering the Gulf of Mexico as a major hurricane.

National Hurricane Center forecasters say Gustav is expected to produce total rainfall accumulations of six to 12 inches over Hispaniola, eastern Cuba, Jamaica and the Cayman Islands. Isolated maximum rainfalls of up to 25 inches are possible with life-threatening flash floods and mud slides, warned the NHC. Coastal storm surge flooding of one to three feet above normal tide levels with large and dangerous battering waves can be expected in areas of onshore winds.

Gustav is forecast to increase in size once it reaches the Gulf of Mexico, and these expanding wind fields will produce sea swells that will hit Florida’s Gulf of Mexico beaches by early Sunday. Onshore winds along Florida’s Atlantic beaches are forecast to strengthen this weekend, which will create a moderate to high risk for rip currents.

The National Weather Service predicts that Gustav will strike the Florida Panhandle and the eastern coastal parishes of Louisiana at hurricane force.

Federal and state agencies are better prepared to handle the effects of a hurricane today than they were when Katrina struck on August 29, 2005.

In Baton Rouge, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal issued a state disaster proclamation on Wednesday, and today he requested a pre-landfall disaster declaration from President George W. Bush.

In his letter to the president, Governor Jindal wrote, "I have determined that this incident is of such severity and magnitude that effective response is beyond the capabilities of the state and affected local governments, and that supplementary federal assistance is necessary to save lives and to protect property, public health and safety."

The Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness has activated its Emergency Operations Center, and FEMA has brought its National Response Coordination Center and its Regional Response Coordination Centers to heightened states of readiness.

Evacuations will begin 72 hours before to the arrival of tropical storm force winds, FEMA officials and the governor said.

The federal Department of Transportation, through the Federal Aviation Administration and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, is working with states, airports, airlines and bus companies to insure any needed evacuations are executed without delay.

The Louisiana National Guard has activated 3,000 troops to perform missions, including the transportation, security, assistance with contra-flow traffic and search and rescue.

The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development activated their contract today for 700 buses, which began to arrive this morning in preparation for the evacuation.

While Governor Jindal is still serving his first year in office, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin is a veteran of the disastrous 2005 hurricane season that brought Katrina on August 29 and Rita a month later. The city is still mired in a slow recovery process.

Nagin, who was a key speaker this morning for the Oregon, Washington and Minnesota delegations at the Democratic National Convention in Denver, is returning to New Orleans immediately to monitor Gustav.

"While it is too early to tell exactly where Gustav will hit and how strong it will be, I'm deeply concerned about the emotional and psychological effect on our citizens," said Nagin.

New Orleans has made preparations to execute its city evacuation plan, which includes an additional 130 buses.

The Louisiana Department of Corrections will begin relocating prisoners from at risk areas on Friday. The state Department of Agriculture and Forestry is prepared to activate pet shelters and has made arrangements for pet evacuation by truck from New Orleans.

The Department of Homeland Security is advising all Gulf Coast residents to have a three-day supply of water for each person in the family, including pets, along with non-perishable food, a battery-powered radio, extra batteries and a flashlight, needed medications and important documents like property insurance.

"Regardless of its predicted path, it is important for citizens in the Gulf Coast region to listen to what their local officials are advising over the course of the next few days and to take these simple steps to prepare," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. "If residents make individual and family preparations, they make it easier for first responders to focus on people who can’t help themselves and need help first."
FEMA Administrator David Paulison is managing the federal response to Gustav from New Orleans. (Photo by Jacinta Quesada courtesy FEMA)

FEMA's pre-positioned supplies available for distribution in Gulf Coast states include more than 2.4 million liters of water and more than four million meals.

The agency has prepositioned 478 emergency generators, 140 truckloads of tarps and 267 truckloads of blankets and cots.

The federal Department of Health and Human Services has placed nine disaster medical assistance teams, 11 health strike teams and two incident command teams on alert. Nine federal medical stations, each with a 250-bed capacity, are on alert.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has teams on alert to handle planning, power, roofing, and debris removal, and a water and ice team is ready to provide these necessities as they are needed.

In Austin, Texas, Governor Rick Perry issued a disaster declaration late Tuesday in response to the threat posed by Tropical Storm Gustav to 61 Texas counties.

The governor has called on state resources to prepare for Gustav, which is expected to strengthen as it enters the Gulf of Mexico over the Labor Day weekend. He said all state resources are ready for rapid deployment as necessary, and volunteer organizations are prepared to provide mass care support for residents.

The American Red Cross is moving hundreds of mobile feeding trucks into Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The organization is moving thousands of cots and blankets, tens of thousands of comfort kits and ready-to-eat meals into the coastal states today and Friday. Operational headquarters are being established in Dallas, Baton Rouge, Hattiesburg, and Montgomery.

Federal and state officials are also beginning to coordinate with Southeastern states that could be impacted by Tropical Storm Hanna, which is currently developing off the Atlantic coast.

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/aug2008/2008-08-28-092.asp

Be SAFE to all of Louisiana.
 
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To all the N.O. and Louisana fam, please be careful and get the hell out if you see it getting more powerful than they expect it to be!

Get ready for gas prices to go up again.....
 
im about 2hrs from New O damn not this shit again i was home for Katrina shit sounded like a wolf was out side my window that wind was cutting :smh::smh:
 
dam, i have alotta folks in new oleans mayne.. let's keep the louisiana peeps in our prayers.. gustav is about to do damage..
 
I'm praying that you kats from the area get up and out of there with the quickness . Those levies are untested and I'd hate to see the same shit happen again.
:smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
bush_mccain_cake.jpg



055_bush_katrina_comp.jpg
 
Originally posted by futureshock
bush_mccain_cake.jpg

055_bush_katrina_comp.jpg
Damn! Futureshock where did you get those pictures from? That wasn't what he was really doing on that date was it?:eek: Bush and McCain?! Now that's really fucked up.....
 
I'm heading back on the 9th. :smh::smh:

Oh well, if there is an evacuation, I'll get paid to drink and chill at the hotel until it's over. :yes:
 
Good luck Deuce

For What?
Unless Gustav is a 3 or higher, I'm not evacuating. I gassed up all of the cars and set a few of my wimpy family members to my grandparents in Prairieville and the rest with my parrain in Lafayette.
I dont feel like taking any more drives. I took 600 mile drives constantly when I was displaced and they wore me the fuck out. I survived Katrina in a 60 year old house in the 9th ward. TROPICAL STORM Gustav does not scare me, the worst that could happen is the May 1995 flood.

Me I'll enjoy the quiet.
The rest of yall be blessed.
 
track the storm
go to 2nd drop down menu :cool:
scroll down to find the name of the storm (GUSTAV):cool:
will give you current location and 120hr storm track (best guess):cool:

[FLASH]http://www.ibatom.com/_public/flash/hurtracker2/htracker.swf[/FLASH]
 
Damn! Futureshock where did you get those pictures from? That wasn't what he was really doing on that date was it?:eek: Bush and McCain?! Now that's really fucked up.....

someone posted them here a while back.....gotta love BGOL....the new CNN of Black America!


mccain-orleans-cake-bush-hsmall-vertical.jpg

While floods ravaged New Orleans in August
2005, Bush and McCain celebrated McCain's
birthday in Arizona


President Bush's lackadaisacal response to the Hurricane Katrina crisis is pretty much a truism by now. But John McCain's cameo role in the mess may soon make it into the highlight reel as well.

As the deadly storm system moved ashore almost three years ago, sending fatal floods through New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, Bush was in Phoenix, on a tour aimed at boosting participation in what was then the administration's new Medicare prescription-drug plan. McCain had opposed the bill, but showed up to meet Bush at the airport anyway, along with other Arizona lawmakers. It was Aug. 29, McCain's 69th birthday, and on the tarmac, Bush presented his old political rival with a cake. The two posed, holding the cake up for cameras, and within seconds, went their separate ways. The cake, melting in the 110-degree Arizona heat, was left behind, uneaten.

It's a photo op that Democrats will no doubt use as part of their campaign to portray a McCain presidency as nothing more than a third Bush term--a picture of the senator and the president, yukking it up on one of the administration's darkest days. But McCain, visiting New Orleans this week as part of his campaign's tour of America's "forgotten" places, is trying to put distance between himself and Bush as he woos moderate Democrats and independents. Arriving Thursday morning, McCain was asked how he planned to distinguish himself from Bush's handling of Katrina. "Just like I do everything," he said. "They have to judge me on my record." He argues, as he has all week in places like Selma, Ala., and in eastern Kentucky, that he's a different kind of Republican and would be a different kind of president.


Today he took a walking tour of the Ninth Ward--perhaps the most visible symbol of the Bush administration's inaction in the wake of Katrina--passing a mix of rebuilt homes and vacant, blighted houses. After the tour, McCain addressed reporters in front of a restored church. "Never again will we allow such a mishandling of a natural disaster," he vowed. "Never again."

Yet on the issue of New Orleans, it's still unclear how different McCain and Bush actually are. Speaking about Katrina, McCain, like many other Republicans, has trashed the administration's handling of the storm and has vowed to prevent similar catastrophes. "We can never let anything like that happen again," McCain told reporters on board his Straight Talk Express earlier this week. Still, the senator, who has visited the Lower Ninth Ward twice since the storm, has yet to tread into the far trickier debate over what to do about New Orleans now, a fight that has dragged on and on with little progress since the waters washed part of the city away.

The senator won't present his own plans for recovery, at least not today. Asked earlier this week if he thought the Lower Ninth Ward should be rebuilt, McCain shrugged, considering the question for several seconds. "I really don't know," he finally said. "That's why I am going … We need to go back to have a conversation about what to do: rebuild it, tear it down, you know, whatever it is."

That's an answer that likely won't please many people, especially those in New Orleans who have been fighting to keep the city's rebuilding an important priority for Washington. McCain's team is hoping that the candidate, at the very least, gets credit for making the effort to reach out in New Orleans, a city that is hardly friendly Republican territory. Yet it will likely take a lot more effort to undo the political damage the Bushies inflicted on their party in the aftermath of the storm--something McCain freely admits. "I think Americans will be disturbed by those images for a long time," he says. "It can't happen again."

http://www.newsweek.com/id/133551
 
:(

Gulf Coast prepares as storm Gustav approaches

By JOHN MORENO GONZALES, Associated Press Writer 17 minutes ago

NEW ORLEANS - With a new storm threatening to cause chaos in New Orleans all over again, a horse-drawn carriage brought the last seven unclaimed bodies of Hurricane Katrina victims for entombment at a memorial site on Friday during ceremonies marking the disaster's third anniversary.
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The ceremonies were tinged with a recognition of how much the city has rebuilt since Katrina's floods, as well as fear that another disaster could be looming.

"We look ahead to a better day, as we also prepare ourselves for another threat," Mayor Ray Nagin said as he helped guide a gleaming coffin into a mausoleum.

Tropical Storm Gustav was swirling near Jamaica on Friday after being blamed for 67 deaths in its path. Forecasters said it could hit the Louisiana coast early next week as a major hurricane and city and state officials were preparing for possible weekend evacuations — the first in the state since Katrina hit in 2005.

About 200 people attended the ceremony. Many rang hand-held bells at 9:38 a.m., the time that levee breaches that inundated the city are believed to have begun.

"I think God is reminding us that on the eve of Katrina, God can bring nature back," said Russell Honore, the retired Army General who headed up rescue efforts three years ago.

Preparations for Gustav forced cancellation of other Katrina memorials Friday, including a jazz funeral that was to have been part of the memorial service. Instead, a lone trumpeter played "Amazing Grace."

In coastal Mississippi, also devastated by Katrina, a morning memorial was held in the town of Waveland, but in neighboring Bay St. Louis, officials chose not to mark the anniversary.

"We decided not to look backward. We decided to look forward with all the progress we've made," said Harold "Buz" Olsen, director of administration for Bay St. Louis.

As Gustav churned, the National Guard was scheduled to begin convoying into New Orleans, while some nursing homes and hospitals planned to start moving patients further inland and the state began moving 9,000 inmates from coastal lockups.

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour called Friday for a mandatory evacuation of Katrina victims still living in temporary homes along the state's 70-mile coast. The evacuations, which will begin this weekend, also apply to some residents in 2,800 cottages built as an alternative to trailers. The mayor of Grand Isle, La., a town typically among the first to evacuate when bad weather threatens, called for a voluntary evacuation.

An evacuation order for New Orleans was likely, Nagin said, but not before Saturday. Meanwhile, residents of areas further south could be told to leave starting Friday, Gov. Bobby Jindal said.

Federal, state and local officials expressed confidence that plans put in place since Katrina would protect residents.

"What you're going to see is the product of three years of planning, training and exercising at all levels of government, starting with the local and the state level and leading up to the federal level," U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff told ABC's "Good Morning America" on Friday from New Orleans. "So we're clearly better prepared."

New Orleans said it is prepared to move 30,000 residents in an evacuation; estimates put the city's current population between 310,000 to 340,000 people. There were about 454,000 here before Katrina hit. Unlike Katrina, there will be no massive shelter at the Superdome, in fact, no shelter at all was planned for the city. It was unclear what would happen to those left behind.

The first 150 of 700 buses to move residents inland arrived at a staging area near New Orleans on Thursday.

Forecasters reiterated that storm projections days ahead of a storm are extremely tenuous. National Hurricane Center specialist Richard Knabb cautioned that the track forecast is still uncertain and the final landfall is possible throughout the northern Gulf Coast.

At 11 a.m. EDT, the center of Gustav was about 165 miles east-southeast of Grand Cayman. It had top sustained winds near 65 mph.

But forecasters said for the first time that there's a better than ever chance that New Orleans will feel at least tropical storm-force winds. There was much less confidence in whether the city would get hit by hurricane-force winds.

Melissa Clark, who lives in neighboring Jefferson Parish, said she's leaving Friday with her family to stay with friends in Clinton, Miss. — evacuation order or not. Her husband, who works in maintenance at a nearby hospital, will stay behind.

"I'm not taking any chances this time," the 35-year-old mother of three teenagers said as she waited fifth in line at a Wal-Mart gas station Thursday.
 
I'm not a paniker, and will not leave until I want......, but with that being said if anything along the lines of Katrina happens again I will not be returning to the N.O., love the city with all my heart but completely rebuilding once in my life is enough for me. I'll start over but I can't rebuild again. That shit's draining... I will say though gubbment officials here seem to be on the ball with preperations, so we will play the waiting game for now :( :( :(
 
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