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View Full Version : "Get out of New Orleans now"



conman1000
08-30-2008, 09:15 PM
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered a mandatory evacuation of the city beginning 8 a.m. Sunday but urged residents to consider escaping "the mother of all storms" before then.


New Orleans residents leave Friday via Interstate 10 westbound ahead of Hurricane Gustav.

"You need to be scared," Nagin said of the Category 4 hurricane tearing along Cuba's western coast. "You need to be concerned, and you need to get your butts moving out of New Orleans right now. This is the storm of the century."

The city's west bank is to evacuate at 8 a.m.

Nagin said the city had evacuated roughly 10,000 people Saturday on buses, trains and planes. Buses from collection points would continue running until midnight and resume at 6 a.m. Sunday, he said.

"This storm is so powerful and growing more powerful every day," Nagin said. "I'm not sure we've seen anything like this."

At 8 p.m. ET, Gustav's eye was over western Cuba near Los Palacios, about 65 miles (105 kilometers) west-southwest of Havana, with sustained winds near 150 mph.

Authorities began ordering mandatory evacuations along Louisiana and Mississippi's Gulf Coast earlier Saturday as Gustav roared past Cuba and into the Gulf of Mexico. iReport: Are you there? Send photos, video

"This storm could be as bad as it gets," Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal said Saturday afternoon. "We could see flooding even worse than we saw in Hurricane Katrina."

Thousands of people had begun fleeing the coast by the time a hurricane watch was issued Saturday afternoon for southeastern Texas to the Alabama-Florida border as Gustav pursued a projected path toward the U.S. Gulf Coast.


The watch, which means hurricane conditions are possible within 36 hours, was announced the day after many in the region marked the third anniversary of Katrina's landfall.

Hurricanes are ranked 1 to 5 in intensity on the Saffir-Simpson scale. A Category 4 has winds of 131 to 155 mph and can cause extreme damage.

Hundreds of people lined up for buses and trains to take them out of New Orleans and thousands of other Gulf Coast residents drove inland, clogging major highways.

Jindal said the state planned to begin "contraflow" procedures, opening both sides of interstates to outgoing traffic only, at 4 a.m. Sunday.

More than a dozen parishes in Louisiana have declared states of emergency, and several others called for mandatory evacuations to begin Saturday and Sunday.

In Louisiana's St. Bernard Parish, where mandatory evacuations began 4 p.m. Saturday, authorities called the order "a matter of survival."

Many parishes also were imposing tough dusk-to-dawn curfews, hoping to assure residents that they could evacuate without fear of their vacant homes being looted.

Jindal did not order mandatory evacuations at a state level, but he urged residents to take the evacuations seriously.

"I wouldn't worry about whether the evacuation in your parish begins at 4 p.m. today or 8 a.m. tomorrow," he said. "When it comes to evacuation, do it sooner rather than later."

In New Orleans, anxiety was high Saturday as residents fled, leaving behind a ghost town of boarded-up homes and empty streets.

At the Union Passenger Terminal in downtown New Orleans, people began arriving as early as 5:30 a.m., forming a line that snaked behind the main Amtrak terminal. Humvees circled the crowds of people, many who waited as long as 2½ hours, enduring the heat and relentless sun, unsure of their destination.

New Orleans officials designated 17 sites for people without transportation to board buses to take them to the terminal, where they will be moved to shelters outside New Orleans. However, scores of residents went directly to the terminal, prompting confusion, as did a glitch in the computer system being used to register people.

Jindal suspended registration at the terminal and instructed people to register when they arrive at shelters. By Saturday afternoon, 1,100 to 1,200 people had left the city on those buses, Nagin said.

"I'm not sure where I'm going," Margie Hawkins of New Orleans said. "My last 24 hours have been somewhat worrisome and very, very prayerful, because this is a very serious threat, and it's a lot of people to get to safe ground or be safe where they are."

The city also arranged with Amtrak for more than 7,000 seats to evacuate the elderly by train. About 1,500 people left for Memphis, Tennessee, Nagin said.

There were also crowds at New Orleans' Louis Armstrong International Airport, which the city plans to keep open through 6 p.m. CT Sunday. Both Delta Air Lines and AirTran Airways said they planned to continue flights in and out of New Orleans until the airport is closed.

Vehicles jammed Interstate 10 headed west toward Texas. Cars also clogged Interstates 55 and 59 heading north out of eastern Louisiana. Heavy volume was also reported on Interstates 65 and 59 as Mississippi evacuees streamed north.

The hurricane is projected to pass over western Cuba and to move into the southern Gulf of Mexico early Sunday and into the central Gulf by early Monday, according to forecasters. Gustav could make landfall as a Category 3 or 4 on the U.S. Gulf Coast late Monday or Tuesday, the National Hurricane Center said.

The storm called up uneasy memories Friday of the deadly 2005 hurricane season, particularly of Katrina. When Katrina hit, more than 1,800 people died in five states, 1,577 of them in Louisiana.


Unlike the situation during Katrina, there will be no "shelter of last resort," the city said. In 2005, the city's Louisiana Superdome housed thousands of New Orleanians who couldn't, or didn't, heed the mandatory evacuation order. Watch FEMA administrator talk about being proactive »

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour announced Friday that Hurricane Katrina victims living in government-issued trailers or mobile homes along his state's coast would begin evacuating Saturday.


Dang, I thought nothing could be worse than Katrina.

rukisuto
08-30-2008, 09:37 PM
At least their finally issuing an evactuation.
It's about time.

MissLEGENDARY
08-30-2008, 09:39 PM
Well I think that maybe they are handling this one better than katrina

rukisuto
08-30-2008, 09:41 PM
Well I think that maybe they are handling this one better than katrina

Only about 100x better.

conman1000
08-30-2008, 09:45 PM
They told people to evacuate for Katrina, no one did and we saw the result I think people will listen this time around.

rukisuto
08-31-2008, 07:51 AM
They told people to evacuate for Katrina, no one did and we saw the result I think people will listen this time around.

Because they didn't let on the intensity of the storm.
And they did it like 24 hours before it hit.

Everyone thought it was just another hurricane.

MacQuarie
08-31-2008, 01:41 PM
Well I think that maybe they are handling this one better than katrina

That's the Titanic effect. Before the Titanic sank most luxury cruisers didn't have enough escape boats for the entire population of the ship, now they do. They learnt from their mistakes and altered plans for the future to avoid such a disaster from reoccurring, and now the same thing is happening in New Orleans. They are evacuating before Gustav comes because they have seen and been educated by the devastating effect Katrina had on the city, and will do what they can to stop it happening again.

rukisuto
08-31-2008, 03:37 PM
That's the Titanic effect. Before the Titanic sank most luxury cruisers didn't have enough escape boats for the entire population of the ship, now they do. They learnt from their mistakes and altered plans for the future to avoid such a disaster from reoccurring, and now the same thing is happening in New Orleans. They are evacuating before Gustav comes because they have seen and been educated by the devastating effect Katrina had on the city, and will do what they can to stop it happening again.

It's so sad that it has to happen once before someone does something.
Why don't they just think ahead?

MacQuarie
08-31-2008, 04:42 PM
It's so sad that it has to happen once before someone does something.
Why don't they just think ahead?

Because it's not as easy as that. Say there's a road with a crash guard that stops cars going into the opposite lane if they crash. A truck crushes this guard easily and there's a pile up on both sides of the road. It's something you're not expecting and wouldn't usually think of. Titanic for example was said to be "unsinkable" because of the massive amounts of steel in the hull, but it was easily pierced by an iceberg which they didn't realise would happen.

Then there's the people complaining about "this is costing too much" and would prefer finance over safety.

rukisuto
08-31-2008, 06:21 PM
Because it's not as easy as that. Say there's a road with a crash guard that stops cars going into the opposite lane if they crash. A truck crushes this guard easily and there's a pile up on both sides of the road. It's something you're not expecting and wouldn't usually think of. Titanic for example was said to be "unsinkable" because of the massive amounts of steel in the hull, but it was easily pierced by an iceberg which they didn't realise would happen.

Then there's the people complaining about "this is costing too much" and would prefer finance over safety.

Well, I would much rather pay more in the first place than keep handing out money time after time to fix something.
In the end it just costs more.

LemonRising
09-04-2008, 09:31 AM
Things get worse before they get better.

This proves itself time and time again.