Local News
11:54 PM CDT on Sunday, August 28, 2005
When Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans on Monday, it could turn one of
America's most charming cities into a vast cesspool tainted with toxic
chemicals, human waste and even coffins released by floodwaters from the
city's legendary cemeteries.
Experts have warned for years that the levees and pumps that usually
keep New Orleans dry have no chance against a direct hit by a Category 5
storm.
That's exactly what Katrina was as it churned toward the city. With top
winds of 160 mph and the power to lift sea level by as much as 28 feet
above normal, the storm threatened an environmental disaster of biblical
proportions, one that could leave more than 1 million people homeless.
"All indications are that this is absolutely worst-case scenario,"
Ivor van Heerden, deputy director of the Louisiana State University
Hurricane Center, said Sunday afternoon.
The center's latest computer simulations indicate that by Tuesday, vast
swaths of New Orleans could be under water up to 30 feet deep. In the
French Quarter, the water could reach 20 feet, easily submerging the
district's iconic cast-iron balconies and bars.
Estimates predict that 60 percent to 80 percent of the city's houses
will be destroyed by wind. With the flood damage, most of the people who
live in and around New Orleans could be homeless.
"We're talking about in essence having -- in the continental United
States -- having a refugee camp of a million people," van Heerden
said.
Aside from Hurricane Andrew, which struck Miami in 1992, forecasters
have no experience with Category 5 hurricanes hitting densely populated
areas.
"Hurricanes rarely sustain such extreme winds for much time.
However we see no obvious large-scale effects to cause a substantial
weakening the system and it is expected that the hurricane will be of
Category 4 or 5 intensity when it reaches the coast," National Hurricane
Center meteorologist Richard Pasch said.
As they raced to put meteorological instruments in Katrina's path
Sunday, wind engineers had little idea what their equipment would record.
"We haven't seen something this big since we started the program,"
said Kurt Gurley, a University of Florida engineering professor. He
works for the Florida Coastal Monitoring Program, which is in its
seventh year of making detailed measurements of hurricane wind
conditions using a set of mobile weather stations.
Experts have warned about New Orleans' vulnerability for years, chiefly
because Louisiana has lost more than a million acres of coastal wetlands
in the past seven decades. The vast patchwork of swamps and bayous south
of the city serves as a buffer, partially absorbing the surge of water
that a hurricane pushes ashore.
Experts have also warned that the ring of high levees around New
Orleans, designed to protect the city from floodwaters coming down the
Mississippi, will only make things worse in a powerful hurricane.
Katrina is expected to push a 28-foot storm surge against the levees.
Even if they hold, water will pour over their tops and begin filling the
city as if it were a sinking canoe.
After the storm passes, the water will have nowhere to go.
In a few days, van Heerden predicts, emergency management officials are
going to be wondering how to handle a giant stagnant pond contaminated
with building debris, coffins, sewage and other hazardous materials.
"We're talking about an incredible environmental disaster,"
van Heerden said.
He puts much of the blame for New Orleans' dire situation on the very
levee system that is designed to protect southern Louisiana from
Mississippi River floods.
Before the levees were built, the river would top its banks during
floods and wash through a maze of bayous and swamps, dropping
fine-grained silt that nourished plants and kept the land just above sea
level.
The levees "have literally starved our wetlands to death" by
directing all of that precious silt out into the Gulf of Mexico, van
Heerden said.
It has been 40 years since New Orleans faced a hurricane even comparable
to Katrina. In 1965, Hurricane Betsy, a Category 3 storm, submerged some
parts of the city to a depth of seven feet.
Since then, the Big Easy has had nothing but near misses. In 1998,
Hurricane Georges headed straight for New Orleans, then swerved at the
last minute to strike Mississippi and Alabama. Hurricane Lili blew
herself out at the mouth of the Mississippi in 2002. And last year's
Hurricane Ivan obligingly curved to the east as it came ashore, barely
grazing a grateful city.
(Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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