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Rita becomes 175-mph monster
New Orleans, Galveston residents under mandatory evacuation orders 07:32 AM EDT on Thursday, September 22, 2005
GALVESTON, Texas — Gaining strength with frightening speed, Hurricane
Rita swirled toward the Gulf Coast a Category 5, 175-mph monster
Wednesday as more than 1.3 million people in Texas and Louisiana were
sent packing on orders from authorities who learned a bitter lesson from
Katrina.
Latest news: Give, get help: External links: National Hurricane Center:
"It's scary. It's really scary," Shalonda Dunn said as she and her 5-
and 9-year-old daughters waited to board a bus arranged by emergency
authorities in Galveston. "I'm glad we've got the opportunity to leave.
... You never know what can happen."
With Rita projected to hit Texas by Saturday, Gov. Rick Perry urged
residents along the state's entire coast to begin evacuating. And New
Orleans braced for the possibility that the storm could swamp the
misery-stricken city all over again.
Galveston, low-lying parts of Corpus Christi and Houston, and mostly
emptied-out New Orleans were under mandatory evacuation orders as Rita
sideswiped the Florida Keys and began drawing energy with terrifying
efficiency from the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
Forecasters said Rita could be the most intense hurricane on record ever
to hit Texas, and easily one of the most powerful ever to plow into the
U.S. mainland. Category 5 is the highest on the scale, and only three
Category 5 hurricanes are known to have hit the U.S. mainland – most
recently, Andrew, which smashed South Florida in 1992.
The U.S. mainland has never been hit by both a Category 4 and a Category
5 in the same season. Katrina, at one point became a Category 5 storm,
weakened slightly to a Category 4 hurricane just before coming ashore.
Government officials eager to show they had learned their lessons from
the sluggish response to Katrina sent in hundreds of buses to evacuate
the poor, moved out hospital and nursing home patients, dispatched
truckloads of water, ice and ready-made meals, and put rescue and
medical teams on standby. An Army general in Texas was told to be ready
to assume control of a military task force in Rita's wake.
"We hope and pray that Hurricane Rita will not be a devastating storm,
but we got to be ready for the worst," President Bush said in Washington.
Late Wednesday, Rita was centered about 570 miles east-southeast of
Galveston and was moving west near 9 mph. Forecasters predicted it would
come ashore along the central Texas coast between Galveston and Corpus
Christi. Hurricane-force winds extended up to 70 miles from the center
of the storm.
But with its breathtaking size – tropical storm-force winds extending
370 miles across – practically the entire western end of the U.S. Gulf
Coast was in peril, and even a slight rightward turn could prove
devastating to the fractured levees protecting New Orleans.
In the Galveston-Houston-Corpus Christi area, about 1.3 million people
were under orders to get out, in addition to 20,000 or more along with
the Louisiana coast. Special attention was given to hospitals and
nursing homes, three weeks after scores of sick and elderly patients in
the New Orleans area drowned in Katrina's floodwaters or died in the
stifling heat while waiting to be rescued.
Military personnel in South Texas started moving north, too. Schools,
businesses and universities were also shut down. Some sporting events
were canceled.
Galveston was a virtual ghost town by mid-afternoon Wednesday. In
neighborhoods throughout the island city, the few people left were
packing the last of their valuables and getting ready to head north.
Helicopters, ambulances and buses were used to evacuate 200 patients
from Galveston's only hospital. And at the Edgewater Retirement
Community, a six-story building near the city's seawall, 200 elderly
residents were not given a choice.
"They either go with a family member or they go with us, but this
building is not safe sitting on the seawall with a major hurricane
coming," said David Hastings, executive director. "I have had several
say, `I don't want to go,' and I said, `I'm sorry, you're going."'
Galveston, a city of 58,000 on a coastal island 8 feet above sea level,
was the site of one of the deadliest natural disasters in U.S. history:
an unnamed hurricane in 1900 that killed between 6,000 and 12,000 people
and practically wiped the city off the map.
The last major hurricane to strike the Houston area was Category-3
Alicia in 1983. It flooded downtown Houston, spawned 22 tornadoes and
left 21 people dead.
In Houston, the state's largest city and home to the highest
concentration of Katrina refugees, the area's geography makes evacuation
particularly tricky. While many hurricane-prone cities are right on the
coast, Houston is 60 miles inland, so a coastal suburban area of 2
million people must evacuate through a metropolitan area of 4 million
people where the freeways are often clogged under the best of
circumstances.
Mayor Bill White urged residents to look out for more than themselves.
"There will not be enough government vehicles to go and evacuate
everybody in every area," he said. "We need neighbor caring for
neighbor."
Houston Police Chief Harold Hurtt issued a stern warning to anyone
staying behind that looting would not be tolerated and anyone caught
stealing after the storm would be prosecuted.
At the Galveston Community Center, where 1,500 evacuees had been put on
school buses to points inland, another lesson from Katrina was put into
practice: To overcome the reluctance of people to evacuate without their
pets, they were allowed to bring them along in crates.
"It was quite a sight," Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas said. "We were able to put
people on with their dog crates, their cat crates, their shopping carts.
It went very well."
But Thomas warned late Wednesday that the city was nearly out of buses.
She said those left on the island would have to find a way off or face
riding out a storm that is "big enough to destroy part of the island, if
not a great part of the county."
City Manager Steve LeBlanc said the storm surge could reach 50 feet.
Galveston is protected by a seawall that is only 17 feet tall. More than
180 police officers were expected to stay behind to guard the city,
along with 117 firefighters.
Rita approached as the death toll from Katrina passed the 1,000 mark –
to 1,036 – in five Gulf Coast states. The body count in Louisiana alone
was put at 799, most found in the receding floodwaters of New Orleans.
The Army Corps of Engineers raced to fortify the city's patched-up
levees for fear the additional rain could swamp the walls and flood the
city all over again. The Corps said New Orleans' levees can only handle
up to 6 inches of rain and a storm surge of 10 to 12 feet.
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin estimated only 400 to 500 people remained in
the vulnerable east bank areas of the city. They, too, were ordered to
evacuate. But only a few people lined up for the evacuation buses
provided. Most of the people still in the city were believed to have
their own cars.
"I don't think I can stay for another storm," said Keith Price, a nurse
at New Orleans' University Hospital who stayed through Katrina and had
to wade to safety through chest-deep water. "Until you are actually in
that water, you really don't know how frightening it is."
Rita also forced some Katrina refugees to flee a hurricane for the
second time in 31/2 weeks. More than 1,000 refugees who had been living
in the civic center in Lake Charles, near the Texas state line, were
being bused to shelters farther north.
"We all have to go along with the system right now, until things get
better," said Ralph Russell of the New Orleans suburb of Harvey. "I just
hope it's a once-in-a-lifetime thing."
Crude oil prices rose again on fears that Rita would smash into key oil
installations in Texas and the gulf. Hundreds of workers were evacuated
from offshore oil rigs. Texas, the heart of U.S. crude production,
accounts for 25 percent of the nation's total oil output.
Rita is the 17th named storm of the Atlantic hurricane season, making
this the fourth-busiest season since record-keeping started in 1851. The
record is 21 tropical storms in 1933. The hurricane season ends Nov. 30.
–––
Associated Press Writers Lynn Brezosky in Corpus Christi, Alicia
Caldwell in Galveston and Juan A. Lozano in Houston contributed to this
report.
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