Hurricane Katrina - 5 years later
Last week was the 5th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and there have been many retrospectives of the good and bad that occurred. I particularly liked this one from Instapundit of lessons learned two weeks after the event.
1. Don’t build your city below sea level: Sooner or later it will flood.
2. Order evacuations early: even 48 hours advance notice is too late if you want to get everyone out.
3. Have — and use — a plan for evacuating people who can’t get out on their own: New Orleans apparently had a plan, but didn’t use it.
4. Have an emergency relocation plan: designated places far enough away to be safe, but close enough to evacuate people to.
5. Make critical infrastructure survivable: one of the key failures of Katrina was the collapse of the New Orleans Police Department’s radio system - they could not communicate after the hurricane.
6. Stock supplies and prepare facilities: The Superdome didn’t have adequate food, water, and toilet facilities, even though everybody knew it was going to be a shelter of last resort.
7. Be realistic: In the event of a major disaster, streets may be impassable and public services could be interrupted or taxed beyond their limits. Therefore, everyone must know how to provide for their own needs for an extended period of time.
8. Put somebody in charge: Right now it’s mostly state governors, but this needs to be made inescapably plain to everyone.
The webpage has more details and wonderful comments from readers.
Bottom Line
The media (and Democrats) love to blame Bush for the failures after Katrina. But look at the list above. None of these topics are Federal in scope. They are failures at the city, regional, and state level. That is where preparedness begins and where it will succeed or fail.
Labels: Disaster Recovery, Emergency Management, Government, Hurricane, Katrina
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home