Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    Hurricane Katrina Duties

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    The failures of government response to Hurricane Katrina was a result of the aggregation of the local and federal governments lacking proper communication with each other, the levels of government not fulfilling their duties in a state of emergency, and the lack of personal responsibility that each level of government took upon themselves in the crisis. On a local level, Mayor Ray Nagin did not mobilize evacuation via bussing, nor did he ensure that adequate amounts of food and water were stocked

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    Hurricane Katrina was an incredibly unique hurricane that left 90,000 square miles destroyed, but it taught us about natural disaster protection and that no matter how much we think we are prepared nature can push back. With all the destruction it caused the terror it pushed on us Katrina will be remembered forever This monster of a storm swept through florida and no one really thought it would come back… that is until it got to the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico. The hurricane that was

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    There were several issues that played a part in the disaster of New Orleans afte Hurricane Katrina had struck. Due to neglence of the five agencies ( that were responsible for designing, building, and maintaining the New Orleans Hurricane Protection System led to insuffiecent preparation. Even after declaring a state of emergency, lack of coordinating between Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) resulted in a poor response to help render aid and

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    Hurricane Katrina proved to be one of the most catastrophic and costly natural disasters to affect the United States. Severe winds, heavy rains, and a 27-foot storm surge devastated the Gulf Coast states of Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. In addition, the ferocity of the storm caused the failure of the New Orleans levee system resulting in massive flooding. The loss to the nation was extraordinary. The total expense from infrastructure damage, destroyed personal properties, and recovery

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    Hurricane Katrina By Ethan McMahen Ethan McMahen Mrs. Johnson 15 March 2017 Hurricane Katrina I. Introduction A. Background B. Thesis: The government should have help Hurricane Katrina, through additional money, supplies, and community help. II. Government Funds A. Too much money B. Not much taken III. Enough supplies A. Too much food B. Not enough shelter IV. Community help A. Volunteers B. City help V. Conclusion Ethan McMahen Language Arts Mrs. Johnson May 5, 2017

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    Honoring the Tragedy of Hurricane Katrina August 29, 2005 may be just another date to most of the American population but for New Orleans it is a date that weighs heavy on the hearts of the residents. Every year when this date comes around, residents are reminded of the lost ones they didn’t get to say goodbye too, the pets that were lost, homes that were damaged and lost, families that were shattered and broken apart due to this tragic event. Thousands of lives were taken during this time, not including

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    Hurricane Harvey wreaked havoc throughout the Houston School District – the largest public school district in Texas and the seventh-largest in the U.S. – forcing schools to close and disrupting the lives of thousands of students, teachers, and education officials. As of September 1st, district officials reported that each of the 200 school-related facilities they inspected after the disaster sustained damage from the hurricane, which was later downgraded to a tropical storm. It’s also expected that

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    Hurricane Katrina Ten years ago, on Aug 23, Hurricane Katrina was born over the warm waters of the Bahamas. Alice Jackson was interviewed about the storm, “I could see the house next door turn into a living, breathing monster, as the wind and pressure pushes the house out and in like a breathing creature.” Hurricane Katrina, created above the warm blue waters surrounded the Bahamas that destroyed many homes and took many lives. For instance, hurricanes are deadly, but there are many ways to survive

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    Introduction Hurricane Katrina strikes the Gulf Coats of the US in 2005 which caused wide spread devastation. It is estimated that nearly two thousand individuals lost their lives (Rhodes, Chan, Paxson, Rouse, Waters, and Fusell, 2010). The storm displaced more than 1.5 million residents and caused $108 billion in property damage, which is the costliest on record in the US (Blake, Landsea, Christopher, Gibney, 2011). Katrina had hit the regions of New Orleans, Louisiana, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi

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    Hurricanes are an all too common weather event during the months of June through November. According to NASA, an average of eighty-five hurricanes occur each year. A tropical storm becomes a hurricane when winds of seventy-five miles per hour are sustained. Each named hurricane then falls into a category based upon its maximum sustained wind speed. One of the most devastating hurricanes to hit the United States was Hurricane Katrina. Hurricane Katrina formed over the south-eastern Bahamas and made

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