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A gas station offers its limitted gasoline service in New Orleans, Louisiana, August 31, 2008, after a mandatory evacuation was ordered ahead of Hurricane Gustav.
JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
With a historic evacuation of nearly 2
million people from the Louisiana coast complete, gun-toting police
and National Guardsmen stood watch as rain started to fall on this
city's empty streets Sunday night - and even presidential politics
took a back seat as the nation waited to see if Hurricane Gustav
would be another Katrina.
The storm was set to crash ashore late Monday morning with
frightful force, testing three years of planning and rebuilding
that followed Katrina's devastating blow to the Gulf Coast. The
storm has already killed at least 94 people on its path through the
Caribbean.
Painfully aware of the failings that led to more than 1,600
deaths during Katrina, this time officials moved beyond merely
insisting tourists and residents leave south Louisiana. They
threatened to put looters behind bars, loaded thousands onto buses
and warned that anyone who remained behind would not be rescued.
A crew from on a medical evacuation C-17 plane from the US Air Force 64 out of Texas prepare to evacuate patients from waiting ambulances to military aircraft at the Lakefront Airport in New Orleans ahead of Hurricane Gustav.
AFP/AFP/Getty Images
They were confident that they had done all they could.
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"It's amazing. It makes me feel really good that so many people
are saying, 'We as Americans, we as the world, have to get this
right this time,"' New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said late Sunday.
"We cannot afford to screw up again."
Col. Mike Edmondson, state police commander, said he believed
that 90 percent of the population had fled the Louisiana coast. The
exodus of 1.9 million people is the largest evacuation in state
history, and thousands more had left from Mississippi, Alabama and
flood-prone southeast Texas.
Late Sunday, Gov. Bobby Jindal issued one last plea to the
roughly 100,000 people still left on the coast: "If you've not
evacuated, please do so. There are still a few hours left."
A woman enjoys a drink at the bar that never closes, Johnny White's Sport Bar & Grill, on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, Louisiana, August 31, 2008, after a mandatory evacuation was ordered ahead of Hurricane Gustav.
JIM WATSON/AFP/Getty Images
Louisiana and Mississippi temporarily changed traffic flow so
all highway lanes led away from the coast, and cars were packed
bumper-to-bumper. Stores and restaurants shut down, hotels closed
and windows were boarded up. Some who planned to stay changed their
mind at the last second, not willing to risk the worst.
"I was trying to get situated at home. I was trying to get
things so it would be halfway safe," said 46-year-old painter
Jerry Williams, who showed up at the city's Union Station to catch
one of the last buses out of town. "You're torn. Do you leave it
and worry about it, or do you stay and worry about living?"
There were frightening comparisons between Gustav and Katrina,
which flooded 80 percent of New Orleans. There was no doubt the
storm posed a major threat to the partially rebuilt city and the
flood-prone coasts of Louisiana and southeast Texas.
Mindful of the potential for disaster, the Republican Party
scaled back its normally jubilant convention - set to kick off as
Gustav crashed ashore. President Bush said he would skip the
convention altogether, and Sen. John McCain visited Jackson, Miss.,
on Sunday as his campaign rewrote the script for the convention to
emphasize a commitment to helping people.
More than 1,500 members of the Louisiana National Guard troops arrive at the convention center during preparations for Tropical Storm Gustav August 29, 2008 in New Orleans, Louisiana. New Orleans is bracing for the storm three years after the levees broke during Hurricane Katrina which flooded the area.
Stephen Morton/Getty Images
The nation's economic attention was focused on Gustav's effect
on refineries and offshore petroleum production rigs. The
combination of prolonged production interruptions, such as occurred
when Katrina and Rita damaged the Gulf infrastructure, could
trigger rising prices.
Billions of dollars were at stake in other wide-ranging economic
sectors, including sugar harvesting, the shipping business and
tourism. The Mississippi Gaming Commission ordered a dozen casinos
to close.
Forecasters said Gustav could strengthen slightly as it marched
toward the coast. At 2 a.m. EDT Monday, the National Hurricane
Center said Gustav was centered about 170 miles south-southeast of
New Orleans and was moving northwest near 16 mph. It had top
sustained winds of 115 mph, and was likely to stay a Category 3
storm when it made landfall west of New Orleans. Category 3 storms
have winds between 111 mph and 130 mph.
Tropical storm-force winds had reached the southeastern tip of
the state and winds were picking up at New Orleans' city hall, but
they had not reached the 55-mph limit that would lead police to
call officers in from patrols.
Orleans Levee District employee Sherry Hines pushes a sandbag into place while Derrick Lewis lowers it at the 17th Street Canal pumping station near Coconut Beach in New Orleans Friday August 29, 2008 in preparation for Hurricane Gustav which may make landfall in Louisiana next week. The 17th Street Canal levee was breeched after Hurricane Katrina exactly three years ago flooding the Lakeview neighborhood of New Orleans. Tropical Storm Gustav regained hurricane strength as it churned toward Cuba Friday, leaving 78 people dead in its wake, as New Orleans began voluntary evacuations ahead of the storm's projected arrival next week.
Matthew Hinton/AFP/Getty Images
New Orleans will likely be on the "dirty" side of the storm -
where rainfall is heaviest and tornadoes are possible, but the
storm surge is lower. If forecasts hold, the city would experience
a storm surge of only 4 to 6 feet, compared to a surge of 10 to 14
feet at the site of landfall, said Corey Walton, a hurricane
support meteorologist with the National Hurricane Center. Katrina,
by comparison, brought a storm surge of 25 feet.
Surge models suggest large areas of southeast Louisiana,
including parts of the greater New Orleans area, could be flooded
by several feet of water. But Gustav appears most likely to
overwhelm the levees west of the city that have for decades been
underfunded and neglected and are years from an update.
Against all warnings, some gambled and decided to face the
storm's wrath. On an otherwise deserted commercial block of
downtown Lafayette, about 135 miles west of the city, Tim Schooler
removed the awnings from his photography studio. He thought about
evacuating Sunday before deciding he was better off riding out the
storm at home with his wife, Nona.
"There's really no place to go. All the hotels are booked up to
Little Rock and beyond," he said. "We're just hoping for the
best."
Nathan Washington screws a wood board over the window of his home before he and his family evacuate as hurricane Gustav approaches August 30, 2008 in New Orleans, Louisiana. City and state officials have urged residents in the area to evacuate as early as possible to avoid traffic on the already busy highways leading away from New Orleans.
Stephen Morton/Getty Images
The final train out of New Orleans left with fewer than 100
people on board, while one of the last buses to make the rounds of
the city pulled into Union Station empty. Police made final rounds
around 7 p.m. Every officer in the department was on duty, and the
1,200 on the street were joined by 1,500 National Guardsmen.
The only sign of life on St. Bernard Avenue - a four-lane artery
through the partially rebuilt Gentilly neighborhood that flooded
during Katrina - was a brown and black rooster meandering along the
street.
"When the 911 calls start coming in, we'll know how many people
are left in town," said police superintendent Warren Riley.
Even as they pressed to complete the evacuation, officials
insisted there would be no repeat of the inept response to
Katrina's wrath. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said
search and rescue will be the top priority once Gustav passes -
high-water vehicles, helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft, Coast
Guard cutters and a Navy vessel that is essentially a floating
emergency room are posted around the strike zone.
Michael Neal (R) and Gary Davis (L) sandbag the Royal Sonesta Hotel on Burbon Street while preparing for Hurricane Gustav August, 31, 2008 in New Orleans, Louisiana. According the National Hurricane Center Gustav downgraded to Category 3 with top winds near 125 mph early Sunday. Forecasters expected it to regain strength later in the day.
Stephen Morton/Getty Images
West of New Orleans in Houma, he wished passengers well as
stragglers boarded buses for Shreveport and Dallas.
"It's going to be hot on some of the buses. It's going to be a
long trip," Chertoff said. "So it's not going to be pleasant, but
it's a lot better than sitting in the Superdome and it's a lot
better than sitting in your house."
Melissa Lee, who lives in Pearl River, a town near the boundary
of Mississippi and Louisiana, was driving away to Florida Sunday.
Before she left, she heard neighbors chopping down trees with chain
saws, trying to ensure the tall pines that surrounded their homes
wouldn't come crashing down.
"I sent my son out with a camera and said, `Go take pictures of
our backyard. Because it's going to look different when we get
back."'
---
Associated Press writers Janet McConnaughey, Robert Tanner, Cain
Burdeau, Alan Sayre, Allen G. Breed and Mary Foster contributed to
this report from New Orleans. Vicki Smith in Houma, Doug Simpson in
Baton Rouge and Michael Kunzelman in Lafayette also contributed.
Kelli Kennedy reported from Miami, and Shelia Byrd contributed from
Pearl, Miss.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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A gas station offers its limitted gasoline service in New Orleans, Louisiana, August 31, 2008, after a mandatory evacuation was ordered ahead of Hurricane Gustav.
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