Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    Hurricane Katrina was a devastating category 5 that made landfall in Buras, Louisiana, on Monday, August, 25, 2005. It was downgraded to a level 4 hurricane when it made landfall. This hurricane was extremely devastating for the city of New Orleans 2004 (Haddow, Bullock, Coppola, 2014 p17). This hurricane was so overwhelming that it crippled local government which ceased to exist immediately after the disaster. The main problem with FEMA at the was President George W. Bush. This was less that four

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    Hurricane Irene has passed and though the extent of the damage is still being assessed, we know many thousands have been affected by flooding, wind damage, power outages, mass evacuations and more. There has been loss of human and animal life and extensive property damage. As rescue professionals work to determine the impact, and our country ultimately reviews the preparations and the response, we must pause to remember another disaster that began six years ago today – Hurricane Katrina. This quote

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    Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    Hurricane Katrina pounded the Gulf Coast with tremendous force at daybreak, August 29, 2005, severely punishing regions that included the city of New Orleans and its neighboring state Mississippi. Resulting in a total of just over 1700 people killed, and hundreds of thousands missing. When we think of Hurricane Katrina stories, we think of stories that were published by the media such as, “Packing 145-mile-an-hour winds as it made landfall, the category 3 storm left more than a million people in

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    29, 2005 the Hurricane Katrina had stuck. “When the storm made landfall, it had a Category 3 rating on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale–it brought sustained winds of 100–140 miles per hour–and stretched some 400 miles across.”("Hurricane Katrina.”) Katrina had destroyed the state, Louisianan is located below the city level. A known target to be floored by the Gulf Coast. “Local, state and federal -- was unprepared, uncoordinated and overwhelmed in dealing with the Hurricane Katrina disaster that

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    Hurricane Katrina was a significant political disaster in intergovernmental relations. There were many government leaders, agencies, and officials that were responsible for the political fallout of Katrina. There was a chain of events that involved many people that resulted in the failure of handling this disaster. Hurricane Katrina showed the weaknesses and lack of preparation of the government at the time. There were a series of events that occurred leading up to Katrina that had very negative

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    Hurricane Katrina was a terrible Natural Disaster which swept away much of New Orleans, Louisiana leaving little behind. Causes and outcomes with discrimination in race and ethnicity after Hurricane Katrina. When thinking of a certain town or city, people will remember what it is known for or what they saw. When one is thinking of New Orleans, Louisiana they will more than likely think of African Americans (Pg.90). The Latino population did not start to appear in New Orleans until the late twentieth

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    Hurricane Katrina was devastating. My sister’s husband was a lifeguard when that occurred. He saved a couple lives but felt as if he failed since he couldn’t save more. He is a hero, but feels guilty about all the ones he couldn't save. I couldn’t believe the amount of damage that occurred, how unprepared the local, state and national governments were and the large amount of deaths that took place. I experienced Hurricane Sandy in New Jersey which was truly a scary experience. I can’t even imagine

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    years ago, the tropical cyclone that struck the southeastern United States,Hurricane Katrina, had a level three ranked on the hurricane scale. This storm killed nearly 2,000people and affected almost 90,000 square miles of the United States. The state of Louisianaevacuated approximately 1.5 million people before the storm made landfall. However, about150,000 to 200,000 individuals still remained during the storm (Hurricane Katrina). This tragedywas ranked as the costliest natural disaster in the U.S.

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    On August 29, 2005, early in the morning the Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast of the United States, with category 4 and winds of 240 kilometers per hour. Most of its 600,000 residents evacuated the city by the authorities 48 hours before the disaster and about 20,000 people mostly without resources were sheltered in the Superdome sports arena. The storm itself did a great deal of damage, but its aftermath was catastrophic. It produced a massive flooding by levee breaches, many people complained

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    impoverished and minorities are forced to figure out their own plan to recover from the natural disaster. Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, Louisiana and caused a myriad of issues with its residents. Some of the problems the impoverished and minorities faced were: evacuating New Orleans, homelessness, rebuilding, and unjust treatment from the government. Natural disasters, specifically Hurricane Katrina, cause a socioeconomic dichotomy between the lower class and the upper and leave the population in a

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