Hurricane Katrina Essay

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    suppose to have more opportunities. On August 23, 2005 Hurricane Katrina had hit American, soil leaving over millions of people without electricity, food, flooded homes and devastated love ones. On August 31, 2005 Katrina left American residents to depend on FEMA. Many people applied federal aid help, but very few received help. According to David Bellinger an Atlanta resident from New Orleans received help from federal aid because hurricane Katrina destroyed his home in New Orleans. Six years after

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    these patients were deemed to be considered in critical care, evident by the need of machines to provide, oxygen, other forms of life saving methods, and monitoring, which only lasted so long (Van Camp, 2014). Although the critical situation of Hurricane Katrina was such a severe issue in itself, leaving an extreme amount of devastation behind, another issue was brought to the surface (Van Camp, 2014). Despite some of the greatest efforts, some patients lost their lives. An evaluation carried out by

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    Hardy Historical Geography 14 December 2016 The Aftermath of Katrina On August 29, 2005, the third strongest storm ever documented in America, Hurricane Katrina, hit the coast of Louisiana at 125 miles per hour. However, the real horror came when the levees breached, causing New Orleans to fill up like a bathtub. Gary Rivlin discusses the racial, political, and geographical change of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in Katrina: After the Flood. Gary Rivlin is a journalist and author of five

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    suffered from one of the largest Hurricanes in history known as Katrina. In addition, other areas such as Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, where even affected. However New Orleans took a significant hit in regards to total destruction, death toll, and last but not least displacement of individuals forced out because of Katrina. Furthermore, I will also discuss reasons as to why some citizens of New Orleans did not build or use community resilience prior to Katrina. Plus how did the

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    In Chapter 12 the remains of the hurricane are brought to the surface. The community lost the nature that surrounds them and their families lives. Esch’s childhood was changed by this hurricane. Katrina brought the family together through the loss of possessions, which create a place to store your memories and sentimental items. Memories for Randall were physically taken away but not mentally. An acknowledgment and acceptance was brought to old situations with Esch and Daddy. Hope was shown through

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    Hurricane Katrina has been noted as one of the costliest and deadliest natural disasters in US history. This paper will exam the city of New Orleans and the preparation, response, and aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. This catastrophic event shaped the US disaster response and recovery system. The city of New Orleans is the most populated city in state of Louisiana. Due to the geographical location, the city was at a significant risk for flooding. New Orleans was originally settled on the natural

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    principles of argumentation. He uses ethos, which is the character of the speaker; he uses logos, which is an appeal based on logic or reason; and he uses pathos, which is an appeal based on emotions. His piece is over poverty and what came from Hurricane Katrina and the aftermath for the people. He also discusses what other events in history have contributed to poverty, and how nothing is being done about it by the government. He begins in part 1 using pathos, “ There they were on our television screens

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    The floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina marooned Memorial Medical Center in Uptown New Orleans [1]. Disaster struck leaving patients helpless, and doctors and nurses with confusion and stress. The article “Deadly Choices at Memorial” by Sheri Fink describes, in just the right amount of detail, the crisis that MMC faced because of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Although the article was able to state a few good things that were done by medics at the hospital, it mostly showed all of the flaws that exist in

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    Introduction 2 What is FEMA? 2 Three Major Divisions of FEMA 3 Three Activities of FEMA 5 Impact of Hurricane Katrina 6 1. Economic effects 6 2. Social effects 7 3. Environmental effects 7 Criticisms 8 The Strength of FEMA 11 1. Reduce the redundancies: 11 2. Disaster assistance 11 3. Various programs 12 The Weakness of FEMA 12 1. Vague role definition 12 2. Staffing problems 13 3. Problem with motivation 14 4. Absorption into DHS 14 5. Problematic strategies 16 6. Poor communication

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    Social Poverty

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    in a basic form. This carries on into numerous factors of life. One which I’m concentrating today is on the privilege of land, more so, on how the poor are exploited during extreme events. Take New Orleans, Louisiana during a hurricane for example: During 1965, Hurricane Betsy came into the gulf, destroying New Orleans. The residents of the community believed that the impoverished neighborhoods were purposely flooded due to a dam to keep nicer neighborhoods in tact. Apparently these allegations

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