News from Louisiana
Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2005 6:58 pm
Jesus, thank you for you kind telephone call. The voice mail recorded messages, but I could not access them until the electric power returned. Most of you may know more than I know about the storm.
Complaining about not having air conditioning is whimpy when many people endured great danger. I do not know how many people the storm killed. The worst damage seemed to be in Mississippi on the east side of the storm. The east side of hurricanes are worst than the west. That is because hurricanes move counter-clockwise.
Louisiana is a wonderful place with wonderful people. Most people here are acting in fine form. New Orleans is a complex society. The geography of New Orleans is, of course, unique. The crisis is less severe in New Orleans than what I anticiplated. I had read about this possible storm since 1978. It is one of several reasons why I did not want to live in New Orleans. I hope that we take time to plan a reduction in the size of the city and find ways to rebuild our marshlands.
The federal governement has finally begun to respond to the crisis in the city. Mississippi is where the primary damage is. That Mississippi coast is not as populated as New Orleans, but the damage I have seen on videos resembles damage in Baton Rouge in 1993 after Andrew passed west of here.
Our places such as Waveland seem much worse than Andrew.
One of the local reports covered Ochsner Hospital in Metairie. For many years, I lived within walking distance from Ochsner Hospital in Metairie. The hospital is above sea level. Seeing images of places I know well keeps surprising me.
I am exhausted from not doing anything but endure the sultriness. I cannot understand how people in New Orleans are functioning in their jobs in this heat.
The entire notion of transferring work to places outside the city amazes me. Think about how to teach children displaced by the storm. Parishes outside Orleans are hiring teachers from the city to teach students displaced by the storm. Some people told me today that they had cound apartments in Baton Rouge. One young woman said her apartment complex was destroyed but she had found a place. An attorney told me that his family had rented an apartment in Baton Rouge.
The River Center in Baton Rouge is next door to where I work. It is filled with refugees. Children are here without their parents. They do not know how to contact parents. The New Orleans Metropolitian Area had 1.3 million people.
The images of refugees shopping in the mall today seemed surreal. One woman told me she just wanted to know what she has and what she no longer has. You simply want to comfort the refugees.
I have sleep apnea which required that I sleep using a respirator. For that reason and that reason only, I am tired tonight. More later.
Jesus, again thank you.
Complaining about not having air conditioning is whimpy when many people endured great danger. I do not know how many people the storm killed. The worst damage seemed to be in Mississippi on the east side of the storm. The east side of hurricanes are worst than the west. That is because hurricanes move counter-clockwise.
Louisiana is a wonderful place with wonderful people. Most people here are acting in fine form. New Orleans is a complex society. The geography of New Orleans is, of course, unique. The crisis is less severe in New Orleans than what I anticiplated. I had read about this possible storm since 1978. It is one of several reasons why I did not want to live in New Orleans. I hope that we take time to plan a reduction in the size of the city and find ways to rebuild our marshlands.
The federal governement has finally begun to respond to the crisis in the city. Mississippi is where the primary damage is. That Mississippi coast is not as populated as New Orleans, but the damage I have seen on videos resembles damage in Baton Rouge in 1993 after Andrew passed west of here.
Our places such as Waveland seem much worse than Andrew.
One of the local reports covered Ochsner Hospital in Metairie. For many years, I lived within walking distance from Ochsner Hospital in Metairie. The hospital is above sea level. Seeing images of places I know well keeps surprising me.
I am exhausted from not doing anything but endure the sultriness. I cannot understand how people in New Orleans are functioning in their jobs in this heat.
The entire notion of transferring work to places outside the city amazes me. Think about how to teach children displaced by the storm. Parishes outside Orleans are hiring teachers from the city to teach students displaced by the storm. Some people told me today that they had cound apartments in Baton Rouge. One young woman said her apartment complex was destroyed but she had found a place. An attorney told me that his family had rented an apartment in Baton Rouge.
The River Center in Baton Rouge is next door to where I work. It is filled with refugees. Children are here without their parents. They do not know how to contact parents. The New Orleans Metropolitian Area had 1.3 million people.
The images of refugees shopping in the mall today seemed surreal. One woman told me she just wanted to know what she has and what she no longer has. You simply want to comfort the refugees.
I have sleep apnea which required that I sleep using a respirator. For that reason and that reason only, I am tired tonight. More later.
Jesus, again thank you.