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oggbashan said:The UK used to have a Civil Defence organisation largely staffed by volunteers. It has been abolished.
We used to have a Territorial Army, fairly numerous, locally based, mainly staffed by volunteers. It has been turned into a very much smaller low-cost substitute for regular troops and some units are in Iraq. Just like the US's National Guard.
Although we have never had anything like New Orleans, I think we would be equally incompetent in our first responses because the command structures and organisation no longer exist. Locally, riverine flooding in recent years showed a lack of the basics including sandbags and an inadequate distribution system. Home owners were collecting empty bags and filling them from their gardens - if they could get through the floods to the bag store.
We have the supplies. We have the transport. We DON'T have the people. Those trained for disaster relief are very few and have no resources to call on beyond themselves.
Og
Sub Joe said:As I posted on the first day after the flooding, the real shock to me is to see the level of poverty is in the U.S. It really is pretty disgusting, like looking in a kitchen of a fancy restaurant and seeing all the cockroaches.
The US a fundamentally a land where greed is the norm, with a real problem when it comes to welfare. Although the UK is not what it used to be, I think it's pretty clear that Britain and much of Europe has a far stronger tradition of government repsonsibility for state welfare .
dr_mabeuse said:Over the last 20 years politicians have done a great job of sweeping poverty under the rug and turning greed and selfishness into a civic virtue.
What do we think?popcorn2721 said:The mayor of N.O. says could be as many as 10,000 dead....what do you guys think?
LadyJeanne said:That water that's being pumped out of NO, that water reporters have described as a toxic soup of chemicals and oil and ickiness, is that being pumped back into Lake Pontchartrain??
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Does anyone know?
LadyJeanne said:That water that's being pumped out of NO, that water reporters have described as a toxic soup of chemicals and oil and ickiness, is that being pumped back into Lake Pontchartrain??
![]()
Does anyone know?
cantdog said:Even a small "disaster," enough to temporarily swamp local resources, means no one gets to expect treatment as usual. That is, the waiting times and the way triage is done have to change. This one, as everyone has noticed, is big. What that means is that no one will be able to grab a phone an 911 up and ambulance in under a half hour. Waits will be long. Triage will be radically different: walking wounded may have long long waits, even after someone manages to hook them up with a treatment facility. The difficulties we've seen with communication, where available help has no where specific to go because no one locally to them has knowledge of a site with needs? These things are entirely typical where part ofd the problem is that the communications systems are compromised.
Not every such case, by far, is the result of unclear chains of command, or any incompetence. It is usually the ordinary concomitant of chaos.
shereads said:Today we were promised "accountability" by the same president who promised that anyone in the White House connected with the outing of Valerie Plame would be held accountable. In this case, he has promised to head the investigation himself. Since he's the person whose lack of concern was so clearly evident when he attended a fundraising dinner the night of the storm, how qualfied is he to determine who is and is not accountable in "the blame game" he's been so reluctant to undertake?
cantdog said:Weird Harold says a few snipers cost 48 hours. Damn. Once we knew where there were snipers, having a few thousand National Guard Iraq vets on hand, what the hell is everything taking 48 hours for? Those snipers don't have the vests and the automatic weapons the Guard and the SWAT people do. Does SWAT training tell you never stand in water to do SWAT work? Or were all the SWATs and Guards on the Texas side of the river?
Now what?
Every city and town in Louisiana that wasn't blasted by the hurricane is full of evacuees. Then there are the tens of thousands in Texas and the multitudes scattered across neighboring states. Their host communities have the best of intentions, but many won't be able to stand the added drain on resources indefinitely. Where will these people go? Why wasn't there a plan?
That's when I start my finger-pointing, because a few days in and around this ground zero have convinced me that there are two things the federal government failed to do, and that for these failures there's ultimately no one to blame but the president.
First, an administration that since Sept. 11, 2001, has told us a major terrorist strike is inevitable should have had in place a well-elaborated plan for evacuating a major American city. Even if there wasn't a specific plan for New Orleans -- although it was clear that a breach of the city's levees was one of the likeliest natural catastrophes -- there should have been a generic plan. George W. Bush told us time and again that our cities were threatened. Shouldn't he have ordered up a plan to get people out?
Second, someone should have thought about what to do with hundreds of thousands of evacuees, both in the days after a disaster and in the long term. As people flooded out of New Orleans, it was officials at the state and local level who rose to the challenge, making it up as they went along. Bring a bunch of people to the Astrodome. We have a vacant hotel that we can use. Send a hundred or so down to our church and we'll do the best we can.
Tent cities aren't a happy option, but neither is haphazard improvisation. Is the problem the Bush administration's ideological fervor for small government? Does the White House really believe that primary responsibility should fall on volunteers, church groups and individuals? Or is it just stunning incompetence and lack of foresight?
At the big shelter here in Baton Rouge on Sunday, some student volunteers from Louisiana State University took a group of children outside to get some air. The kids were using sheets of cardboard as sleds and surfboards, zooming down the grassy levee next to the Mississippi River and then scampering back uphill for another ride. It was a beautiful, sunny day, and the scene warmed your heart. But those college students are going to have to go back to their classes, and then how will those kids from New Orleans spend their days?
eugenerobinson@washpost.com
Couture said:It has to go somewhere. And better there than in the streets.
There have been several lakes and waterways that have been incredibly contamintated. Luckily, nature is pretty efficient at breaking down that nasty ickiness.
LadyJeanne said:Even if they were on the Texas side, journalists were using I-90 and the bridge to drive into NO from the west side of the River. Not to mention, don't those people train to parachute into situations?
Mayhap they were busy with Mr. Rehnquist?shereads said:Entertainer Harry Connick Jr. ("the closest thing to a statesman on the ground in New Orleans last week," according to a Wash. Post columnist, was able to arrive in New Orleans after learning of the disaster, tour downtown, deliver a small supply of food and water, and visit the convention center while federal officials were still claming there was no way to get to the refugees.
An NBC crew leaving the city saw a parade of 18-wheelers from Walmart entering the city to bring donated supplies. While the feds were still claiming access to the city was limited.
Limited to whom?
shereads said:A system to pre-clean the water is one of the smart things that might have been done during the decade that this disaster was accurately predicted.
In Florida, where we are officially warned not to consume fish caught in the Everglades, and where the coral reefs are being covered with algae nourished by fertilizer run-off, there's no evidence that bodies of water clean themselves of contamination.
shereads said:Entertainer Harry Connick Jr. ("the closest thing to a statesman on the ground in New Orleans last week," according to a Wash. Post columnist, was able to arrive in New Orleans after learning of the disaster, tour downtown, deliver a small supply of food and water, and visit the convention center while federal officials were still claming there was no way to get to the refugees.
An NBC crew leaving the city saw a parade of 18-wheelers from Walmart entering the city to bring donated supplies. While the feds were still claiming access to the city was limited.
Limited to whom?