I've seen some satellite photos of New Orleans as of this morning...It's Lake New Orleans.
Figure 1-2 weeks to get the levee patched, then a few months to pump out all the water... whomever said 90 days to clear the city of water was assuming there was electricity to use the New Orleans Lift stations: there is none to be had. Also, many of the lift water entries will be clogged with debris.
It's going to get worse, far worse, before it gets better. They may well end up condemning the city.
Generators are still in short supply worldwide because of the Tsunamis in Asia, and last year's Hurricane season. This situation will continue probably well into 2007.
At work, we've sent down all the of portable RX's and Emergency supply stores (they literally are run from a semi-trailer), and are building more. We built several of these for the Florida Hurricanes, and they are being put to good use again. My understanding is that bottled water and ice at most of these locations is to be freely given, though it may be rationed to discourage hoarding. These locations are already accepting Red Cross Vouchers. Our infrastructure was hit fairly hard in the region: we have all of the DCs running as of today at varying degrees of capacity: Fortunately for Louisiana we have several DCs that were not hit and are adjusting routes to make up for lost capacity and to increase total capacity to the disaster areas. I've said it before: the real secret of the company I work for is it's unmatched logistics. We were moving needed goods to within 8 hours driving time for the areas projected to be impacted by Katrina 5 days ahead of time, and that move is going to end up saving lives.
Figure 1-2 weeks to get the levee patched, then a few months to pump out all the water... whomever said 90 days to clear the city of water was assuming there was electricity to use the New Orleans Lift stations: there is none to be had. Also, many of the lift water entries will be clogged with debris.
It's going to get worse, far worse, before it gets better. They may well end up condemning the city.
Generators are still in short supply worldwide because of the Tsunamis in Asia, and last year's Hurricane season. This situation will continue probably well into 2007.
At work, we've sent down all the of portable RX's and Emergency supply stores (they literally are run from a semi-trailer), and are building more. We built several of these for the Florida Hurricanes, and they are being put to good use again. My understanding is that bottled water and ice at most of these locations is to be freely given, though it may be rationed to discourage hoarding. These locations are already accepting Red Cross Vouchers. Our infrastructure was hit fairly hard in the region: we have all of the DCs running as of today at varying degrees of capacity: Fortunately for Louisiana we have several DCs that were not hit and are adjusting routes to make up for lost capacity and to increase total capacity to the disaster areas. I've said it before: the real secret of the company I work for is it's unmatched logistics. We were moving needed goods to within 8 hours driving time for the areas projected to be impacted by Katrina 5 days ahead of time, and that move is going to end up saving lives.
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