The rain has started to fall.
Hmmm...down to 165 mph.
Not much comparing, but it's a start.
The rain has started to fall.
The Superdome is built to withstand 200MPH winds.
It is build solidly and build about 20 feet above street level. Below it are many levels of parking. It is also built to deflect wind, not to be pushed in by it. I think its going to be alright - aside from many many fights.
I don't gamble.They're going to need tens of thousands of body bags in New Orleans, and you're ing about your gambling trip.
Sad.
And these people had plenty of warning to get out of town.
Alot of people don't have the means to get out of town! No transportation or anything!
Look at the other threads. ~100,000 people in NO have no form of transportation.
What about tourists that cant rent cars and canat fly out?
Poor people?
Disabled people?
Again...And these people had plenty of warning to get out of town.
1. They didn't have NO pegged until yesterday
2. There's lots of homeless/poor who have no means of getting out.
Quit being such a .
But they also have known since Thursday this monster was coming!!!also means give me a ing ride outta here!!!
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Exactly. If you're motivated enough to get out and not potentially die, then you will.All I know is that if I was leaving town, and if I had room in a vehicle for people, I woudl find SOMEBODY to take. I couldn't fathom leaving other people behind.
It's all about motivation. But I do understand, there are a few that absolutely can't get out.
It's a no-win situation for everyone.
Damn, it just occurred to me - this thing could spin the entire US economy into a recession, between the loss of oil production/refineries to the loss of a major US port for sometime.
The national guard is using the dome as a staging area as well. Should have decent security -- I hope everyone cen find some shelter. Could be horrible if folks are turned away. I'd break into an office building in that case I guess.
You are soooooooo right!! I filled up both cars today at 2.47 a gal. Wonder what it will be manana??![]()
Ouch!! I've been called worse.Quit being such a .
But why do 99.999% of the posters here always resort to name calling if their opinions are challenged?
Having warning and a means are 2 different things.
All I know is that if I was leaving town, and if I had room in a vehicle for people, I woudl find SOMEBODY to take. I couldn't fathom leaving other people behind.thats awsome. Thats awesome...in fact I'd like you to move next door to me 'casue in case of an emergency I'd most likely need a ride.
unfortunatly most people get the "me 1st" at ude in situatutions like this and will even other people over to make them selves just >< that much safer.......it;s sad.
They were talking about this earlier on FoxNews. They were saying supposedly there is a stash the president could tap into that covers the amount of production the Gulf does in a year, I think... It's only supposed to be tapped in a case of production being disruppted. This would proubably make a strong case for it. I suggest people fill up today if you can.
but NOLA has been bascailly right in the middle of the cone since thursday.
And it has only been a cat5 since today.
Cat3 is no problem, but it wasnt expected to get this strong.
I brought that up earluer, overnight it skipped pass 4 right to 5
New Orleans braces for 'the big one'
NEW ORLEANS, Louisiana (CNN) -- A solemn New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin ordered mandatory evacuations Sunday as his city faced its worst fear -- the threat of a direct hit from a major hurricane that could swamp the low-lying city.
By mid-morning Sunday, Katrina was a Category 5 hurricane with maximum sustained winds near 175 mph. It was expected to make landfall Monday morning. Category 5 is the most intense category on the Saffir-Simpson scale of intensity. (Full story)
Officials are particularly concerned about New Orleans because about 70 percent of the city is below sea level.
The city essentially sits in a bowl, protected by a series of levies that keep the Mississippi River waters out.
Nagin warned that Katrina's expected storm surge -- which could top 28 feet -- would likely topple those levies.
"We are facing a storm that most of us have feared," Nagin said. "I don't want to create panic, but I do want the citizens to understand that this is very serious, and it is of the highest nature."
Nagin said the city's shelters should be used as a last resort and said that people who use them should bring enough food, water and supplies to last for several days. He said that the Superdome, the city's main shelter, "is not going to be a very comfortable place at some point in time."
"The shelters will end up probably without electricity or with minimum electricity from generators in the end," Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco said. "There may be intense flooding that will be not in our control which would be ultimately the most dangerous situation that many of our people could face."
Residents who had delayed their departure -- some not quite believing that Katrina could be the storm New Orleans authorities have always called "the Big One" -- jammed Interstate 10 westbound, prompting Blanco to urge evacuees to go north.
In worst-case scenarios, most of New Orleans would end up under 15 feet of water, without electricity, clean water and sewage for as long as six months. Even pumping the water out could take as long as four months to get started because the massive pumps that would do the job would be underwater.
Nagin also cautioned that the port of New Orleans handles much of the nation's oil transportation, meaning that an interruption in operations could have "a significant impact on the cost of oil." (Full storyexternal link)
He said it would likely take weeks for the city to return to any semblance of normalcy if the worst comes to pass. Federal Emergency Management Agency teams and other emergency teams were already in place to move in as soon as the storm was over, FEMA Under Secretary Michael Brown said.
New Orleans, a city of nearly half a million with a metropolitan area population of 1.3 million, dodged a bullet in 1998 when a Category 2 Hurricane Georges had a last minute change of route and made landfall near Biloxi, Mississippi. But Georges was close enough to push the Mississippi River to within one foot of the top of the levees between the river and the city.
The last hurricane to score a direct hit on New Orleans was Hurricane Betsy, a Category 2 with 105 mph winds when it came ashore in 1965. Betsy killed more than 70 people, its storm surge overflowing the levees and reaching the eaves of many buildings.
The levees are higher now, but Katrina is a stronger storm -- as strong as 1969's Hurricane Camille, which grazed New Orleans when it came ashore in Mississippi and killed more than 250 people.
"After Betsy these levies were designed for a Category 3," said Sheriff Jeff Hingle of Placquemines Parish, just southeast of New Orleans. "You're now looking at a Category 5. You're looking at a storm that is as strong as Camille was, but bigger than Betsy was size-wise. These levies will not hold the water back. So we're urging people to leave. You're looking at these levies having 10 feet of water over the top of them easily."
Two category 4 storms, in 1909 and 1915, each killed hundreds in the area, and 1964's Hurricane Hilda killed 38.
But the deadliest storm to hit southeastern Louisiana was an unnamed storm in 1893 that killed an estimated 2,000 people.
But if I let other people in my car, where will I put by fondue set?
Are you on dope or dogfood???Cat3 is no problem![]()
take out the sticks and wear it like a hat.. i hear the metal should also prevent aliens from reading your brainwaves.....
Ivan was Cat 3 and NO survived that
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