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As we approach 20 years since Katrina, a reminder that it wasn't just New Orleans

Posted on 8/10/25 at 11:57 am
Posted by udtiger
Over your left shoulder
Member since Nov 2006
111930 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 11:57 am
South Mississippi got it much worse.

Posted by JohnnyKilroy
Cajun Navy Vice Admiral
Member since Oct 2012
40090 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 11:58 am to
Landmass
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
78737 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 11:59 am to
South Mississippi had more damage but got a head start on cleanup and recovery. Louisiana was trying to plug the breaks in the lever so it had an ongoing crisis.
Posted by Meauxjeaux
102836 posts including my alters
Member since Jun 2005
45568 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:01 pm to
One could make a case that Houston got it much worse.
Posted by vl100butch
Ridgeland, MS
Member since Sep 2005
36605 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:02 pm to
Mississippi also had a governor that didn't collapse before the storm hit AND didn't have a National Guard Brigade deployed in Iraq.
Posted by AncientTiger
Mississippi- Louisiana - Destin
Member since Sep 2016
1838 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:02 pm to
100%
I live in The Pass. 20 years after Katrina there are still beach front lots & acreage available.

Growth is exploding, our community is full of transplants from the NE. Not many from CA, yet.
Posted by Purple Spoon
Hoth
Member since Feb 2005
20112 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:07 pm to
Haley Barbour vs Kathleen Blanco

Yes it’s true that the water receded quickly and recovery was underway two three weeks sooner.

It’s also true that Barbour as well as the leadership in those south MS counties weren’t fricking around.

The biggest tragedy that came out of Katrina was the job performance of basically every single elected official in Louisiana
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
94638 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:09 pm to
While you're correct, on a superficial level, the problem we deal with is - the disaster on the Mississippi Coast was largely one of nature and, self-correcting. (What I mean by this is that the storm surge came in and then the storm surge went out.)

What happened in New Orleans was largely man-made and self-inflicted. My bonafides on that are:

1. I was in the Lower Ninth Ward when the storm came through,

2. I was at the Superdome from Monday evening through Labor Day after the storm passed, and

3. I participated in the relief efforts, in an active way, through December 31st, 2005

I want to wait until the anniversary and do a mini "AMA", but I can clarify things for you if you'd like.

(ETA: Another major difference was just the scope of the damage to New Orleans infrastructure, coupled with population density and other demographic factors combined to make New Orleans a much bigger humanitarian issue than experienced by the Mississippi Gulf Coast, who, admittedly, got the stronger edge of the storm - the eye passed directly over me, so I kind of have the big picture comfortably in mind.)
This post was edited on 8/10/25 at 12:13 pm
Posted by udtiger
Over your left shoulder
Member since Nov 2006
111930 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:13 pm to
quote:

While you're correct, on a superficial level, the problem we deal with is - the disaster on the Mississippi Coast was largely one of nature and, self-correcting. (What I mean by this is that the storm surge came in and then the storm surge went out.)

What happened in New Orleans was largely man-made and self-inflicted. My bonafides on that are:

1. I was in the Lower Ninth Ward when the storm came through,

2. I was at the Superdome from Monday evening through Labor Day after the storm passed, and

3. I participated in the relief efforts, in an active way, through December 31s, 2005

I want to wait until the anniversary and do a mini "AMA", but I can clarify things for you if you'd like.


I've been around long enough to know/remember your story.

I am not downplaying what happened to NO, but as you said, that was primarily a man made problem. I am speaking to the actual destruction/impact of the storm itself and bringing attention to the fact that easily 90% of national coverage (to the extent there is any) will be about NO.

The recovery of each area is also an interesting case study of population and government.
This post was edited on 8/10/25 at 12:16 pm
Posted by LSU82BILL
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Member since Sep 2006
10834 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:14 pm to
People forget it made landfall first in South Florida. Then we got hit worse by Hurricane Wilma 2 months later.
Posted by Aldo
Bay saint louis
Member since May 2017
197 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:15 pm to
I road Katrina out in Waveland, live in BSL now. I seem to remember able bodied folks in NOLA waiting for a government hand out, instead of helping themselves and neighbors.
That was not the case for the most part in the Bay/Waveland area.
Posted by TigersHuskers
Nebraska
Member since Oct 2014
14400 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:15 pm to
quote:

People forget it made landfall first in South Florida. Then we got hit worse by Hurricane Wilma 2 months later.


I remember early on Katrina was supposed to go into the panhandle
Posted by Tall Tiger
Golden Rectangle
Member since Sep 2007
4155 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:16 pm to
Unbelievable wall of water. Washed away entire parts of Cat and Ship Islands.

The coastal part along the highway looked like Hiroshima. We had property, and a boat in the PC harbor. All gone. Camille did the same thing.
Posted by Woobie
Member since Jan 2017
3250 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:17 pm to
quote:

AND didn't have a National Guard Brigade deployed in Iraq


this had nothing to do with the problems in nola
Posted by tigeraddict
Baton Rouge
Member since Mar 2007
14345 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:17 pm to
Had the flood walls not failed, Katrina would have been a MS hurricane. Remember initially there was no flooding in NO just a lot of blown out windows. It was a day or so later the walls failed.
Posted by pbro62
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2016
15169 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:18 pm to
Or Baton Rouge
Posted by Swagga
504
Member since Dec 2009
18424 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:18 pm to
quote:

I road Katrina out in Waveland, live in BSL now. I seem to remember able bodied folks in NOLA waiting for a government hand out, instead of helping themselves and neighbors. That was not the case for the most part in the Bay/Waveland area.



Yea man we all just sat around waiting for the government. Nvm that we weren’t even allowed into our city for weeks after.


This attitude is probably the thing that pisses me off more than any about Katrina. Were there people in New Orleans sitting around waiting for the govt? Sure. But this idea that people in New Orleans weren’t tough enough to pick themselves up is comical.
Posted by yakster
Member since Mar 2021
3392 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:20 pm to
Some things never change.
Posted by TheHarahanian
Actually not Harahan as of 6/2023
Member since May 2017
22773 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:20 pm to
The western side of the eyewall did a good job on my house in Slidell. Winds tore off most of the roof and much of the siding.

The 20something foot storm surge went up a canal from the lake and over the levee around my subdivision and filled it up like a bathtub. The ground was saturated for 3 days. Pine trees fell. Back yard fence fell.

I got 40 1/2 inches of water over the slab inside for the 3 days.

Took a year to restore the house. I sold it a year to the day following Katrina landfall, for about a 50% profit over what I paid 3 1/2 years earlier.
This post was edited on 8/10/25 at 3:02 pm
Posted by LSUGrad9295
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2007
36832 posts
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:24 pm to
quote:

One could make a case that Houston got it much worse


If we are going down that path, I nominate Baton Rouge as well.
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