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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather- |
Isaac Threat Looms Large for New Orleans |
2012-08-26 |
![]() As the large and strengthening system crossed waters with temperatures of 86 degrees or greater Sunday, forecasts called for the storm to make landfall along the Gulf coast late Tuesday or early Wednesday as a powerful Category 2 storm with winds of speeds up to 110 mph. Isaac is likely to be the first significant hurricane to make landfall along the Gulf coast since Hurricane Gustav struck south central Louisiana near Cocodrie on Sept. 1, 2008. Wednesday marks the seventh anniversary of the day Katrina struck New Orleans and nearby Louisiana parishes, causing massive flooding and billions of dollars in damages. "We've been watching those models like everybody else, and we're very concerned. Any westward shift changes things greatly for us," said Ken Graham, meteorologist in the New Orleans office of the National Weather Service. Graham said the current track of the storm could mean 6 feet of water with the tides along the Mississippi coast. If the track shifts left and more directly toward New Orleans, "now we're talking a whole lot of additional water," Graham said. "We have low water flow in the Mississippi River, which is a different situation for us. You can actually have storm surges up the river," he said. Graham said the levees in New Orleans are stronger than they were when Katrina hit in 2005."I've toured those levees, they look pretty good," he said. "They're going to do their best to hold back the water we get." |
Posted by:tu3031 |
#7 From the Weather Nerd... In a bizarrely low-key press conference that seemed more focused on calming residents’ “anxiety” and vaguely telling them to “be prepared” (and then making of a series of mundane announcements about municipal matters like trash collection and parking restrictions) than on advising them to take specific, concrete steps commensurate to the risk of a possibly major hurricane potentially making a direct hit on America’s most hurricane-vulnerable city starting in about 48 hours, New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu did his best Ray Nagin impression Sunday, announcing a no-evacuation, “shelter in place” plan that suggests a stunning level of confidence that a worst-case scenario won’t happen, at a time when it remains, meteorologically speaking, very much in play. The possibility that residents would be “sheltering in place” in a “place” the could, in the worst-case scenario, be swallowed up by the Gulf of Mexico, was not mentioned. |
Posted by: tu3031 2012-08-26 21:51 |
#6 Misery's comin to town... |
Posted by: Nimble Spemble 2012-08-26 21:00 |
#5 Re: Jindal, if the damage isn't too great (i.e if he could spare the time) he could be videoed in to the convention. |
Posted by: lotp 2012-08-26 20:40 |
#4 With a Democratic media carrying water for the PResident any problems will strictly be local ones. The Mayor should understand that and be a bit more prepared. |
Posted by: rjschwarz 2012-08-26 20:18 |
#3 Hey, what could go wrong? |
Posted by: Ray Nagin 2012-08-26 18:44 |
#2 Jindal is on record that he'll stay back in La to tend to the state/New Orleans and blow off any scheduled speaking gig at the convention. That speaks more about him than a convention speech |
Posted by: Frank G 2012-08-26 17:17 |
#1 "Fool me twice, shame on me." |
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 2012-08-26 17:04 |