Tag Archives: Hurricane Katrina

Column: Playing politics with crisis is inevitable

Hours after the Boston Marathon bombings, President Barack Obama gave the standard presidential line following a tragedy: “On days like this there are no Republicans or Democrats — we are Americans, united in concern for our fellow citizens.”

And, as usual, Republicans and Democrats alike quickly ignored his don’t-politicize-this plea.

This was inevitable.

Our leaders always play politics after catastrophe, whether made by man or Mother Nature. The Newtown shootings and Superstorm Sandy. The financial crisis and Hurricane Katrina. Our history is filled with moments when something big happens and elected officials maneuver quickly to take advantage of the changing public mindset — or at least the more intense media spotlight — on a specific issue.

Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt and Congress leveraged public angst over the Depression and a worldwide war in the 1930s to enact the New Deal, overhauling financial systems, funding public works projects and creating Social Security. Some three decades later, Lyndon B. Johnson and his Democrats seized on social unrest to pass the Great Society, anti-poverty and civil rights measures, education and transportation initiatives, Medicare and Medicaid.

During the 1980s, Ronald Reagan and his GOP used the moment of sky-high inflation and a growing Soviet threat to win support for boosting the military, trimming government and cutting taxes. And, in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, Republican George W. Bush rallied a fearful America behind expanding the government‘s terrorist-tracking powers, streamlining intelligence gathering and toppling Saddam Hussein.

Most recently, when he took office amid the worst economic conditions in a generation, Obama saw an opportunity to advance an audacious agenda that included ending the costly war in Iraq, improving crumbling transportation arteries and overhauling the health care system. As his first chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, was fond of saying back then: “You never want a serious crisis to go to waste.”

A gray area exists in all cases.

To some people, politicians who press for new legislation after a tragedy are seizing the perfect time to make needed changes, using typically fleeting we-are-one moments to reach consensus on an issue that long had been languishing behind more pressing priorities or struggling to get the necessary votes. To other people, these politicians are exploiting a tragedy in a blatant attempt to enact their pet, partisan policies.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Google Maps Out Emergency Alert System

By Rich Duprey, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

In an emergency situation, you’re likely to get more valuable, reliable, and up-to-date information off of social media like Twitter and Facebook then you’ll get out of FEMA, Homeland Security, or any other number of disaster relief organizations. The hashtag #Sandy was among the top trending topics on Twitter as the hurricane barreled into the East Coast, with residents posting the latest news, pictures, and information along its path.

With hundreds of millions of “boots on the ground,” so to speak, social media provides virtually live updates of what’s happening and how bad things really are in a disaster.

Where to go when disaster strikes
Last year, Google also greatly expanded its alert system ahead of Sandy, launching “crisis maps” showing the storm’s path and providing emergency information, such as evacuation routes, the location of public shelters, and live pictures of the storm.

Source: Google.

Now it’s taking it further by rolling out a system that displays alerts from police agencies all across the U.S.

Hyperventilating over hyperlocal
Partnering with a small start-up called Nixie, a New Jersey-based community information service that alerts you to public safety threats and community events via web, email, and cell phone, Google on Friday tapped into the company’s hyperlocal database of 6,500 police agencies to begin displaying alerts when someone searches for a place that has an active alert or uses Google in an area with an active alert.

Beginning with Hurricane Katrina in 2005 when it created satellite imagery overlays of the devastation in the affected region accurately showing the scope of the disaster — which EMS workers used to help find stranded survivors — Google has been expanding its “National Weather Service, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to display warnings issued by the agencies on its maps. Google has since added the Japan Meteorological Agency and AMBER alerts for missing children.

Have your bug-out bag at the ready
Alternative news outlets have been undermining the foundations of traditional media for years now. With social media and the Internet quickly supplanting the TV networks as place to turn to to get immediate information when disaster strikes, Google’s crisis response alert system makes it even harder to extricate ourselves from its web.

Now when it all hits the fan, you’ll be able to map out how you’ll be able to make it to your bug-out location in safety.

As one of the most dominant Internet companies ever, Google has made a habit of driving strong returns for its shareholders. However, like many other web companies, it’s also struggling to adapt to an increasingly mobile world. Despite gaining an enviable lead with its Android operating system, the market isn’t sold. That’s why it’s more important than ever to understand each piece of Google’s sprawling empire. In The Motley Fool’s new premium research report on Google, we break down the risks and potential rewards …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Tenfold increase in hurricane frequency this century, researcher predicts

By examining the frequency of extreme storm surges in the past, previous research has shown that there was an increasing tendency for storm hurricane surges when the climate was warmer. But how much worse will it get as temperatures rise in the future? How many extreme storm surges like that from Hurricane Katrina, which hit the U.S. coast in 2005, will there be as a result of global warming? New research from the Niels Bohr Institute show that there will be a tenfold increase in frequency if the climate becomes two degrees Celcius warmer. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Serious Stressors: Natural And Financial Disasters Lead To Widespread Health Woes

By Alice G. Walton, Contributor

The fact that chronic stress, whether psychological or physiological, can lead to serious health problems has long been appreciated. In this vein, two new studies, to be presented at the American College of Cardiology’s 62nd Annual Scientific Session, show that the significant psychological stress that comes of natural disasters – like Hurricane Katrina – or financial meltdowns – like Greece’s – can significantly affect the heart health of entire populations. And the effects can be felt even years after the disasters occur. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Shards of south Louisiana's ancient history found

By BronxKnight

An archaeological project arising out of Hurricane Katrina‘s floods has turned up bits of pottery fired about 1,300 years before the first French colonists slogged into south Louisiana swamps.

The project also has turned up artifacts from later Native Americans, Spanish and American fortifications, as well as a hotel and amusement park near the mouth of Bayou St. John, once an important route from Lake Pontchartrain to New Orleans….

Source:
WashExam

Source URL:
http://washingtonexaminer.com/shards-of-south-louisianas-ancient-history-found/article/feed/2074334?custom_click=rss

Date:
2-23-13

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

First witness testifies in BP Gulf oil spill trial

BP failed to implement a new safety plan on the ill-fated Deepwater Horizon drilling rig even though the company realized a blowout in the Gulf of Mexico was its greatest danger, an expert witness for people and businesses suing the company testified Tuesday.

University of California-Berkeley engineering professor Robert Bea was the first witness at a civil trial to determine how much more BP and other companies should pay for the spill. Bea said BP PLC didn’t implement a two-year-old safety management program on the rig that exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

“It’s a classic failure of management and leadership in BP,” said Bea, a former BP consultant who also investigated the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill and New Orleans levee breaches after Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

The London-based company has said its “Operating Management System” was designed to drive a rigorous and systematic approach to safety and risk management. Yet it was only implemented at one of the seven rigs the company owned or leased in the Gulf.

Bea said it was “tragic” and “egregious” that BP didn’t apply its own safety program to the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig before the Macondo well blowout triggered the explosion that killed 11 workers and spawned the massive spill. Transocean owned the rig; BP leased it.

A plaintiffs’ lawyer who questioned Bea showed him a transcript of a deposition of Tony Hayward, who was BP‘s CEO at the time of the disaster. Hayward was asked if the deadly April 20, 2010, blowout could have been averted if BP had implemented the safety management program in the Gulf.

“There is possible potential,” Hayward responded. “Undoubtedly.”

Bea said BP‘s “culture of every dollar counts” was reflected in a May 2009 email sent by BP well team leader John Guide: “The DW Horizon embraced every dollar matters since I arrived 18 months ago,” Guide wrote. “We have saved BP millions and no one had to tell us.”

In a report prepared for the trial, Bea concluded that BP‘s “process safety failures” were a cause of the blowout.

“Financially, BP had the resources to effectively put into place a process safety system that could have prevented the Macondo disaster,” Bea said.

Bea said he had warned BP management several years before the Gulf rig explosion that “culture is key” to the company’s ability to operate safely. Bea said the company didn’t heed his warnings.

“You still don’t get it,” he recalled telling BP officials in 2007. “You have not implemented any recommendations. Process safety is deadly serious, and you’ve turned it into a traveling roadshow.”

Lawyers for BP and other companies involved in the ill-fated drilling project will question Bea later Monday.

Bea’s testimony opened the second day of a civil trial that could result in BP and its partners being forced to pay billions of dollars more in damages. The case went to trial Monday after attempts to reach an 11th-hour settlement failed.

The second witness slated to appear is Lamar McKay, president of BP America, but it wasn’t clear if there would be time for his …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

1st witness to testify in Gulf oil spill trial

FILE - Oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill floats on the water as the sky is reflected in sheen on Barataria Bay, off the coast of Louisiana, in this June, 7, 2010 file photo. A high-stakes trial to assign blame and help figure out exactly how much more BP and other companies should pay for the spill began Monday, Feb. 25, 2013. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A University of California-Berkeley engineer who played a prominent role in investigating levee breeches in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina is scheduled to be the first witness Tuesday at a trial involving another Gulf Coast catastrophe: the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business

Ex-La. official gets jail for giving wife fake job

A judge imposed a sentence of nearly four years for the ex-president of a populous New Orleans parish best known for sobbing during a nationally televised interview during Hurricane Katrina‘s chaotic aftermath.

Former Jefferson Parish President Aaron Broussard will serve 46 months and pay a $280,000 fine for a payroll fraud scheme that also involved his wife. A federal judge also ordered Broussard to return $66,000 in bribery money and make restitution to Jefferson Parish.

The populist Democrat pleaded guilty to conspiracy and theft charges in September.

He resigned as parish president in 2010, ending a career of four decades in politics.

Broussard and another man were charged with plotting to give a lucrative parish job to Karen Parker, Broussard’s wife, for work she never performed.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Conviction overturned in Alabama bridge deaths

An Alabama appeals court has thrown out the 2009 conviction and death sentence of a Vietnamese immigrant tried for killing four small children by tossing them off a coastal bridge, ruling that publicity surrounding the case made it impossible for the suspect to have a fair trial in Mobile where the crime occurred.

The Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals ordered a new trial for Lam Luong, whose wife testified he laughed when he told her their children — whose ages ranged from 3 years to just 4 months — would never be found. Alabama’s attorney general could appeal the ruling to the state Supreme Court.

The case of Luong, a part-time shrimp boat worker, took odd twists that made headlines right up to the start of his trial. Days before jury selection, Luong said he wanted to plead guilty but he ended up withdrawing that decision. The trial judge denied requests by Luong’s defense lawyers to move the trial outside of Mobile County.

“It is clear that publicity surrounding the murders completely saturated the Mobile community in 2008. A great deal of that publicity was prejudicial,” the appeals court said in its ruling Friday. “… Luong was denied his constitutional right to an impartial jury. Therefore, we must reverse Luong’s convictions and sentence of death and remand this case for a new trial.”

Mobile County District Attorney Ashley Rich and a spokeswoman for state Attorney General Luther Strange did not immediately return phone calls Saturday.

Greg Hughes, Luong’s lead defense attorney, applauded the decision.

“Maybe this will save his life,” Hughes said. “I don’t know how this will come out down the road. But he’s certainly better off than he was.”

At the trial, Hughes told jurors that Luong was on drugs in January 2008 when he threw the children from the Dauphin Island bridge into the Mississippi Sound more than 80 feet below. Three of the children were Luong’s while the other was his wife’s from a prior relationship.

The bodies of all four — Ryan Phan, 3, Hannah Luong, 2, Lindsey Luong, 1, and Danny Luong, 4 months — were later recovered along the coasts of Alabama, Mississippi and even Louisiana, where Hannah’s body was found 144 miles from the bridge. Autopsies found the children were all alive when they were tossed off the bridge.

Their mother, Kieu Phan, testified at Luong’s trial that their relationship soured when they moved from Alabama after Hurricane Katrina demolished Bayou La Batre on Aug. 31, 2005, and relocated to Hinesville, Georgia. She said Luong had begun using crack cocaine and had a girlfriend, so she moved with her children to Mobile. Luong followed and had been unable to find work, she testified.

The Alabama appeals court ruled that the trial judge should have allowed Luong’s attorneys to individually question jurors about their knowledge of the case before the trial. The appeals judges said 139 out of 156 prospective jurors who completed questionnaires for jury selection said they had heard about the case — and 38 of those said they had heard …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Official: Joe Flacco wins C7 Corvette along with MVP honors

By Jeremy Korzeniewski

Filed under: , , , , ,

Super Bowl MVP Joe Flacco and his 2014 Chevrolet Corvette prize

As part of a longstanding tradition, the MVP of Super Bowl XLVII, Joe Flacco, quarterback for the Baltimore Ravens, was given a new car directly after the game and trophy celebrations. For 2013, that car is a 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray, and it was presented to Flacco by Rick Flick of Banner Chevrolet, a dealership in New Orleans that was wiped out by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 before returning to prominence as the only Chevy dealer in Orleans Parish.

Last year, Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning took home a 2012 Corvette GS Centennial Edition. Manning also won in 2008, when he selected a Cadillac Escalade Hybrid as his reward. In 2011, quarterback Aaron Rodgers accepted the keys to a Camaro convertible.

Though we’re most definitely an auto-obsessed group, we did watch the Big Game along with nearly everyone else in America. And we’ve gotta say, as if winning the Super Bowl and receiving the Tiffany-designed Pete Rozelle Trophy wasn’t enough for the multi-millionaire MVP athletes, a brand-new C7 seems like an awfully generous prize. Scroll down below for an official announcement from General Motors.

Continue reading Joe Flacco wins C7 Corvette along with MVP honors

Joe Flacco wins C7 Corvette along with MVP honors originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 04 Feb 2013 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Super Bowl? Inside the Blacked-Out Superdome, It Was the Surreal Bowl

By Randall Lane, Forbes Staff NEW ORLEANS — The first Super Bowl in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina, held at the Mercedes Benz Superdome, a building constructed for football, made infamous as a shelter for the city’s drenched refugees in 2005 and now named for a luxury German car company, was already full of imagery and paradoxes.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Details emerge about Alabama suspect as hostage standoff goes into seventhh day

A close-knit Alabama community has blanketed their town with fliers imploring people to pray for a boy held hostage for almost seven days, as authorities release new details on the man allegedly holding him in an underground bunker.

Authorities say 65-year-old Jimmy Lee Dykes, a decorated veteran of the Vietnam War, gunned down a school bus driver and then abducted a 5-year-old boy from the bus, taking him to the bunker on his rural property.

On Sunday, more than 500 people paid final tribute to the driver, 66-year-old Charles Albert Poland Jr., hailing him as a hero for protecting the other children on the bus.

Dykes, described as a loner who railed against the government, lives up a dirt road outside this tiny hamlet north of Dothan in the southeast corner of the state. His home is just off the main road north to the state capital of Montgomery, about 80 miles away.

The FBI said in a statement Sunday that authorities continue to have an open line of communication with Dykes and that they planned to deliver to the bunker additional comfort items such as food, toys and medicine. They also said Dykes was making the child as comfortable as possible.

Government records and interviews with neighbors indicate that Dykes grew up in the Dothan area and joined the Navy in Midland City, serving on active duty from 1964 to 1969. His record shows several awards, including the Vietnam Service Medal and the Good Conduct Medal. During his service, Dykes was trained in aviation maintenance.

Later, Dykes lived in Florida, where he worked as a surveyor and a long-haul truck driver although it’s unclear how long.

He had some scrapes with the law there, including a 1995 arrest for improper exhibition of a weapon. The misdemeanor was dismissed. He also was arrested for marijuana possession in 2000.

He returned to Alabama about two years ago, moving onto the rural tract about 100 yards from his nearest neighbors, Michael Creel and his father, Greg.

Neighbors described Dykes as a man who once beat a dog to death with a lead pipe, threatened to shoot children for setting foot on his property, and patrolled his yard at night with a flashlight and a firearm. Michael Creel said Dykes had an adult daughter, but the two lost touch years ago.

The Dykes property has a white trailer which, according to Creel, Dykes said he bought from FEMA after it was used to house evacuees from Hurricane Katrina. The property also has a steel shipping container — like those on container ships — in which Dykes stores tools and supplies.

Next to the container is the underground bunker where authorities say Dykes is holed up with the 5-year-old. Neighbors say that the bunker has a pipe so Dykes could hear people coming near his driveway. Authorities have been using the ventilation pipe to communicate with him.

The younger Creel, who said he helped Dykes with supplies to build the bunker and has been in it twice, said Dykes wanted protection from hurricanes.

“He said he lived in Florida and had hurricanes hit. He wanted someplace he could go down in and be safe,” Creel said. Authorities say the bunker is about 6 feet by 8 feet, and the only entrance is a trap door at the top.

Such bunkers are not uncommon in rural Alabama because of the threat of tornadoes.

Greg Creel was a friend of Dykes, but he said he would not comment for The Associated Press. “I will only talk to the police and the FBI,” he said.

Michael Creel said Dykes kept to himself and listened a lot to conservative talk radio.

“He was very into what’s going on with the nation and the politics and all the laws being made. The things he didn’t agree with, he would ventilate,” he said.

James Arrington, police chief of the neighboring town of Pinckard, put it differently.

“He’s against the government, starting with Obama on down,” he said.

Morris Dees of Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, a group that tracks hate crimes, said Dykes was not on the group’s radar.

Although the fatal shootings in December at a school in Newtown, Conn., are still on everyone’s mind, Dees said he doesn’t think Dykes was trying to be a copycat.

“Probably not. He had a whole bus load full of kids, and he could have walked up there and shot the whole crowd of them,” he said.

“I think he’s just a really angry and bitter guy with some anger management issues,” Dees said. “He is just against everything — the government and his neighbors.”

The mother of the 5-year-old boy is ‘hanging on by a thread,’ said a local politician who visited the woman.

State Rep. Steve Clouse, who represents the Midland City area, said the mother told him that the boy has Asperger’s syndrome as well as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.

Residents are praying for the safe return of the boy.

“The community is real concerned,” said Fred McNab, mayor of Pinckard, Ala. “You can tell by the food that’s been carried over there to the church. It’s just devastating. We want it to come to a resolution. We want to save that little child.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Why The Super Bowl Is A Great Showcase For Revitalized New Orleans

By John Ellett, Contributor Tourism in New Orleans has been booming for the past several years and its recovery from Hurricane Katrina is complete (from a tourism perspective). This week it will get to showcase that revitalization as the eyes of the world are on this year’s Super Bowl host city.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Katrina's scars harder to see as Super Bowl looms

New Orleans has celebrated plenty of milestones on its slow road to recovery from Hurricane Katrina, but arguably none is bigger than hosting its first Super Bowl since the 2005 storm left the city in shambles.

To see the remnants of Katrina’s destruction, fans coming arriving for Sunday’s game will have to stray from the French Quarter and the downtown corridor where the Superdome is located. Even in neighborhoods that bore the brunt of the storm, many of the most glaring scars have faded over time.

Billions of dollars in federal money has paid for repairing and replacing tens of thousands of homes wrecked by flooding. The city’s lifeblood tourism trade has thrived despite the double-barrel blow of Katrina and BP‘s massive 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Ray Nagin: Black Good Ole Boy?

By capblack

Ray Nagin SC Ray Nagin: Black Good Ole Boy?

The phrase “Good Ole Boy” is used to describe America’s age-old system of cronyism.

Its leading critics have sadly included racism lobbyists whose selective outrage never includes American Blacks engaged in graft.

Instead of eliminating the Good Ole Boy system, they’ve merely integrated it, as illustrated by cases like the recent federal indictment of former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin.

Previously, Americans would have stated that his claim to fame was being at the helm when levees tragically failed after Hurricane Katrina.

He now has made the dubious history of being New Orleans’ first mayor to face corruption charges in a town renowned for its culture of corruption.

That’s saying something.

Twenty one counts alleging taking bribes, funneling money to a business he owned, and other official misconduct challenges claims that Black faces in high places are all we need.

Cries of prejudice await deployment by Black racism lobbyists whose greatest wish is for Black folks to get in on the action- not end corruption.

“White guys do it (engage in corruption); why can’t we?” is their weak rationale. The long list of convicted Black officials only means to them that dark hands only are the ones that get punished for dipping into the public cookie jar.

That’s a sad commentary for a demographic whose watch word was once “you have to be be twice as good to get half as much.”

It seems our motto has now morphed into “Take the money and run!”

Nagin’s last term was winding down when I arrived here three years ago. I’ve had a ringside seat to monitor some of America’s most colorful and disturbing corruption cases in a town I’ve nicknamed the “real life Gotham City.”

My overriding concern remains how numerous liberal American Blacks overlook our crime on the streets and suites because they feel White people aren’t punished for the same offenses.

In Ray Nagin’s case, cooperating witnesses from his past will undoubtedly take the stand against him (including his former technology chief Greg Meffert, whom Black racism lobbyists will note is White).

Others wait in the wings, I’m sure.

Black observers in New Orleans and the rest of America have yet another high-profile scandal to experience.

It can serve as the latest mirror testing Black commitment to good government or expose hypocrisy by not being any better than those whom racism lobbyists ritually accuse.

Whether Ray Nagin is merely the latest Black Good Ole Boy to be exposed remains to be seen.

Corruption is wrong, regardless of its perpetrator’s color.

Cap Black, the Hood Conservative
504 214-3082

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Photo credit: Jeffery Schwartz, flickr user jeffschwartz (Creative Commons)

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

African-American baby doll tradition is undergoing a revival in New Orleans for Mardi Gras

By hnn

NEW ORLEANS — The “baby dolls,” an on-again, off-again Mardi Gras tradition of New Orleans’ African-American community, are on again.

The troupes of women strutting and prancing in bonnets, garters, and skimpy or short, ruffled dresses on Fat Tuesday also are being spotlighted in a new book and museum exhibit that trace their history and modern rebirth.

When the predominantly African-American Zulu krewe hits the streets on Fat Tuesday — Feb. 12 — its marchers will include the Baby Doll Ladies, a troupe formed after Hurricane Katrina. They play tambourines and cowbells to accompany their dance, a hip-hop style called bounce.

Though Mardi Gras celebrations date from the city’s French founding in 1718, historians say the baby doll tradition started in 1912 when black prostitutes who worked just outside the legal red-light district called Storyville dressed up on Mardi Gras to outdo their legal rivals….

Source:
AP

Source URL:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/travel/african-american-baby-doll-tradition-is-undergoing-a-revival-in-new-orleans-for-mardi-gras/2013/01/21/5130f554-6428-11e2-889b-f23c246aa446_story.html

Date:
1-21-13

Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Should worst-flooded areas be left after Sandy?

Should I stay or should I go? That’s the question some people are asking in the aftermath of Superstorm Sandy.

The storm renewed a debate on whether damaged areas should be restored to the way they were, or whether it’s cheaper in the long run to buy out property in flood-prone areas and let nature reclaim the land.

Hard-hit Sea Bright N.J., where three-quarters of the residents remain homeless, vows to rebuild — only higher this time.

But homeowners in the Oakwood Beach section of New York’s Staten Island want the government to buy them out.

Several states have tried small-scale buyouts after past floods, but large-scale depopulations are easier said than done. New Orleans considered backing away from some low-lying areas after Hurricane Katrina, but a public outcry halted that plan.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Hoda Kotb: 6 Inspirational Stories of Overcoming Adversity

By Dan Schawbel, Contributor I recently spoke to Hoda Kotb, who is the co-host of the fourth hour of NBC’s Today Show, alongside Kathie Lee Gifford. She has also been a Dateline NBC correspondent since April 1998. She has covered a wide variety of domestic and international stories across all NBC News platforms as well as numerous human-interest stories and features. She covered significant events like the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the war in Iraq. Hoda is the New York Times Bestselling author of “Hoda: How I Survived War Zones, Bad Hair, Cancer and Kathie Lee.” She is a  three-time Emmy winner also won the prestigious 2006 Peabody Award, the 2003 Gracie Award, and the 2002 Edward R. Murrow Award. You can follow her on Facebook or on Twitter @hodakotb.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Ex-New Orleans Mayor Nagin Charged With Corruption

Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was indicted today on charges that he used his office for personal gain, accepting payoffs, free trips, and gratuities from contractors while the city was struggling to recover from the devastation of Hurricane Katrina. The charges against Democrat Nagin are the outgrowth of a…
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home