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No Exit From the Danger Zone

By Alison Stein Wellner, MotherJones.com. Posted September 19, 2005.


Disaster evacuation plans throughout the U.S. assume that people own a car. Too bad for the 23 million Americans who don't.
Evacuees on foot
Evacuees on foot

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The night before Hurricane Katrina hit, tens of thousands of people in New Orleans had one thing in common. It was not their race, although many were African American. And it was not that they were poor, or elderly or infirm -- although many of them were all of these things.

What many of those people shared that night was this: they didn't own a vehicle. They had no car, no truck, no SUV to point north or west, away from the storm and the flood waters. They had no "extra set of car keys" to tuck into their "disaster supply kit," as recommended by the New Orleans Emergency Preparedness Guide. They had no gas tank to keep half-full at all times, a key evacuation preparation step suggested by the Department of Homeland Security. In all, 77,462 households in the New Orleans metropolitan area lacked private transportation, according to the US Census Bureau. Since the average household contains 2.6 people, approximately 200,000 people were without a vehicle and a way out of the imperiled area.

This was not a secret prior to Katrina's landfall: it was widely reported in the local and national media. A full year earlier, in September 2004, New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin had explained at a press conference that he could not declare a mandatory evacuation of his city in advance of Hurricane Ivan because he had no way of evacuating people without cars.

New Orleans is hardly the only place in such a predicament. Nearly 11 million households in the United States lack vehicles, according to the Census Bureau--which means that approximately 28 million people have difficulty evacuating their area in the event of an emergency. These people might take comfort in the vague reassurances of official disaster plans, such as the single sentence addressing the problem in New Orleans' Emergency Preparedness Guide: "Local transportation will be mobilized to assist persons who lack transportation." But they shouldn't.

"The fact is that in this country, we haven't paid adequate attention to this issue," says Havidan Rodriguez, director of the Disaster Research Center at the University of Delaware. "Most evacuation plans are based on the premise that people have transportation available to them--their private cars," he explains. "We think very little about people who don't have automobiles."

Examples can be found everywhere. In hurricane-prone Miami-Dade County, for instance, 14 percent of households lack a vehicle, but the Office of Emergency Management website says only that "public transportation may be provided" to evacuate people without transportation. (Miami-Dade county officials did not return calls for comment.) Similarly, Florida's Department of Emergency Management's website, which has a chart walking people through the decision of whether they should stay put or evacuate in an emergency, advises citizens in either case to fill their cars with gas. No mention of what to do if you have no vehicle, as is the case for 8.1 percent of Florida households.

In fact, the D.C. Emergency Management Agency doesn't even know many households in the nation's capital have no car, as the Washington Post reported on Sept. 7, 2005. (The correct answer: 37 percent, according to Census stats easily accessible online.) Barbara Fockert, the natural disaster planner in Minnesota (site of the devastating Red River floods of 1997), also did not know how many households in her state lacked a vehicle. (The answer is 7 percent.) She said she "really didn't know, and couldn't say," whether any local governments in her state had prepared to evacuate people without a vehicle.


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Alison Stein Wellner, a former editor at American Demographics, has written for the Washington Post, Business Week, and the Christian Science Monitor, among other publications. For information about reprinting this piece, contact Featurewell.com.

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View:
Who comes up with these plans anyway?
Posted by: hagwind on Sep 19, 2005 4:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the early 1980s, I think, when I lived in Washington, D.C., the plan for evacuating the city in case of nuclear attack was revealed in the newspapers. The plan required nearly the whole population to exit the city over the Potomac River bridges and make their way to rural western Virginia and West Virginia. This cracked me and my friends up: Didn't the planners know that Monday through Friday the Potomac River bridges were paralyzed for several hours by the demands of the ordinary afternoon rush hour? Couldn't they extrapolate from that what might happen when hundreds of thousands of people tried to escape over the bridges during a national emergency? Not to mention -- the destination areas were not known for their openness to strangers, particularly urban strangers, most of whom were black.

Who thought up these plans? My friends and I, with no special training or expertise other than what we'd acquired as D.C. residents, could see at a glance that they were ludicrous. How could their inventors, presumably high-up civil servants and their expert advisers, take them seriously?

It seems the disaster planners are still living in Cloudcuckooland. I'm reminding myself once again that the problem isn't "government," even "big government": it's short-sighted, incompetent, out-of-touch government.

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» Your wrong jimster... Posted by: tkd82arty@netscape.net
» People with appointed positions Posted by: Bic Pentameter
» ego Posted by: Olympiada
government isn't the problem
Posted by: jimsenter on Sep 19, 2005 5:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"I'm reminding myself once again that the problem isn't "government," even "big government": it's short-sighted, incompetent, out-of-touch government."

Let;s be clear on this point: the problem is YOU CAN'T GOVERN IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE IN GOVERNMENT and the GOP doesn't believe in government. They believe the "free market" is the best regulator of human activity. Reagan crystalized the philosophy well "Government isn't the solution. It's the problem." And an ineffective FEMA and Lake George where New Orleans used to be is the result.

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And I used to be jealous of every teenager in high school owning a car !
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 19, 2005 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For a lot of these folks who don't own a car because they can't afford one, at least they know how not to get into further debt and credit problems and it will be harder for "conservatives" to say that these people lack personal responsibility. With gas prices soaring slowly but steadily and staying high and with the new bankruptcy overkill bill ready to further smash the working class, perhaps more respect will be given to those who don't have a car because they can't afford it. And it's not the car taxes, it's the rising car prices.

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» forget it Posted by: eosinglemum
Even if they had a car....
Posted by: cyclone on Sep 19, 2005 6:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With 30% of New Orleans residents living below the poverty level, owning a car would not have automatically provided them with the means to leave. They needed money for (at the time) $2.10 per gallon gas. They certainly did not have the cash available to them to continually refill their tanks, so would have been stuck wherever their cars ran out of gas. In looking at the long lines of vehicles attempting to get out, crawling along at the pace of about 5 MPH, what little gas they had would not have gotten them far and would have only created chicanes in the middle of the already nearly impassable freeways. And, where were they to go? Many of those folks do not have credit cards, thus denying them the ability to even get a hotel room had they been able to get out of NALO. Finally, one would have needed to drive several hundred miles to find an available hotel. The early evacuees had already taken the rooms in closer locales.

While lack of automobiles was a problem, I do not think that had all people owned vehicles it would have solved the problem. For the government, local through federal, to not use every means necessary to provide a safe and prearranged way to get these people out of harms way is deplorable. The poor, towntrodden, mostly African American people that were left to die in "Lake New Orleans" deserved better. After all, what do we pay taxes for? Only to blow up Iraqi's and foresake the brothers and sisters in "our homeland," I guess.

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Public transportation?
Posted by: sausage on Sep 19, 2005 6:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...'public transportation may be provided' to evacuate people without transportation. (Miami-Dade county officials did not return calls for comment.)"
And why do you suppose Miami-Dade county officials didn't return calls for the above article?

Because, with a few exceptions, "public transportation" in major and medium-sized American cities is a joke. We've been conned by the automobile marketing industry into the "America's a car society" trap for fifty years. For the billions spent yearly on highway construction and maintenance pennies are spent nationally on public transportation.

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» RE: Public transportation? Posted by: bornxeyed
My parents household does not possess a car and neither does mine. Time to start building community.
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 19, 2005 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am glad that FEMA is thinking about this. It is a sign of hope to me. At the same time this disaster points out the need for community. I know many of my neighbors and in am emergency I am sure one would be able to help my daughter and I get to safety. But more then be sure, I have to talk to them about this and make a plan.

People need to be educated to make emergency plans. I learned how to do this on various jobs and training programs. We have fire drills in school. I hope this national disaster teaches the American public education system that it needs to include disaster planning in its curriculum.

It would be good to write an article on the public education system in LA. I would be interested to see what it is all about. I know from Savage Inequalities that Missippi is one of the most destitute public school systems in the nation. I believe that LA is not far behind in its lack.

I hope the government of this country takes a real good look at the public education system in the Deep South and does something to address these problems now. Jonathan Kozol has been advocating for this for years and he has been a voice crying out in the wilderness just like John the Baptist.

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» Education in Louisiana Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: Education in Louisiana Posted by: Olympiada
» I'm not quite certain...... Posted by: Diecash1
» You are right I do not understand Posted by: eosinglemum
What good is a car
Posted by: bookwoman on Sep 19, 2005 10:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Even with a car, it is sometimes impossible to get out of an area. Consider the lines of traffic leaving New Orleans. One girl who left college in a car with five friends said it took them seven hours to reach Baton Rouge. This is usually a 45 minute trip.

I remember the wonderful evacuation plan which was set up for Massachusetts a few years ago to be used if there was a nuclear bomb threat. They had all kinds of time schedules about how long it would take to get everyone out of the Boston area. In reality, these people would have been sitting ducks in long lanes of traffic as the nuclear bomb hit.

These plans are created based on the best of all possible worlds. This is not necessarily what would happen and any little thing which goes wrong, such as all the phones going out at one time as they did in New Orleans is always a possibility.

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In Motown
Posted by: churchofone on Sep 19, 2005 11:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We have a crappy public transit system, and only two seasons: winter and road repair. I wonder how inner city residents would be advised to respond in case of evacuation?

Of course, I can't imagine anyone planning an attack here unless they aimed at the refineries and chemical factories. It's not like we are the "Arsenal of Democracy" any longer.

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» RE: In Motown Posted by: smidget2k4
Lessons From Katrina
Posted by: johnny-boy2 on Sep 19, 2005 12:35 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We're going to need buses!

Part of me wants to say: making sure that everyone has a car isn't the government's problem, it's the individuals.

But, the government is responsible for protectings its citizens.

This means adjusting future evacuation plans to use bus/train/whatever.

In time of war, we can federalize our commercial airline fleets. I think we should reserve the right to do the same with private charter bus companies..plus Amtrak and Greyhound.

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Here in Seattle
Posted by: nitsua1023 on Sep 19, 2005 1:28 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here in Seattle less than 10% of our population are drivers. We all use public transportation, bus, monorail, walk or bike. Even some of the absolute wealthiest families don't own cars. Sometimes in very urban areas, (maybe NOLA too) the need to buy a car just never arises. What do I expect the gov't to do for me when a big one hits? Not much, I just hope they respond before six full days.

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California Levees are also vulnerable
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 19, 2005 3:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
California's Levees Are in Sorry Shape

I'd like to see Bush and Arnold and rest of the local, state, and federal officials get their act together on this one if they learned any lessons from the New Orleans tragedy.

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WHAT GOOD IS A CAR WITHOUT GASOLINE?
Posted by: froggeymonkey on Sep 19, 2005 5:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If we have to evacuate the day before payday, we're up the creek without a paddle. We have one car, but the day before payday it only has enough gas to get to work, the bank, and the gas station. Can't evacuate very far on that!

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I'm gonna buy me an automobile - Sam the Sham -
Posted by: sovinformburo on Sep 19, 2005 8:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And its you and your woman in your own front seat
So you turn on the radio just loud enough to hear
And move in closer and hear her heart beat
And then you fiddle with the keys
And you switch on the fan
Then you start driving just as fast as you can
Everybody I knows, got to have an automobile
So one of these days I'm gonna buy me an automobile

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