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It Happened in Houston

By Howard Karger, AlterNet. Posted September 24, 2005.


Attempting to flee Hurricane Rita, a Houston resident tells an all-too-familiar tale of gridlock, government incompetence and empty gas pumps.

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In his press conference on Friday, Texas governor Rick Perry congratulated his staff for doing a great job in preparing for Rita. It must be a Texas thing, since I remember Bush congratulating Michael Brown. A few days later he fired him. Despite the hype by city, state and federal officials, the reality on the ground in Houston tells a different story. It is a saga of incompetence and an almost complete lack of planning.

Like many people, we tried to flee Rita's path. Thinking we could beat the traffic, we left Houston at 8pm on Wednesday -- 48 hours before Rita's expected landfall. We chose a road with normally light traffic. By 11:30 p.m., we had driven about 20 miles -- another 180 lay ahead of us. At that pace, we would have arrived in San Antonio in 24 hours, if our gas held out. Already exhausted and watching the gas needle drop, we made a U-turn and headed back home, passing an almost uninterrupted line of gridlocked traffic extending back to the city. By Wednesday night there was no viable way out of Houston.

When we returned to Houston, the gas stations were closed and every pump was bagged and empty. Stopping at a large 24-hour Kroger supermarket, most canned foods were gone, and only a couple of boxes of water remained. Not a single flashlight or C or D battery was available. The market had posted a sign "Closing Thursday at 1pm. Reopen ???" The manager said they might reopen Monday, but he wasn't sure. By Thursday afternoon, all of Houston's supermarkets had closed, if they weren't already shut down.

Those with the money to stock up on groceries did well. Others who did not have the money may face several days of hunger. One shopper on the line with a small basket of groceries said she could not afford to buy more. Her paycheck had run out.

For some of us in Houston, it was like New Orleans all over again. City, state, and federal authorities again demonstrated their incompetence in the face of a crisis. Despite the "we're in control" -- another Texas thing -- the evacuation was chaotic until late Thursday, even though a mandatory evacuation order for large parts of the city and surrounding counties were in effect a day earlier.

There were no roadside services available on Wednesday, despite the impossibility of driving -- or idling -- a vehicle for 24 hours on one tank of gas. Emergency gas for stranded motorists was not made available until late Thursday, more than 24 hours after the exodus began. The counter-lanes were also opened on Thursday, again more than 24 hours after the evacuation order. By then, most people who had turned back -- and there many -- were too weary and wary to try again. By Thursday morning, almost every gas station in Houston was out of gas, reinforcing the fact that there was no way out.

The absence of statewide coordination was obvious early on. For instance, when driving through small towns toward San Antonio, all of the traffic lights were operating. It was like a regular evening for the small town of Richmond, Texas, except for hundreds of thousands of cars trying to snake through a narrow main street lined with stoplights on almost every corner. There were no sheriffs or state troopers to keep the traffic moving.

The much-touted presence of the "new and improved" FEMA was absent. Low-income people were not provided with sufficient food before the hurricane hit. Nor was water being distributed. There were no notices on billboards or signposts announcing shelters or food depots. Helping people after a hurricane is far less effective than helping them prepare for it. Apparently, FEMA prefers the heroics of "saving people" to the more banal aspects of preparing them. Seeing the lack of preparedness of America's fourth largest city was sobering.

We can only hope that the aftermath of Rita will be handled better than the preparation for it. But, as President Bush is fond of saying, "The jury's still out."

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Howard Karger lives in Houston. He is professor of social policy at the University of Houston and author of "Shortchanged: Life and Debt in the Fringe Economy" (Berrett-Koehler, 2005).

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No Suprise
Posted by: EJW on Sep 24, 2005 3:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just imagine if New York or Los Angeles had to be evacuated.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: No Suprise Posted by: sovinformburo
» RE: No Suprise Posted by: bornxeyed
» RE: No Suprise Posted by: LazyEight
» RE: No Suprise Posted by: bornxeyed
» Hurt my brain, too many details Posted by: Michiganman
WHY IS THE LORD PUNISHING THE SOUTH?
Posted by: LMNOP on Sep 24, 2005 5:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course you remember Falwell and Robertson's comments after 9/11 that such a misfortune occurring in the New York City, was a sure sign from Gawd that he was displeased with all their homosexuality and abortions.

For the second year in a row, Gawd has redirected his wrath at the South and given them a hell of a Bible belt in the form of multiple devastating hurricanes each year. Once upon a time, until 2003, it was the odd visit from Hugo or Andrew every decade or so.

Last year was like spring break in Florida with Charlie and Ivan coming in from out of town to party on Florida's head.

This year, it's Girls gone Wild in the Bible belt with Katrina ("show me your t*ts"), Ophelia and Rita ("don't mess with Texas").

That got me to wondering what wickedness Jehovah was punishing the Bush constituency for? What had they begun doing two years ago that was such an abomination unto him that he had sent Charlie and Ivan to blow all of Florida?

Then I remembered that it was at just about that time that the "hating gay's for the lord" campaign had escalated as a wedge issue just in time for the '04 elections and I realized that *that* was the reason that the lord had devastated America's penis, Florida. Maybe the lord didn't like his people speaking for him with such hatred.

What had his children done in '05 to cause Yahweh to throw thunderbolts like Thor on steroids for the second year in a row all over Dixie? Of course, it was that vile comment that Pat Robertson had upchucked about killing Venezuela's Hugo Chavez right from the pulpit of Dixie, the 007 Club. There they go again, I thought, spewing hate for the lord.

I would advise these people to start reading their bibles a little bit more and talking a little less about what the big man wants before there is nothing left of any of them. Hell, even Noah wouldn't have gotten out New Orleans after that flood. And it seems that the poor evacuees who wandered to Houston from The Big Easy are gonna be wandering through the deserts of Texas and elsewhere for a while longer.

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» All hail balding bovine! Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: All hail balding bovine! Posted by: montana freeman
Clogged highways unbelievable
Posted by: ggmurray on Sep 24, 2005 8:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It blows my mind that highways out of Houston - as any person with internet access could see - should have had NORTH and SOUTH bound lanes ALL HEADING OUT OF THE CITY!!! To have people running out of gas and hope, stalled for hours in clogged northbound lanes is simply incomprehensible. Who is in charge? Who has a plan? Why have confidence in government at all?
Whenever an evacuation order for a city is issued, all major arteries - except a few designated for emergency purposes - should be for OUTBOUND TRAFFIC ONLY.

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» RE: Clogged highways unbelievable Posted by: stevietheman
Logical Way to Evacuate
Posted by: Kitty Lady Oregon on Sep 24, 2005 10:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been watching and reading about these so-called evacuations. It seems to me that the way to do it is this:
Close all freeway ramps at the same time. Then open one and let the people in that region leave. Close that ramp, and open another, let those people leave. Keep doing this until all people have had a chance to leave. Also, station gas, food and water trucks along the way, say 100 miles up the road for those who need help.

I'm sure that this will never be done, because it is logical, and not that bureaucratic. It makes sense to me and most of my friends.

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» RE: Logical Way to Evacuate Posted by: ShaSpirit
» RE: Logic? Posted by: stoney13
» Government logic... Posted by: bornxeyed
» Lots of Logical Ways to Evacuate Posted by: Michiganman
Marmaduke Lakewater
Posted by: Jeffersonista on Sep 25, 2005 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sit back and watch as America crumbles, more slowly, but just as surely as Russia did. The criminals have won. They ransack every nations treasuries, and it is only a matter of time before every main street lacks power and governance.

Fact, every major city in the US is experiencing power outtages with increasing frequency. Fact, oil is running out and there is nothing to replace it. Fact the US government is bankrupt and bound to fail.

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» Marmalade Dudewater Posted by: LMNOP
This was no real evacuation
Posted by: paula_manuel on Sep 25, 2005 9:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The concept of an orderly evacuation hasn't failed...it simply hasn't truly been attempted. There was no plan, no direct order for most areas of the city. A few low-lying areas were issued a voluntary evac order. But honestly, after Storm Allison, don't you think most of the city should consider itself "low-lying"?

To simply have people get on the freeways at random times obviously won't work. Besides...there was no real place for them to go. I had to drive all the way to Arkansas in order to get a room for Wednesday night, and then I had to move on to Nashville TN. That's simply ridiculous.

Let's develop a plan and try it some Saturday or Sunday. Obviously what we have doesn't work. If we had to get all Houstonians out on, say, 6 hours notice, it simply couldn't be done.

Let's develop a plan and then test it some Saturday or Sunday.

Our lives could depend on it.

Paula Manuel

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The "successful evacuation" claims must be exposed
Posted by: rosevines on Sep 26, 2005 3:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm so glad to see this article in Alternet.

I am a Katrina refugee (I use the word deliberately) and now I'm a Houston evacuee. From my perspective, Houston's evacuation "plans" were woeful in comparison to New Orleans', and we all know that's saying a lot.

I keep seeing and hearing news reports where this line that "the evacuation was a success because people took heed and left early" is repeated and seemingly accepted by the media. It really needs to stop, or more people will die from neglect.

Evacuating from Houston was hellish. (I've written about my experiences in my blog, My Katrina). There was no support whatsoever along the way, no apparent thinking through. When I saw the acting director of FEMA congratulating Houston, Texas and all the officials and saying he acknowledged some people were made "uncomfortable", I realised that FEMA is so far beyond clueless it's chilling.

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ECLECTICIST S. JIM RODRIGUEZ
Posted by: SJR505 on Sep 26, 2005 5:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
" CAN WE HEAR AN AMEN...???"
We also experienced a similar experience heading towards Dallas on Wednesday -- no gas, food, etc , traveling bumper to bumper between Friendswood and Livingston a distance of 110 miles taking six(6) hours to complete...And, decided to stay in Livingston unbeknowest to us that Rita would demolish the East Texas area from Livingston to the Texas/Louisana border... This area was decimated with no utilties, no gas,food, limitied police protection, etc

We stayed until Saturday morning and decided to return to Friendswood that AM... it took us one (1) hour to travel back to our home with our area that had no fuel/food but with all utilities and no damage to our home...

There were no shouts of "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED"; "BROWNIE ,YOU ARE DOING A TERRIFIC JOB"; and, there was no FEMA, American Red Cross, etc to be found to help our neighbors in East Texas to survive...All of us whether in Friendswood, Houston, Jasper, etc were facing two (2) enemies - RITA and and the " INEPT BUREAUCRACIES OF FEMA AND BUSH 43'S CRONIES... They were all there when the photo ops people arrived just ask the Bernard parish president, Mr Broussard, in Louisana...?

Finally, my question(s) to all the Bush 43 cronies and high paying politicians is : "HOW MUCH OUT OF YOUR POCKET ARE YOU GOING TO HELP PAY FOR THESE NATIONAL DISASTERS???", AND, " ARE YOU WILLING TO TAKE A PAYCUT OR REDUCE YOUR PLAYBOY/PLAYGIRL SALARIES/BENEFITS TO FURTHER AID THE REDUCTION OF COSTS...??? The answer(s) that we will receive is a resounding "NO>>>>"

S...JIM...RODRIGUEZ+++EL ECLECTICIST+++
333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333333

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God's Jr. Under-assistant Gulf Coast Repo Man's Plan
Posted by: chasaturn on Sep 26, 2005 9:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jeez people! We stood by and allowed this bunch of crooks aand thugs to steal TWO elections and then, oh, Lordy! - we expect COMPETENCE? The greater the catastrophe, the more and bigger the contracts for Halliburton and Bechtel and KBR, etc to reap HUGE profits -- especially after President Moron decrees that these companies don't have to pay prevaling wage on the rebuilding.
A hundred years ago, the populace would haul this bunch out and tar and feather them. I suggest a swift trial and hanging. Traitors all!
TAKE BACK OUR COUNTRY!

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