[StBernard] Hurricane drill in Louisiana canceled

Westley Annis westley at da-parish.com
Wed May 24 18:29:29 EDT 2006


Hurricane drill in Louisiana canceled
By BRETT MARTEL, Associated Press Writer
Wed May 24, 6:22 AM ET



A mock evacuation that was supposed to be part of a two-day statewide
hurricane preparedness drill was canceled after a misunderstanding about who
had jurisdiction over a Federal Emergency Management Agency trailer park.

The two-day statewide drill that began Tuesday was aimed at avoiding the
chaos that followed last year's deadly Hurricane Katrina, which hit the
state Aug. 29 and killed more than 1,000 people. The drill is expected to
continue Wednesday.

The mock evacuation was to take place in the state's largest FEMA trailer
park in Baker, 10 miles from Baton Rouge. The park has more than 500
camper-style travel trailers that house about 1,500 people displaced by
Katrina.

Officials are concerned about the safety of travel trailer residents in
rough winds. There are more than 200,000 people statewide living in
unfinished homes and mobile trailers.

But the Baker evacuation was canceled because of an apparent communication
breakdown, said JoAnne Moreau, director of the East Baton Rouge Parish
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.

"We were unable to get any information from the state or federal government
on what policies or procedures were for evacuating those sites - whose
jurisdiction it was," Moreau said. "We're very disappointed we didn't get to
work with the people who live on the trailer site."

After the parish canceled the drill, FEMA asked park management to drive
around the park with bullhorns and simulate an evacuation notice, according
to Tony Robinson, response and recovery director for FEMA Region 6, which
includes Louisiana.

Baker Police Chief Sid Gautreaux said that evacuating the people in the
trailers is a problem because residents are not allowed to have land-based
telephone lines, their cell phones do not have good signals and a majority
of them do not have transportation.

In New Orleans, dozens of make-believe evacuees boarded evacuation buses
while state and federal officials in Baton Rouge planned to reroute traffic
and call up the National Guard as a fictitious "Hurricane Alicia" swirled in
the Gulf of Mexico.

As the drills got underway, "Alicia" was less than two days away after
taking a somewhat erratic and unpredictable path in the Gulf of Mexico and
building to dangerous Category 3 strength.

Gov. Kathleen Blanco threw officials at the state Office of Emergency
Preparedness in Baton Rouge a curve - adding a scenario in which a nuclear
power plant north of Baton Rouge caught fire, forcing the closure of U.S
Highway 61 as an evacuation route.

Bar-coded wrist bands and computers will help officials keep track of
evacuees.

Last year, as Hurricane Katrina approached, thousands of New Orleans' poor
were left behind because they had no transportation, could not afford to
leave or did not know where to go. The Louisiana Superdome and the
convention center became shelters of last resort where thousands sweltered
for days, suffering through shortages of food and water.

Mayor Ray Nagin has said there will be no shelters in the city this time.

Scientists predict the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season, which begins June 1
and runs through November, could produce 16 named storms, including six
major hurricanes.

___

Associated Press reporter Stacey Plaisance contributed to this story.

___

On the Net:

Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness:

http://www.ohsep.louisiana.gov




More information about the StBernard mailing list