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Search - 2006 Hurricane Katrina: Lessons Learned--The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina: Preparedness and Recommendations
2006 Hurricane Katrina Lessons Learned--The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina Preparedness and Recommendations Author:U.S. Government This is a complete reproduction of the February 2006 report entitled ?The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina: Lesson Learned? issued by the Executive Branch to the President. The foreword states: On August 23, 2005, Hurricane Katrina formed as a tropical storm off the coast of the Bahamas. Over the next seven days, the tropical storm grew ... more »into a catastrophic hurricane that made landfall first in Florida and then along the Gulf Coast in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama, leaving a trail of heartbreaking devastation and human suffering. Katrina wreaked staggering physical destruction along its path, flooded the historic city of New Orleans, ultimately killed over 1,300 people, and became the most destructive natural disaster in American history. Awakening to reports of Katrina?s landfall on the Gulf Coast the morning of Monday, August 29, American citizens watched events unfold with an initial curiosity that soon turned to concern and sorrow. The awe that viewers held for the sheer ferocity of nature was soon matched with disappointment and frustration at the seeming inability of the ?government??local, State, and Federal?to respond effectively to the crisis. Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent sustained flooding of New Orleans exposed significant flaws in Federal, State, and local preparedness for catastrophic events and our capacity to respond to them. Emergency plans at all levels of government, from small town plans to the 600-page National Response Plan?the Federal government?s plan to coordinate all its departments and agencies and integrate them with State, local, and private sector partners?were put to the ultimate test, and came up short. Millions of Americans were reminded of the need to protect themselves and their families. Even as parts of New Orleans were still under water, President Bush spoke to the Nation from the city?s historic Jackson Square. He stated unequivocally, that ?[f]our years after the frightening experience of September the 11th, Americans have every right to expect a more effective response in a time of emergency. When the federal government fails to meet such an obligation, I, as President, am responsible for the problem, and for the solution.?1 In his address, the President ordered a comprehensive review of the Federal response to Hurricane Katrina so we as a Nation could make the necessary changes to be ?better prepared for any challenge of nature or act of evil men that could threaten our people.?2 The President?s charge has resulted in the material and conclusions of this Report?The Federal Response to Hurricane Katrina: Lessons Learned. WHAT WENT WRONG In general terms, the challenges to our collective response to Hurricane Katrina are not difficult to identify. Hurricane Katrina, its 115-130 mph winds, and the accompanying storm surge it created as high as 27 feet along a stretch of the Northern Gulf Coast from Mobile, Alabama, to New Orleans, impacted nearly 93,000 square miles of our Nation?roughly an area the size of Great Britain. The disaster was not isolated to one town or city, or even one State. Individual local and State plans, as well as relatively new plans created by the Federal government since the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, failed to adequately account for widespread or simultaneous catastrophes. We were confronted by the pictures of destroyed towns and cities, each with their own needs. Smaller cities like Waveland, Mississippi, were completely devastated by Hurricane Katrina and required smaller scale yet immediate search and rescue efforts as well as large volumes of life saving and sustaining commodities. New Orleans, the largest affected city?which dominated much of what Americans saw on their televisions?suffered first from the initial impact of Katrina and then from the subsequent flood caused by breaches in its 350 mile levee system. Over an estimated eighteen-hour period, approximately 80 percent of the city flooded with six to twenty feet o« less