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In this aerial photo, a boat motors between flooded homes in Hammond, Louisiana, on August 13. Max Becherer/AP Photo |
The relief effort in Louisiana is ramping up after 10 days of monumental flooding. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama will visit
Baton Rouge to survey the damage and find out how the federal
government can help. The Red Cross has repeatedly described the flooding
as "the worst natural disaster to strike the United States" since Hurricane Sandy hit the East Coast in 2012.
But for those who aren't on the ground in Louisiana, it can be
difficult to understand what that really means. Here are some numbers
that compare the two disasters.
Deaths and damaged homes: Thirteen people have died and about 60,000 homes have been damaged in the flooding that began in Louisiana on August 12. As of Friday, the Obama administration listed 20 parishes
in the state as disaster areas, making federal funding available to
assist those communities. Hurricane Sandy had a bigger death toll,
claiming 72 lives
in the United States and damaging 200,000 homes. But that storm hit a
much wider swath of land, including metropolitan centers like New York
City, whose population is nearly double that of the entire state of Louisiana.
People in shelters: When you compare the storms in terms of the numbers of people in shelters, the situation is similar.
"The Red Cross has mobilized our largest sheltering and feeding
effort since Superstorm Sandy with the flooding in Louisiana," said
Molly Dalton, a spokeswoman for the humanitarian organization. "It's the
largest volume of people in need of emergency shelter in the last four
years…In addition, FEMA has reported really high numbers of people
registering for emergency assistance, which is another indicator we're
going by."
About five days after Hurricane Sandy, she said, the Red Cross had
11,000 people in 250 shelters across 16 states. One week into that
relief effort, it had about 7,000 people in shelters, "and we're seeing
about the same over the last week" in Louisiana, Dalton said on Friday.
"Thursday night we had 3,900 people in 28 shelters, but at the peak of
the response we had 10,000 people in 50 shelters [in Louisiana]. So it's
going down, but there are still a lot of people in shelters." Sunday
night, the Red Cross had nearly 3,000 people in 19 shelters across the
state.
Looking at the big picture, the Red Cross and partners have provided
more than 40,000 overnight stays since flooding began in Louisiana. That
compares with 74,000 overnight stays during the entire relief effort
for Hurricane Sandy, and 3.8 million overnight stays for Hurricane
Katrina victims who where spread across 27 states.
"It’s not possible to estimate the full impact of the Louisiana
floods this early in the response, and every disaster is different, so
it would be difficult to make any comparison to past disasters," another
Red Cross spokesperson told Mother Jones on Monday. "But we do know that this is going to be a massive response."
Meals served: "So far in Louisiana in the first
week, we've served 158,000 meals, and if you look at the same point in
Sandy, we had served 164 [thousand]," Dalton said Friday. "So as far as what we're seeing then and what we're seeing now, it's very, very similar."
It's important to remember, she said, that Hurricane Sandy struck
many more states, stretching from New England as far south as the
District of Columbia. "This is just one area of Louisiana," she added.
"So if you look at it that way…it's a very devastating disaster."
At the peak of the deluge, Louisiana was hit by 6.9 trillion gallons of rain between August 8 and August 14, or roughly 10.4 million Olympic-size swimming pools'
worth of water. The flooding is receding now, particularly in the
northern reaches of the state, though some areas in the south will take
longer to dry out, says Gavin Phillips, a meteorologist with the
National Weather Service. "It's going down everywhere now," he says.
"There's nothing worsening at this point."
The Red Cross estimates the relief effort
in Louisiana could cost at least $30 million, though that number may
grow as relief workers learn more about the scope of the disaster. As of
Monday, the humanitarian organization had received about $7.8 million
in donations and pledges.
While Hurricane Sandy and the recent Louisiana flooding were
devastating, they pale in comparison to Louisiana's other famous
disaster, Hurricane Katrina, which hit the Gulf Coast 10 years ago, killing at least 1,833 people.
Source: Mother Jones
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