New Orleans evacuees can return Thursday
After Gustav's glancing blow, will those who fled heed warnings next time?
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NEW ORLEANS - New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin said late Tuesday that residents can return to the city early Thursday to look at the damage caused by Hurricane Gustav, but he advised them not to stay.
In making the announcement, the mayor warned that many homes still do not have electricity and that water and sewer systems are running on backup power.
Nagin said there are few businesses open and a dusk-to-dawn curfew will remain in effect.
Millions fled the Gulf Coast in fear of Gustav, which Nagin had billed as an apocalyptic "mother of all storms." Now, with Gustav not living up to the warnings and with three other storms lining up in the Atlantic, some fear people might not listen next time.
The first of the 2 million people who fled Gustav began to trickle home Tuesday from shelters, and many were grumbling about the food, the heat, the overcrowding, the uncertainty and the frustrating wait for the all-clear. Some evacuees, particularly in Texas, on the far fringes of the storm's path, suggested authorities overreacted in demanding they leave their homes.
"Next time, it's going to be bad because people who evacuated like us aren't going to evacuate," Catherine Jones, 53, of Silsbee, Texas, who spent three days on a cot at a church shelter with her disabled son. "They jumped the gun."
Emergency officials strongly defended the decision to evacuate coastal areas, saying that with something as unpredictable as a hurricane, it is better to be safe than sorry — a lesson driven home by Katrina, which killed 1,600 people in the U.S. in 2005, compared with nine deaths attributed to Gustav.
President Bush on Tuesday declared a major disaster exists in the Louisiana and ordered federal aid to supplement state and local recovery efforts in the area struck by Gustav. He also planned to visit the state on Wednesday.
Officials: No one around to get hurt
Officials noted that, yes, New Orleans' levees held, and Gustav struck only a glancing blow. But when trees fell on homes, power lines went down and roads were washed out, there was no one around to get hurt.
"The reasons you're not seeing dramatic stories of rescue is because we had a successful evacuation," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. "The only reason we don't have more tales of people in grave danger is because everyone heeded the instructions to get out of town."
At the same time, a top emergency planner in Louisiana acknowledged that authorities run of the risk of being accused of crying wolf.
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Eric Gay / AP Debra Peterson comforts her granddaughters as they wait in their car Tuesday in Slidell, La., to return to New Orleans. |
With three months left in the Atlantic hurricane season, the question of whether residents will heed an evacuation order is a serious matter. Three storms are lining up in the Atlantic, with Tropical Storm Hanna leading the way. Hanna could strengthen into a hurricane and hit Florida and Georgia later in the week.
Nagin, who ordered the city evacuated and warned that the "mother of all storms" was approaching, strongly stood by his decision, and said he would make do the same thing all over again.
"We were faced with a Category 5 potential, a huge storm, which would have been really bad news for our citizens," Nagin said. "And there was a complacency."
Similarly, some evacuees said authorities made the right call.
James Katicich, a 49-year-old Louisianan, said his stay at a shelter in Birmingham, Ala., was rough — rationed portions of food and sleeping just inches away from strangers.
'Better safe than sorry'
"But it's better to be safe than sorry," he said. "We needed to evacuate because no one really knows how bad the hurricane can be until it hits."
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Initial inspections showed little damage to the Gulf Coast's extensive oil and gas installations, though resumption of production and refining could still take a few days. Reflecting confidence that the industry suffered little damage, oil prices fell $5.75 a barrel.
In some places, such as Texas, Gustav barely brought a sprinkle, leading to frustration among those who had to spend days on a cot. The Beaumont Enterprise went as far as to taunt "Gustav Who?" on the front page the day after the storm.
"My brother went to Atlanta. He can't get back. He's not happy," said Rod Ferrand, who lives in the New Orleans suburb of Harahan, as he cut up a stately live oak split by the storm. "And there's not a branch on his lawn. Now no one can come back in. The next big storm that comes in, nobody's going to want to leave."
Many evacuees grew frustrated Tuesday as the waited for word on whether they could return to their homes. New Orleans officials said it would be at least Thursday before people would be allowed back, because the city lacked many vital services.
Officials warned residents that they might not have electricity and they should bring food, water, fuel, ice, flashlights and other supplies.
Across the state, more than 1 million people were without electricity, and cellular and Internet service spotty. Gas stations were unable to pump fuel because of the power outages. The threat of severe weather had yet to fully pass, too. A tornado touched down in suburban Westwego around 5 p.m., causing light damage but no injuries.
Dozens of hospitals were still running on generator power, several without air conditioning, and there were fears that hundreds of patients might have to be evacuated in the next few days. Only one hospital in New Orleans had the capacity to provide dialysis, and two in the Alexandria area were running low on drinking water.
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