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Path of Destruction: The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms

di John McQuaid

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"Winners of the Pulitzer Prize, John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein were coauthors of the New Orleans Times-Picayune's award-winning series 'Washing Away, ' the definitive account of the Gulf Coast's grave hurricane risks"--Inside back jacket cover.
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When I opened this book, I found a history of earliest human occupation of the Louisiana Delta gleaned from archaeological and paleometeorolgical data, of the French (and Spanish, and American) annexation and famous floods which destroyed settlements and crops, and of the development of meteorological understanding of hurricanes. Also of particularly devastating hurricanes which have affected the New Orleans area (and one or two, like Galveston in 1900, which did not). The 1965 hurricane under the watch of President Lyndon Johnson found its place in a history of federal involvement in disaster relief. This is a lot of data and after the stage is set the authors discuss Hurricane Katrina in detail, fixing snippets of individual stories in between narrative about the overall picture of the incredibly inept response to a disaster that was (as we can clearly see by this point in the story) largely down to human error, poor planning, and really bad engineering.

The book would have been vastly improved by an index. If one forgets who the Green family are, for instance (and why was their deceased mother on a roof from which they themselves had to retrieve her three months after the hurricane), or wants to track a particular agency's or individual's response through the days or crisis, it is highly annoying to have to leaf through the hundred previous pages to track down earlier mentions.
  muumi | Nov 16, 2018 |
In 2002, John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein wrote “Washing Away,” an award-winning series for the New Orleans Times-Picayune. The authors exposed the unique vulnerability of New Orleans to hurricanes, exploring “an obvious but little-acknowledged fact: here was a city that, for the six months of every hurricane season, lived with a substantial risk of utter annihilation…much of the city was built on top of a swamp, below sea level and gradually sinking.”

On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans and the Louisiana coast. In Path of Destruction: The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms, McQuaid and Schleifstein revisit familiar territory, helping readers understand why this tragic event happened when there were so many warnings.

Path of Destruction outlines the factors that contributed to the tragedy in New Orleans. By 2005, many levees were still incomplete and those built had inadequate safety levels, with safety factors of 1.3 (bridges have a safety factor of 2). The Army Corps of Engineers were more interested in commerce than hurricane safety. When combined with sinking marshlands and unstable soil, these facts increased the likelihood that levees would be overtopped or broken by a Category 2 hurricane, turning much of New Orleans into a lake. Hurricanes sweeping in off the Gulf of Mexico no longer have extensive marshlands to diminish the storm’s strength for “the delta has collapsed like a soufflé.

McQuaid and Schleifstein also provide extensive evaluation of Katrina’s aftermath. Once the levees broke, 80% of New Orleans was under water and the delayed response by FEMA severely increased the misery caused by Katrina.

Despite the harrowing experiences of one year ago and the knowledge that what happened in New Orleans was “catastrophic structural failure” not an “act of God,” the US government is poised to repeat prior mistakes. The Corps is rebuilding levees to their former level of protection, leaving New Orleans as exposed as before Katrina. At one point, Corps contractors were caught “dredging up weak soil and incorporating it into a new levee.” Given the prediction of an increase in Katrina-like storms, the time to act and prevent future tragedies is now. ( )
  Antheras | Oct 2, 2006 |
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"Winners of the Pulitzer Prize, John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein were coauthors of the New Orleans Times-Picayune's award-winning series 'Washing Away, ' the definitive account of the Gulf Coast's grave hurricane risks"--Inside back jacket cover.

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