Katrina, The New Orleans Nightmare : Documentary on the Devastation of Hurricane Katrina
Katrina, The New Orleans Nightmare : Documentary on the Devastation of Hurricane Katrina.
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GRAPHIC PIX Recovery of bodies after hurricane Katrina
(16 Sep 2005) US President George W. Bush on Thursday proposed a sweeping plan for the federal government to pick up most of the costs of rebuilding New Orleans and the rest of the hurricane-ravaged US Gulf Coast, in one of the largest reconstruction projects the world has ever seen.
It has been 19 days since Hurricane Katrina struck the US Gulf coast region and still waters flood the lower parts of Orleans parish, near the University of New Orleans.
As an APTN crew used a boat to travel around the parish, search and recovery crews were seen going building to building.
US Army Search and Rescue's Lieutenant Bill Pursinger described scenes witnessed by his teams as they worked around the neighbourhood.
He said that although the locations of many of the bodies had been recorded and sent to FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency), the group responsible for picking them up had not yet done so.
Across five Gulf Coast states, the death toll from Katrina stood at 710, led by 474 in Louisiana.
Meanwhile, electricity has been restored to large sections of the New Orleans' Central Business District and there are signs that that part of the city is starting to come alive.
The city's Mayor C. Ray Nagin announced plans on Thursday to reopen some of New Orleans' most vibrant and least flood-ravaged neighbourhoods over the next week and a half, including the French Quarter.
The move could bring back more than 180,000 of the city's original half-million residents.
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USA: Officials join residents to mark 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal and Mayor of New Orleans Mitch Landrieu together with other officials and local residents took part in the wreath-laying ceremony at the Hurricane Katrina Memorial in New Orleans, Saturday.
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Wreath laying ceremony marks 9th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina
In 2008, community leaders came together to build the city's Hurricane Katrina memorial, where 100 unidentified victims of the storm are buried. Friday, the mayor welcomed those leaders and the u.s. secretary of housing and urban development to reco Subscribe to WDSU on YouTube now for more:
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Hurricane Katrina Hospital Disaster | Trapped
The Tulane University Hospital in New Orleans, Louisiana takes in patients from other hospitals during Hurricane Katrina. When the basement starts to flood after the hurricane, the decision is made to evacuate. What is to become of the hundreds of patients on life support? Watch this incredible tale of survival and rescue unfold during one of the worst hurricane disasters ever recorded.
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Katrina memorial in St. Bernard Parish
Katrina memorial in St. Bernard Parish
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Shell Beach, 13 years after Hurricane Katrina
Adam Bowles visits Shell Beach, 13 years after Hurricane Katrina destroyed the fishing town.
Lafayette Cemetery in New Orleans
Today I visited Lafayette Cemetery in the Garden District of New Orleans. This place has some very old tombs, plus it's one of the most used cemeteries in New Orleans for film and television! It's been used for productions such as, 'Double Jeopardy', 'NCIS: New Orleans', and even the New Kids on the Block music video for 'You Got It (The Right Stuff)'.
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Hi there, I’m NOLADEEJ! I go to different places in and around New Orleans and sometimes to other cities, states, and countries. I visit Roadside Attractions, Historical Spots, Cemeteries, Abandoned Places, Festivals and Events. I try to check as much out as I can and share what I find here so everyone can enjoy it. If you like what you see, please consider subscribing to my channel. I post videos often! Thanks for dropping by!
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Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans
New Orleans is a city nicknamed the “Big Easy”, however in 2005 a hurricane brought New Orleans to an “Uneasy” situation. On August 29, 2005; Hurricane Katrina struck the United States. Katrina caused harm to human health, property and the natural environment .
Hurricane Katrina Memorial
This is a poem set to music that I wrote about Hurricane Katrina. To all those who ever experience the loss of a home and/or your possessions; you are not alone. Stay strong, there is a bright future. May you all be blessed.
Hurricane Katrina Memorial
This goes to everyone who has ever lost a home. I am so proud of the Gulf Coast for the faith and strength continually demonstrated in the midst of hard times. I too lost my home and all of possessions in Hurricane Katrina which inspired me to write and make this. I pray this touches your heart and helps you find peace! Be blessed, everyone!
Charity Hospital: 10 years after Hurricane Katrina
CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta returns to New Orleans for the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina to check up on Charity Hospital.
Charity Hospital: 10 years later
CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta returns to New Orleans for the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina to check up on Charity
New $1B Medical Center to Open in New Orleans
Among New Orleans losses during Hurricane Katrina was the city's Charity Hospital. But on Aug. 1, a new 2.3 million square foot medical center is scheduled to open to the tune of more than $1 billion. (June 17)
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California Deploys National Guard for Hurricane Katrina
VIRIN: 050910-A-1012H-001
TRT: 02:30
Package story about California National Guard troops deploying to Louisiana in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Scenes from in and around New Orleans acquired SEP 3-9, 2005 to include footage of flood waters in the city shot from boats, aircraft and trucks; Rescues in Orleans Parish (Memorial Medical Center and vicinity, downtown convention center area); Belle Chasse Naval Air Station. California's brand new IC4U communications vehicle highlighted as a way for Louisiana Guard to establish their initial communications.
Soundbites
Deputy Commander LTC David Hawkins (CA ANG) Commander COL Scott Johnson (CA ARNG) Commander Task Force Belle Chasse BG Hunt Downer (LA ARNG)
Produced by SPC Michelle Halpin
69th Press Camp Headquarters,
Joint Task Force California
Reporting Alleged Euthanasia: The Deadly Choices at Memorial
ProPublica reporter Sheri Fink discusses her breakthrough investigation, The Deadly Choices at Memorial, into the deaths of at least 18 patients who died after injections administered at a Katrina-flooded hospital in New Orleans in this exclusive interview with Bruce Shapiro, executive director of the Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
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Video produced by Stan Alcorn and Malcolm Murray.
I Wonder if the Child Made It or Not
In October 2005 The Historic New Orleans Collection initiated Through Hell and High Water: Katrina's First Responders Oral History Project, partnering with local, state, and federal agencies to document their experiences.
In this interview Louisiana Department of Corrections agent James A. Paul recalls a young mother wading through water with a dehydrated infant to a bridge. Paul remembers the woman asking for water, but refusing to evacuate out of fear her other children would be left behind.
This interview is a part of the exhibition Katrina +5: Documenting Disaster, which serves as a reminder of the history made since August 29, 2005 and The Historic New Orleans Collection's ongoing efforts to record it.
James A. Paul, Captain, J. Levy Dabadie Correctional Center, Louisiana Department of Corrections
June 17, 2009
I often wonder if the child made it or not
Photos courtesy of the Louisiana Department of Corrections, MSS 571
Excerpted from:
James A. Paul oral history, June 17, 2009; interviewed by Mark Cave for the Through Hell and High Water: Katrina's First Responders Oral History Project, MSS 571, Williams Research Center, The Historic New Orleans Collection
Slideshow created by Kent Woynowski, Digital Assets Manager, The Historic New Orleans Collection for:
Katrina+5: Documenting Disaster
An exhibition presented by The Historic New Orleans Collection
May 12−September 12, 2010
Hurricane Katrina - YOU MUST WATCH THIS
an edit of news feed - the footage they didn't show you
I Was There: Hurricane Katrina: Heroes of Charity Hospital | History
Charity Hospital was one of the last hospitals to be evacuated after Hurricane Katrina hit. After five days without power or assistance, the staff of Charity took matters into their own hands. including orchestrating a risky roof evacuation. to care for their patients.
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Nursing home where 34 residents died in Katrina, FEMA
SHOTLIST
APTN
New Orleans, Louisiana
1. Exterior of St Rita's Nursing Home
2. Parking lot, cars covered in debris
3. Interior of nursing home, upturned bed frames standing in mud
4. Pan of wheelchairs covered in mud
5. Extra body bags stacked on bed
6. Moving view of corridor, mud on floor, zoom into room with furniture in disarray
7. Various of photographs on walls
8. Pan of room
9. Various of photos on bulletin board, close-up name tag
10. Pan of muddy rooms
11. Photographs
12. Wide view, close-up wheelchairs by window
13. Various interiors
Pool
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Dr Louis Cataldie, Medical Incident Commander, FEMA:
The question has been posed to me, are we doing a good enough job? No. As long as there is one body floating in that water we are not doing a good enough job. And the bottom line is that is my responsibility.
APTN
New Orleans, Louisiana
14. Exterior view of nursing home
STORYLINE
Video shot on Wednesday by APTN shows the conditions inside a New Orleans nursing home in which 34 elderly patients died during the onslaught of Hurricane Katrina.
The husband-and-wife owners of the St. Rita's nursing home in Chalmette were charged with homicide on Tuesday for not evacuating the patients as the hurricane bore down on the area and a storm surge broke the levees around the city causing massive flooding.
Rooms were filled with sludge that entered the nursing home with the flood waters caused by Katrina.
Wheelchairs were lined up in a hallway covered with mud and extra body-bags were left on the vacant beds after recovery workers removed all of the bodies found inside the nursing home.
Inside individual rooms, there were still photographs on walls and name tags on doors - evidence of people's personal belongings amid the debris.
The arrest of nursing-home owners Salvador and Mable Mangano marked the beginning of an attempt by prosecutors to hold those responsible for the New Orleans catastrophe accountable.
Authorities said the death toll would be lower if the nursing home owners had heeded warnings to evacuate their patients as Katrina came ashore August 29.
For Louisiana alone, the death toll surged by more than half Tuesday to 423, and the number is certain to climb.
Including deaths in four other states, Katrina's overall toll stood at 659.
The Manganos were released on 50,000 US dollars bail each; each of the 34 counts against them carries up to five years in prison.
Their attorney, Jim Cobb, said his clients were innocent and had waited for a mandatory evacuation order from the officials of St. Bernard Parish that never came.
FEMA (Federal Emergency Management Agency) Medical Incident Commander, Dr Louis Cataldie, told reporters although everything was being done to recover the remains of those who had died in the storm and its aftermath, as long as there is one body floating in the water more needed to be done.
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