Smoking NOLA Guns: NOLA Had Busses Galore, and the Mayor Ignored the Evacuation Plan, Which Used Busses
I have been saying here that no major city can rely on private cars for evacuation in an emergency, and that the Mayor of New Orleans ought to have commandeered NOLA's own busses to take out evacuees. Thanks to Junkyard Blog for pictures of the NOLA busses galore that were available. Incriminatingly, the state's evacuation plan, which the mayor ignored, even called for using those busses. And most incriminatingly, President Bush had appealed for mandatory evacuation. Here is just one image of one set of city busses.
Junkyard Blog quotes the southeast Louisiana evacuation plan supplement, most recently revised in 2000. Go to page 13, paragraph 5, says Junkyard Blog:
5. The primary means of hurricane evacuation will be personal vehicles. School and municipal buses, government-owned vehicles and vehicles provided by volunteer agencies may be used to provide transportation for individuals who lack transportation and require assistance in evacuating.
This sure looks like a smoking gun to me.
On August 28, the mayor ordered what he called a mandatory evacuation, according to an AP report on the website of the Times-Picayune. The AP report contains another smoking gun, namely, the following extraordinary indications that the mayor was not in fact serious about evacuating the city:
Acknowledging that large numbers of people, many of them stranded tourists, would be unable to leave, the city set up 10 places of last resort for people to go, including the Superdome.The mayor called the order unprecedented and said anyone who could leave the city should. He exempted hotels from the evacuation order because airlines had already cancelled all flights.
Gov. Kathleen Blanco, standing beside the mayor at a news conference, said President Bush called and personally appealed for a mandatory evacuation for the low-lying city, which is prone to flooding.
So the evacuation was mandatory, except for those who had no way to leave, and for those in hotel rooms. How mandatory is that? And what about those busses and other "government-owned vehicles" that the evacuation plan said the mayor should have used?
But in fact, the City of New Orleans has never been serious about evacuation. President Bush got them to call the evacuation mandatory, but New Orleans does not really do things that way:
Previous hurricanes evacuations in New Orleans were always voluntary, because so many people don't have the means of getting out. Some are too poor and there is always a French Quarter full of tourists who get caught.
So this evacuation order was just like all the others: voluntary. Because Katrina was a serious hurricane, and because President Bush appealed for mandatory evacuation, the mayor upped his vocabulary a notch and called the voluntary evacuation mandatory. He lacked the political will to enforce a mandatory evacuation, however, and so he went back to business as usual.
Again, let's look at plans for New York City. Let's make sure there is a plan, and that New York's mayor is ready to use it, whether there are tourists here--as there always are--or not.

