The Demographics
During disasters, poor people, people of color, and the elderly die in disproportionate numbers (source), and Katrina was no exception. Many decisions were made in the days leading up to and shortly after Katrina that amplified loss of life for these groups. New Orleans is both a poor (23% poverty rate pre-Katrina – twice the national average) and segregated city, and these factors led to loss of life. First, an effective evacuation plan was not in place that accounted for the 112,000 poor, mostly black New Orleanians without cars. Additionally, the timing of the storm at the end of the month meant that those receiving public assistance were unusually cash-strapped. To make matters worse for poor people with children, school had just started so expenses for the month were higher than usual.
The immobile poor were disproportionately left behind and lost their lives. A comprehensive study of evacuees to Houston (who had stayed behind during the storm) found that 22% were physically unable to evacuate, 14% were physically disabled, 23% stayed in New Orleans to care for a physically disabled person, and 25% were suffering from a chronic disease (source). Also,
• 55% did not have a car or a way to evacuate
• 68% had neither money in the bank nor a useable credit card
• 57% had total household incomes of less than $20,000 in the prior year
• 76% had children under 18 with them in the shelter
• 77% had a high school education or less
• 93% were black
• 67% were employed full or part-time before the hurricane
Age was also a factor in fatalities. Nearly 40% of those who died in Katrina were elderly, and many more elderly individuals died from the stress of evacuation and home loss.
Government Response
Mayor Nagin received nearly $20 million to establish a workable evacuation plan in plenty of time for Katrina, but it’s questionable whether it was ever developed, and it was never disseminated. Two months before Katrina, Nagin spent money to produce and distribute DVDs in poorer neighborhoods to inform residents that they would be on their own if a storm hit because the city could not afford to evacuate them. In the days before the storm, Nagin sent empty Amtrak trains out of the city, failed to mobilized available school and other buses, and waited an entire day to call for a mandatory evacuation so he could determine whether the City would face lawsuits from local businesses (source). All of these decisions were deadly.
The federal response was no better. The city was quiet after the storm whipped through late Sunday night/early Monday morning when President Bush announced that New Orleans had “dodged a bullet.” Within hours, three major levees breaches and over fifty minor breaches flooded the city. Despite Governor Blanco’s request for federal assistance on Saturday (two days before the storm made landfall) and concern from local media on Sunday (one day before the storm) that the levees wouldn’t hold, they breached on Monday morning with only two Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) workers on the ground (see the timeline). It would take two days for 1,000 additional officials to arrive.
Once on the ground, FEMA slowed the evacuation with unworkable paperwork and certification requirements. Marc Cresswell, a medic from a private ambulance company, reported that “At one point I had 10 helicopters on the ground waiting to go, but FEMA kept stonewalling us with paperwork. Meanwhile, every 30 or 40 minutes someone was dying.” FEMA was also criticized for turning away personnel, vehicles, medical equipment, food and other supplies, and diesel fuel.
The 30,000 people who evacuated to the Superdome (per Nagin’s instructions) were stranded for a week. Those who evacuated to the Superdome experienced deplorable conditions – unbearable heat, darkness, the stench of sewage, and a lack of food and water. They were not allowed to leave, and, according to several evacuees I interviewed in Texas shortly after the storm, this led one man to take his life by jumping from a balcony. This death was one of only six deaths at the Superdome: one person overdosed and four others died of natural causes. Another 20,000 people gathered at the Convention Center for assistance, an evacuation site the federal government was unaware of until three days after the storm.
President Bush was otherwise occupied during this time. The day Katrina hit, he traveled to Arizona and California to promote his prescription drug plan, had birthday cake with John McCain, and attended a Padres game.
Panicked at the slow federal response, Governor Blanco sent an urgent request: “Mr. President, we need your help. We need everything you’ve got.” The president retired to bed that night without responding to Blanco. The next day, he sang songs with country singer Mark Willis and returned to Texas for the final night of his vacation. The President was so oblivious to the suffering in New Orleans that his staff made a video of news coverage four days after the storm to sensitize him. And, in response, President Bush’s team assembled a carefully crafted PR plan to blame local officials seven days into the ordeal while thousands of people were still stranded. Later that same day, President Bush made the infamous statement, “Brownie, you’re doing a heckuva job.”
Cross-posted at Caroline Heldman’s blog.
Comments 26
Kelsey P — August 29, 2011
Hmm, gives Kanye West's comments more validity....
JF — August 29, 2011
As someone who lived in the area during Katrina, and housed evacuees from New Orleans for a month, I KNOW it was handled poorly. But I do want to point out, Mayor Nagin is an African American. If you're going to make ethnicity an important component of this article, you should make note of that as well.
gennieraider — August 30, 2011
I did not bother to read most of your post because at a glance I can tell you the stat's are wrong. 55 percent were African-American, compared to 40 percent white, 2 percent Hispanic and 1 percent Asian-Pacific. It pretty much matched the make up of the city (but in fairness I will say there were 30-35 or so people where race was never determined). 85 percent were older than 51 and almost half were older than 75. "Neither race nor gender made anyone more likely to die, only age, a failure to evacuate and a location near a levee breach." http://www.nola.com/hurricane/index.ssf/2009/08/answers_are_scarce_in_study_of.html
I am from New Orleans. I live in Jefferson and suffered only tree damage but my mother, family members and many of my friends lost their homes and everything inside them. I have spent a great deal of time reading various reports and investigations regarding Katrina. Sorry, your sources are junk for the most part and very little of what you have written is correct.
USA: Inga evakueringsplaner för funkisar! | Funkpol.se — August 30, 2011
[...] läser i amerikansk media att när orkanen Katrina drabbade New Orleans så lämnades de kvar i staden som inte hade bil. [...]
Beasts Of The Southern Wild. Dir. Benh Zeitlin. Fox Searchlight Pictures. 2012. | ZooScope — January 20, 2014
[…] black, 68% were considered impoverished, `having neither money in the bank nor a usable credit card`[16], all statistics considered showing that `during disasters, poor people, people of color, and the […]
Zydeco76 — April 28, 2014
As somebody that was smack in the middle of Katrina when it made landfall I can say with confidence that this article is a straight up political hit job. Right at Bush it goes... Katrina affected every inch of coast from Mobile to New Orleans. It wiped entire towns off the map. You focus on New Orleans which did infact "dodge the Bullet" It caught the edge. Yes that brought a lot of water. Biloxi got hit with a 30-40 ft wall of water. LA took serious damage. There was not an inch of Mississippi that did not get some damage. The gov of LA and the Mayor of NO are responsible for the carnage that occurred later. MS came out of the storm better off than it had been before as it applied the MASSIVE funds given by Bush to improving industry and infrastructure. In NO they were more worried about stealing everyones guns and looting. Yes I mean the authorities were looting. Waveland was leveled Bay St Louis was leveled. Many small towns were destroyed. But here we are making a litteral "act of god" into a race baiting piece political hit job. Wanna bad mouth Bush? Go ahead he gave plenty of ammo. @ obsurd wars and the AIG bailout are legitimate examples. Want to critisize FEMA? Go ahead they gave plenty of ammo. Implying that Bush neglected NO becuause he don't care about black people is stupid false and pathetic.
After the Flood | CollTales — August 27, 2015
[…] damage in black communities reached 45.8%, compared to 26.45 in undamaged areas, and with no evacuation plan in place, attempts to move people out of the way of the storm were either running behind or riddled […]
September 1: Dropping the F-bomb « MVH – AP American Government — September 1, 2015
[…] Demographics […]
What Will the Clean Power Plan Mean for Low-Income People in America? | Poverty & Policy — October 22, 2015
[…] Even if authorities have more effective evacuation plans, folks short on resources — especially the elderly, it seems — are likely to die from the […]
bart — April 25, 2016
the black reverts to his savage nature
Rizzo419 — November 23, 2016
This author severely understates the chaos, rape, destruction, and murder that went on in New Orleans. Shooting at rescue workers, looting hospitals, overturning ambulances, the Superdome was littered with bodies of the raped and beaten. Not to mention the cowardly police force who abandoned their posts almost immediately. Very few authors have told their stories, but they can be found.
What a disgustingly one-sided hit piece that completely ignores the majority of violent crime victims just to paint a picture of "racist" whites, harassing and killing a handful of innocent blacks who were just out for a pleasant evening stroll in a strange neighborhood. They were good boys who didn't do nothing.
We all saw what happened at the Superdome and other temporary shelters. These are the people they didn't want coming into their neighborhood, and who can blame them?
Misconceptions about Health Disparities in the US | Anthropology-News — April 19, 2017
[…] circumstances, such as natural disasters, infrastructure failures, and economic recessions (e.g., Hurricane Katrina, Flint lead poisoning). Even knowing that one is vulnerable is a stress in itself. As such, the […]
TEACH. TALK. SURVIVE. | UWA Ecological Engineering 2017 — May 31, 2017
[…] are some statistics that paint a more detailed picture of the […]
Hurricane Harvey Is Racist Or Something » Pirate's Cove — August 26, 2017
[…] 1,400 died because of Katrina. Most of them were poor, elderly and black. Almost ten years later, the city had nearly 100,000 less black […]
The Hillside by Freetown: Terror of Another Sort — August 29, 2017
[…] did not escape before portions of the city was laid to waste by the rising waters? Overwhelmingly, people who were black, less well educated, poor. They were the people without cars, people whom the city left behind. A disproportionate number […]
eavesmac — September 9, 2017
The blacks were the victims because of their culture and lifestyle; with little reserve funds or substance, they're dependent on the govt. for help. The question now is, 'how good is life led by a govt.?
Joel — March 14, 2019
I am disgusted by these racists comments! Fellow white people, don’t forget who BUILT THIS NATION FOR FREE! Africans.
Worst Than Katrina – Hill1News — May 2, 2019
[…] to hit the US mainland. It made landfall on August 29, 2005. It killed over 1800 people, of which 93% were black. I was a young man back then.. well I was “young at heart.” Look I got my […]
Anonymous — January 31, 2021
Jesus will judge this world: he shed his blood for us!
CC Campbell-Rock — March 10, 2021
Reading the comments, one can plainly see that some of the commentators are racist. They won't admit it because they are in racism denial. Comments about blacks being "less well educated" (how does the commentator know this?), "... they're dependent on the govt. for help..." (More whites are on welfare than blacks), and other racist statements show that they are afflicted with the racism virus. How they could be offended by the author's plain facts is beyond me.
DiscoverNet | Messed Up Things That Happened During Hurricane Katrina — June 20, 2021
[…] conditions in the Superdome, "it was not the murderous hellhole" it was reported to be. The Society Pages writes that there were six deaths in the Superdome: one by suicide, one by overdose, and four from […]
Janie Mejias — January 6, 2022
The link for the for this source source is not working. Can somebody provide the source? Thank you! "immobile poor were disproportionately left behind and lost their lives. A comprehensive study of evacuees to Houston (who had stayed behind during the storm) found that 22% were physically unable to evacuate, 14% were physically disabled, 23% stayed in New Orleans to care for a physically disabled person, and 25% were suffering from a chronic disease" (source).