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Tor Tornqvist, CBR scientist and geologist, and his colleagues comment on a research report from last October. That report suggested that sediment for the wetlands comes primarily from hurricanes and not from the river. Challenging the choice of data and the resulting estimates, Tornqvist et al. argue that sediments from the river are the primary source of wetland material, while acknowledging that hurricanes can be significant contributors of sediment.
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CBR Associate Director and geographer Richard Campanella has completed an analysis of New Orleans' residential population distribution and the city's elevational geography, concluding that it is possible that over 300,000 residents could live in the city's above-sea-level neighborhoods at circa-1960 population densities. The report recommends that policies to encourage utilization of properties in this area be investigated and implemented.
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This summary of the full report details the impacts that climate change has had already, and describes anticipated changes in the future. These projections are broken down by economic sector and world region.
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This issue of the journal contains several essays from an interdisciplinary meeting of researchers which took place in New Orleans early in 2006. The topics include Environmental Justice, Flood and contamination risks, engineering failures, geography and geology, and are extended by comparisons to Venice Italy and the Netherlands. Authors include geographers, philosophers, geologists, biologists, engineers, and sociologists. One essay is by KERRN charter member, CBR associate director, and expert on New Orleans' historical geography Richard Campanella.
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This summary of the full report details the evidence that climate change is occurring, and that it has been caused by human activity releasing green house gases. There are several high quality graphics to present the data.
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Several different methods for participatory decision making are evaluated in this article. It describes the advantages and disadvantages of each, and suggests their best implementation. They found that group dynamics complicate even the best-planned work, and that flexibility and adaptive procedures are vital to success.
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These researchers discuss a successful working method that recovery teams developed with experience. The most important components of this method were continuous physical presence, regular meetings advisors and decision-makers, a multiplicity of programs for diverse needs, and "hyperflexibility" in the use of time and other resources.
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Resource-dependent citizens are an active force against changes in resource policy and management. When change does come, they often suffer. What factors might make those people resilient in the face of change? This investigation found that four main factors influenced this: perception of the risk and ability to cope with the change, the perception of the ability to learn, plan and reorganize during the change, and the individual's level of interest in change.
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The World Wildlife Fund has published a report which weighs the benefits and costs of dams, comparing the risk to ecosystems with the need for safe water. It concludes with a section on best practices for dam projects.
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Taking a personal style, and using narrative structure, this author (Tony Stevenson) describes the challenges that have presented to generations of these island residents. Political and economic leaders, natural disasters, and post-colonial history have shaped today's culture. There are programs to plan and develop a better future, which he outlines.
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The National Academy of Science (US) has two recent reports that may be of interest to KERRN researchers and followers. The first is an analysis of hydrology and climate to inform management of the Colorado River and its basin. This river is critical to a great swath of the West, supporting natural ecosystems and supplying water for western agriculture and urban centers. The second is an evaluation of the outcomes of past global change assessments, in search of lessons learned from past communications between scientists and policy makers.
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This issue of the Katrina Index has many statistical findings, now focusing primarily upon New Orleans. Findings include: a peak in residential properties for sale; increase in new residential housing permits; public transportation and school openings are not keeping pace with the slowly rising population; a decrease in unemployment and increase in construction-sector wages. From the Brookings Institution and the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center
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Using Cs dating techniques, this research found that vertical accretion of marsh was due to organic accumulation, even in areas where the soil was 80% mineral. No known mechanism exists for this, but greenhouse studies suggest that flooding stimulates root growth above the marsh surface, so it is possible that flooding leads to accumulation of organic matter, and thus accretion. If this is true, restoration methods based on adding mineral sediments may not work.
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Different types of constructed wetlands were evaluated for their ability to clear nutrients and suspended matter from wastewater.
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These authors compared adjacent restoration plots of high and low intensity. While more intensive restoration reaps benefits in quicker colonization by fish and plants, after 5 years the biodiversity of the two plots was converging.
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A theoretical analysis suggests that industrial cooling water could be diverted to wetlands, resulting in increased water flow for them, and decreased nutrient load of the water. The greatest concern is the water temperature, but duration and location of discharge could be manipulated to reduce negative impact.
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Reviewing muskrat impacts on wetlands, these authors find several case studies exemplifying the damage these rodents can cause. Reviewed also are methods for the control of muskrats. These results may apply as well to non-native Nutria in Louisiana.
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A constructed wetland in Illinois was found to have decreased N by between 30 and 40%. P by 53%, and total organic carbon by 9%. This supports the idea that wetlands could reduce pollution loading, and consequent hypoxia, in the Mississippi River estuary.
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A constructed wetland was remarkably efficient (89% of P, 78% of suspended solids, 63% for total N) using subsurface flow filter beds. There was no significant difference between warm and cold months.
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Radio-labeled nitrate was used to determine maximum denitrification capacity of marsh plots. The rate was 110g of N per sq meter per year, and at least 30% was converted to nitrous oxide. Low discharge rates allow greater denitrification.
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This paper is a review of greenspace development; comparing New Urbanism with Transit-Oriented-
Development it discusses the future of “green” urban planning and design.
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The author describes an urban action-research project in Vancouver, Canada--one of the UN-habitat Global Urban Observatory Network sites. She believes that negotiation and integration of community ideals and values will change the population’s view of the region.
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This author suggests a new framework, that of natural capital, for evaluating the development of sustainability in urban systems.
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Daniel Aldrich, a KERRN political scientist, and his colleage Kevin Crook have made avaliable this study of the political process involved in deciding where groups of FEMA trailers would be placed during reconstruction.
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KERRN geographer and CBR associate Director Richard Campanella has made available an update on his NSF-funded project. Among his findings are a larger number of locally-owned new businesses, including openings of new operations in flood-damaged areas.
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In the November issue of EOS KERRN scientist Torbjorn Tornqvist and a colleague report on their research comparing sea level and subsidence in southern Louisiana. They conclude that some prior reports have overestimated the level of subsidence, but that increasing rates of sea level rise threaten the Mississippi's delta.
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This November update from the Brookings Institute provides the latests statistics on the region's economy, recovery, and rebuilding
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This review from Environmental Science and Policy suggests a systems approach to balance short and long term considerations when making plans for the recovery of communities and reduction of their vulnerability.
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Case studies of four disasters were examined to look for pitfalls and best methods for community participation in the recovery planning process.
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Temporary housing can make up 10-15% of post-disaster construction costs, and with more and larger events occuring, it is important to consider how resources are used to make temporary housing, and to consider its contribution to the waste stream. This study, reported in Building and Environment, examines these issues with a test case.
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KERRN researchers have published in Continental Shelf Research a report that describes studies following a 2002 tropical system. The storm resuspended bottom sediments that quickly settled again. This resulted in sediment thicknesses mostly between 3 and 10 cm, composed primarily of silty clays with a coarser lower segment. This represents a strong disturbing force for benthic communities.
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Published in the American Journal of Medicine, this clinical research study describes the health care provided at an evacuation center, and makes recommendations for future preparations.
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This paper reports, in Geoforum, on the consequences of relocation of former boat-dwellers to an inland village. It tracks their social networks and social capital, and evaluates their long-term recovery chances.
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One quarter of all typhoons in the world occur in the Phillipines, and are the largest natural disaster problem in this region, even though it also has severe earthquakes and deadly volcanoes. In a recent typhoon event economic losses for agriculture were from 60-25%, yet following this disaster there were no changes in agricultural practices.
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This article from Health and Place describes an empirical model that shows that "good" and "bad" neighborhoods respond similarly to challenges, and that their differing results are due to discrepant levels of exposure to stresses and resources.
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The Natural Hazards Center at the University of Colorado at Boulder has a webpage collecting government reports, books, web sites and journal articles on the Hurricane Katrina disaster.
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In Environmental Science and Technology, scientists from the USGS report on chemicals in the muddy bottom of the estuary to the north of New Orleans. This body of water contained much of the water which flooded New Orleans. The found levels of heavy metals and PAH's higher than normal in urban lakes, but most of the contaminants were restricted to near the mouth of canals which carry urban runoff into the lake.
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This is a report from the National Academy of Engineering and the National Research Council of the National Academies, and is published by the National Academies Press.
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These researchers report, in Environmental Health Perspectives, the results of their studies sampling mold and mold-made chemicals. They found spore concentrations outside in flooded areas to be triple that in unflooded areas, but that the highest concentrations were inside flooded homes. The airborne mold toxins levels were variable, and sometimes very high, but there was no strong correlation with flooding or indoor/outdoor collection.
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This research review from the Public library of science summarizes the evidence that human societies depend upon biodiversity. Taking an ecosystem services approach, the authors identify the control of the amount and rate of energy and materials circulating through ecosystems as the major benefit of biodiversity, and express concern for non-linear impacts.
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There are national programs to eliminate health disparities, but there is a lack of the tools necessary to track the environmental factors that result from and contribute to these gaps. This article in Environmental Research suggests measures for tracking environmental health disparities based on a conceptual model that views these inequities as the result of differential access to resources and exposures to risks.
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This research article from the journal Personality and Individual Differences explores how belief systems affect mental health outcomes, including PTSD in flood victims.
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This brief report from the American Society of Civil Engineers' Hurricane Katrina External Review Panel lists 10 "calls to action." These include "Rethink the whole system--including land use," "Put someone in charge," and "Put safety first."
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Appleseeds Reports : A Continuing Storm -
The Ongoing Struggles of Hurricane Katrina Evacuees: Overview / Full Report |
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The national social justice organization Appleseeds has inteviewed hundreds of evacuees of Hurricane Katrina in several cities. They report that while many have adjusted well, a large number are seriously struggling in their new situations, and that the conditions vary widely across the cities to which they have moved.
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This 62pg document from the Rockefeller Institute of Government examines the recovery, capacity and roles of governments in state and local governments of communities affected by hurricanes Katrina and Rita. In its report on 22 target communities, It identifies areas struggling, rebounding and growing, identifying economic causes, and emphasizing the limiting impact of housing and labor shortages on recovery. It finds hope in the way that NGO's filled in the gap left by the inadequate responses of governments, and concern in the lack of a comprehensive rebuilding plan for New Orleans, going so far as to blame the slow pace of recovery on this missing plan.
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Oxfam America has released a report based on its first experience working on disaster recovery in the U.S. They cite inequities in relief aid, and prioritization of rebuilding casinos over homes among their concerns in this 52pg report.
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The August issue of the journal Global Environmental Change is devoted to a single theme: the factors that make human systems more or less vulnerable to climate change. Two editorials and 6 research articles examine this important topic
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This study, published in Environmental Hazards, examines a small rural town in Alabama located near a chemical release hazard, in order to examine the particular issues involved in public hazards related to the poorest quartile of the population.
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"This paper explores elements of vulnerability to natural disasters in the context of
Hurricane Katrina. We examine whether neighborhoods in New Orleans were impacted
differently by Hurricane Katrina based on pre-existing social, physical and economic
vulnerabilities. We evaluate the degree to which the initial impacts of Hurricane Katrina
were distributed among the New Orleans' residents..." From Ecological Economics.
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This comprehensive report from the ACLU's National Prison Project describes the consequences of the lack of planning for prisoners' care following Hurricane Katrina, and makes recommendations for the future.
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Coastal communities are particularly prone to natural disasters. This article from Marine Policy attempts to draw some general priniciples from past events, including the 2004 Asian tsunami.
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Suzanne Leroy of Brunel University in West London discusses in a forthcoming article from Quaternary International the emerging science of environmental catastrophes. She acknowledges the resistance of societies to the lessons of history, and argues that geology and archaeology can work together to overcome this willful ignorance and prepare us for the future.
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In the wake of the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina, Congress enacted legislation creating Gulf Opportunity Zones (GO Zones) in localities in Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi that suffered the most extensive storm damage. Special tax incentives created in these areas are designed to encourage investment, job creation, and economic growth. While many studies have been done to evaluate the effectiveness of federal and state tax-based efforts to redevelop distressed areas, none of the learning has been reflected in policy debates about the Katrina recovery effort. The evidence suggests that tax incentives alone are not enough—they work better when combined with good planning, local capacity-building, and good governance across sectors
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One year after Katrina, New Orleans is showing signs of early rebirth. The housing market is beginning to turn around and increased business and visitor travel have helped bolster the region’s tax base and economy. But the majority of indicators are troubling, pointing to much- needed progress in basic city services, infrastructure, and affordable housing for workers in order to boost market confidence and move the region’s economy affirmatively forward.
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A follow-up report on the effects of Katrina floodwaters on metal contamination of New Orleans' soils has been published in Environmental Science and Technology. Sampling from 43 sites along four transects crossing the city, the researchers found that arsenic and lead levels exceed EPA levels in several locations.
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KERRN Scientist Torbjorn Tornqvist has published a report in the latest issue of Geology that shows relatively low rates of delta subsidence in southern Louisiana
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Amy Liu, Matt Fellowes, and Mia Mabanta of the Brookings Institute have published a report detailing the mixed recovery of the Gulf Coast following Hurricane Katrina.
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The nonprofit Advancement Project has published a report on conditions for workers in the recovery effort of the gulf coast. They have found that workers face unfair conditions exacerbated by their minority status, by the fact that many are undocumented residents of the country, and by the lifiting of OSHA and other regulations by executive order.
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KERRN Scientist Tom Farley, of Tulane's School of Public Health and the Prevention Research Center, has published a report on the results of New Orleans residents' priorities for their communities.
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The Army Corps of Engineers released their preliminary technical report, requested by Congress, on strategies to protect the State from wetlands losses and future storms.
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Science has made available online a paper it has accepted for publication on the increase in wildfires in the western U.S. This report makes the argument that in some areas, particularly the northern Rockies.
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Science magazine profiles anthropologist and human ecologist Simron Jit Singh, who was studying villagers in Southeast Asia before the Tsunami of 2004. After the disaster, he felt it necessary to put aside his scientific objectivity and work to rescue a disappearing culture.
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This report, available online in advance of its publication in Environmental Health Perspectives, is the result of research done by the National Resources Defense Council (NRDC). The leader of the research team says "The mold levels we found across the city could easily trigger serious allergic or asthmatic reactions in sensitive people. The indoor air quality in the flooded homes was particularly worrisome, but fortunately the homes that had been fully gutted and cleaned up did appear to have lower levels." The researchers found mold concentrations outdoors ranged from 21,000 to 102,000 spores per cubic meter (m3). The average outdoor spore concentration in flooded areas was double the concentration in non-flooded areas. The researchers also reported the peak mold spore concentrations over a 30-minute period. The highest outdoor 30-minute concentration was 259,000 spores m3. The highest concentrations were inside homes, where levels ranged from 11,000 to 645,000 spores m3. The 30-minute peak concentration was more than 1 million spores m3. The researchers identified 45 different types of mold in the sampling. The most common molds were Cladosporium, and Aspergillus/Penicillium. They also detected Stachybotrys (often called "toxic mold") in some indoor samples.
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In the face of trauma, drawing may help children gain symbolic control over events that are confusing and frightening. Through examples of children who were affected by Hurricane Katrina, this article describes the use of drawings and narratives to understand children’s experiences related to traumatic displacement.
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Louisiana State University researchers Mark Kaiser and Allan Pulsipher study the risk assessment decisions of energy related to extreme weather events.
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Tulane University Health Sciences Center Clinicians report on the treatment of patients during catastrophic events.
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Engineers Yue Li and Bruce Ellingwood study the importance of uncertainty modeling in risk assessment in this article published in the journal Engineering Structures.
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KERRN Scientist James Elliott and his colleague Jeremy Pais have published results of their NSF sponsored research on the effects of Hurricane Katrina in the journal Social Science Research, where it was June's featured article.
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The American Geophysical Union has published a report, calling for the greater application of science in planning the Gulf Coast rebuilding, and in predicting and planning for disasters in the future.
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KERRN scientist Robert Olshansky reviewed the past evidence for an answer to this question, and proposed a research agenda to establish a more solid foundation for the future in this paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Planning last Fall.
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Mayor Ray Nagin's office has released the final rebuilding plan based on the work of the Bring New Orleans Back Commission.
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The Journal of Public Health Policy has published this article by Pedro Mas Bermejo, a review of Cuban experience with natural disasters. It calls for more international sharing of knowledge and experience, and the development of a global policy for disaster preparation and response.
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| The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released a report stating that stricter adherence to existing building standards, model building codes and good building practices, and a greater recognition of the risks posed by storm surge, could minimize the kind of structural damage experienced in the Gulf Coast states hit by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The executive summary is 23 pp and the full report is over 270 pp. |
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UC Berkeley engineer Robert Bea, Co-Director for the Center for Catastrophic Risk Management, has released a comment on the Interagency Performance Evaluation Task Force (IPET) report on the performance of the New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana Hurricane Protection System.
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| The Interagency Performance Evaluation Task Force (IPET) has released their report on the performance of the New Orleans and Southeast Louisiana Hurricane Protection System. The executive summary is 68pp long. The full report is over 1500 pages long and can be downloaded one chapter at a time. |
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KERRN scientist Robert Olshansky has published an article in the Journal of the American Planning Association which reviews the knowledge gleaned from past disasters and makes recommendations on planning in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.
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KERRN scientist Howard Mielke and his colleagues have published a study on the cleanup of lead from soil in New Orleans' residential areas... |
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KERRN scientist Ashwani Vasishth presents a report on his work on adaptive ecological planning. He discusses the importance of this approach to disaster planning, and uses the Gulf Coast as a case study... |
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KERRN scientist Rich Campanella reports the results of his NSF-funded research project on the return of business to New Orleans Neighborhoods. He surveyed activity on three of New Orleans' major commercial streets to examine areas with different degrees of flooding and to compare neighborhoods with different socio-economic profiles... |
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Haruo Hayashi, Professor at the Disaster Prevention Research Institute of Kyoto University has allowed us to post his presentation on our website. He made this presentation in New Orleans in an event facilitated by the Consul-General, Masaru Sakato. It places the disaster of Hurricane Katrina into a comparative context, and brings lessons from earlier disasters such as the earthquake in Kobe to bear on the situation here... |
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John A. McLachlan,
Weatherhead Distinguished Professor of Environmental Studies and Professor of Pharmacology, Tulane University and Director
Center for Bioenvironmental Research at
Tulane and Xavier Universities presented to the National Science Foundation how he and his colleagues literally picked up the pieces of his demolished laboratory, and the tremendous, multidisciplinary collaborations that have since emerged among researchers across the country who have been studying Katrina's devastation, society's response, and the ongoing recovery. McLachlan also highlighted the Katrina Environmental Research and Restoration Network (KERRN), of which he is the principle investigator... |
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Oliver Houck, professor of Law at Tulane University, with the research assistance of Todd Campbell, Rina Eisenberg, Machelle Lee, and Elizabeth Nagelin raise the question of whether we can save New Orleans in a post-Katrina environment... |
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"Observations from “ground zero”: lessons in disaster preparedness of people with diabetes", is a commentary published in ADA's Diabetes Care Journal authored by WILLIAM T. CEFALU, MD, STEVEN R. SMITH, MD, LAWRENCE BLONDE, MD, and VIVIAN FONSECA,MD... |
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"The New Orleans Principles, a 27-page report from the Gulf Coast Reconstruction Charrettes held at the U.S. Green Building Council’s Greenbuild conference in Atlanta, is available for downloading. The charrettes were held on November 9th through 11th and attended by more than 160 people from the Gulf Coast and throughout North America. The ten principles and more than 50 detailed policy recommendations and actions chart a course for incorporating a context of sustainability into planning and reconstruction efforts in New Orleans. Additional reports on Schools and Affordable Housing from the charrettes will be available later"... |
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"The devastation wreaked by Katrina and Rita tragically demonstrated the risks that many coastal areas face from hurricanes and associated flooding. Prior to the storms, the historical and continuing land losses in the coastal regions of Louisiana contributed to widespread concerns regarding the vulnerability of the region to storms and coastal flooding. This report, which focuses on restoration efforts proposed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and the State of Louisiana in late 2004, was in the final stages of peer review and was essentially complete at the time the hurricanes struck"... |
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"An independent Working Group of scientists and engineers prepared this report with logistical support provided by the Institute of Water Resources of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and the National Research Council. The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Corps, the Federal government or the NRC. The Integration and Application Network of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science was responsible for final preparation of the report. Copies can be obtained from the Center at the following address or electronically through the website http://www.umces.edu/la-restore"... |
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"THERE IS NO PRECISE SCIENTIFIC definition for “mold,”but this term is commonly used to describe the growth of many different spore-forming, microscopic fungi. They are some of the most widely distributed organisms in nature. The water-saturated homes and possessions of New Orleans residents are providing an ideal habitat for mold growth in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina"... |
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We are happy to announce that the ReInhabiting NOLA Final Report, based on the workshop on November 28 and 29 2005, is complete and can be downloaded from the reports section of this website. We thank everybody involved in the creation of the report and would especially like to acknowledge the workshop participants who provided detailed feedback on a preliminary draft. The report documents the process and the results of the workshop and articulates principles for ReInhabiting NOLA that are grounded in collaboration and networking. Please contact us if you would like hard copies of the report.. . |
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"Early media reports about the wind damage and flooding caused by Hurricane Katrina focused on New Orleans, and especially on the people who had been unable to escape the city before it flooded. Images of poor and predominantly black people crowded into the Superdome and Convention Center supported the impression that Katrina had disproportionately affected poor, black neighborhoods. The purpose of this report is to evaluate more precisely what neighborhoods were heavily damaged, including not only New Orleans but also the coastal communities in Mississippi that bore the brunt of hurricane-force winds"... |
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This paper has benefited tremendously from comments and suggestions from engineers, biologists, geologists and knowledgeable locals. Those listed below contributed but do not necessarily indicate an endorsement of the concepts described here. Their contributions are appreciated... |
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This report summarizes a talk by Richard Campanella on “Natural Systems” delivered at the Reinhabiting New Orleans Workshop of November 29-30, 2005. Words and images are derived from Campanella’s forthcoming book, “Geographies of New Orleans: Urban Fabrics Before the Storm,” due out in 2006 from the Center for Louisiana Studies in Lafayette, and from “Time and Place in New Orleans” (Pelican Publishing Company, Gretna, Louisiana 2002) and should be cited accordingly. All words and images are copyright protected... |
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"Addressing the Challenges of
Recovery & Rebuilding
from Hurricanes Katrina & Rita" (includes overview of comparative damage from Hurricane Katrina)... |
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A report assembled by CNMOC at Stennis Space Center which performed preliminary storm surge hindcasts... |
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H.E. Boudewijn van Eenennaam, the ambassador of the Netherlands to the US, remarked about the reconstruction, the restoration, the renaissance, and the renewal of New Orleans and the gulf coast post Katrina... |
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"The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) are coordinating an environmental impact assessment of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in coastal waters throughout the affected region. By integrating response activities conducted aboard the EPA’s OSV Bold, NOAA’s R/V Nancy Foster, FDA small boat teams and numerous field activities in the shallow nearshore and wetland environments, this effort will characterize the magnitude and extent of coastal contamination and ecological effects resulting from this unprecedented storm"... |
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"The first in a series focusing on the impact of hurricanes Katrina and Rita on Louisiana higer education research activities"... |
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The number of commissions, panels, symposia, and workshops convened recently to discuss the reconstruction of New Orleans is exceeded only by the number of proposals offered on how to do it. Should certain neighborhoods be demolished? Should they be rebuilt? If so, how? What if residents want to return but engineers recommend against it? What if the housing stock is severely damaged, but historically and architecturally significant? |
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KERRN - A network of researchers who share data and ideas, crossing disciplinary, geographical and institutional lines, and providing models for how to respond to major environmental disasters. Ensuring maximum benefit and avoiding duplication of effort will require coordination and collaboration among the many research teams working in the area gathering time sensitive data |
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