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BEFORE AND AFTER. Hard-hit Orange Beach, Ala., and other
coastal towns lost motels, condos and tourist attractions.
(Photos courtesy of USGS) |
Even
as Florida struggled to recover from a one-two hurricane punch,
another monster storm slammed into its Panhandle and Alabama's
Gulf Coast on Sept. 16, adding more wind and rain-induced
damage that extended up the East Coast. But abating winds,
receding floods and the beginning of cleanup, damage assessment
and reconstruction still didn't address major concerns for
those in the country's most hurricane-prone regions. Predictions
of more frequent big storms hitting the U.S. in the next decades
could challenge existing construction techniques, building
codes and evacuation procedures. They may also prompt new
calls to curb coastal building.
"We have been giving these
warnings since 1996," says Stanley B. Goldenberg, a meteorologist
with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
hurricane research division in Miami. "In many areas,
they have flat-out ignored the hurricane problem."
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The impact of Hurricane Ivan was
hard to ignore for residents, local government and utility
officials and the construction industry. "I've been through
six hurricanes and this is the worst one I've ever seen,"
says Ray Etters, vice president of Conti Construction, Pensacola.
"Devastation is a good word for what happened."
The contractor's own office was damaged, "and they're
telling us for the most part, it will be three weeks before
power is restored." Ard Contracting, Birmingham, fared
better but still faces several weeks of project shutdowns
while cleaning out debris and sand from jobsites from Pensacola
to Gulf Shores, Ala., says Garry Ard, president.
Click
here for story - Contractors See Hard Realities
About 825,000 of Alabama Power's
1.3 million customers were initially without power after Ivan
roared through. Ivan struck Gulf Power's Panhandle operations
head-on. "It's catastrophic," says a utility spokesman.
"The electric system it has taken us 80 years to build
was basically destroyed in eight hours last night."
Click
here for story - Ivan Kills The Power
In Atlanta, 10 million gals. of
raw sewage was dumped into a creek in the city's northwest
section after the storm ruptured a 4-ft-dia sewage pipe. A
critical crossing across Escambia Bay in Florida that carries
Interstate-10 is under fast-track reconstruction after being
sliced by storm surge.
click here for story - Contractor Tackles Fast Repairs to
Hurricane-Ravaged Bridge
Who's Vulnerable?
New Orleans largely escaped the
hurricane, but it exposed vulnerability in the city's evacuation
and coastal protection plans. "We had 300,000 vehicles
trying to leave the southeast Louisiana area in about a three-day
period," says a spokesman for the Louisiana Dept. of
Transportation and Development.
The city's levee system is adequate
for 90% to 95% of likely storms. "It's the other five
to 10% that scare me," says Albert Naomi, senior project
manager for the Army Corps of Engineers' New Orleans district.
The Corps and other officials have identified $14 billion
worth of projects that would restore Louisiana's coastal defenses
against further gulf encroachment. Congress may authorize
about $1.5 billion.
Click
here for story - New Orleans Is Served Notice
Ivan's assault on major infrastructure
and engineered buildings raises another
worry. All four hospitals in Escambia County, Fla., suffered
major damage. Several storm shelters reportedly had serious
roof damage, a situation that raised concern in Arcadia, Fla.,
during Hurricane Charley when a shelter roof collapsed. "We...
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