HURRICANE KATRINA








Hurricane Katrina was the first Category 5 hurricane of the 2005 Atlantic
hurricane season. It was the third most powerful storm of the season,
behind Hurricane Wilma and Hurricane Rita, and the sixth-strongest storm
ever recorded in the Atlantic basin. It first made landfall as a Category 1
hurricane just north of Miami, Florida on August 25, 2005, then again on
August 29 along the Central Gulf Coast near Buras-Triumph, Louisiana as a
Category 4 storm. Its storm surge soon breached the levee system that
protected New Orleans from Lake Pontchartrain and the Mississippi River.
Most of the city was subsequently flooded mainly by water from the lake.
This and other major damage to the coastal regions of Louisiana,
Mississippi, and Alabama made Katrina the most destructive and costliest
natural disaster in the history of the United States.The official death toll now
stands at 1,302 and the damage from $70 to $130 billion, topping Hurricane
Andrew as the most expensive natural disaster in U.S. history.  Over a
million people were displaced — a humanitarian crisis on a scale unseen in
the U.S. since the Great Depression.

In Louisiana, the hurricane's eye made landfall at 6:10am CDT on Monday,
August 29. After 11:00am CDT, several sections of the levee system in New
Orleans collapsed. By early September, people were being forcibly
evacuated, mostly by bus to neighboring states.
Federal disaster declarations blanketed 90,000 square miles (233,000 km²)
of the United States, an area almost as large as the United Kingdom

On September 3, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff described
the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina as "probably the worst catastrophe, or
set of catastrophes" in the country's history, referring to the hurricane itself
plus the flooding of New Orleans.
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