Katrina Forgotten Already? Bloggers may not be forgetting about Katrina but they are not blogging about it nearly as much. The graph below from BlogPulse shows the decreasing trend in blog posts about Hurricane Katrina.
The total number of English language Katrina blog posts recently passed the 500,000 post mark on Technorati. There are over 468,000 posts on BlogPulse and over 900,000 posts on IceRocket.com.
Brian Williams was recently in New Orleans and he has some posts on what it is like here, here and here. This quote is from the live segment but was posted on the Daily Nightly blog.
"Finally tonight, the parts of this city not visible to the rest of the nation. From the air, New Orleans -- and this whole region for that matter -- looks like a sea of blue. The locals call it "FEMA blue," the plastic tarp material that covers the roofs of houses.
And when you fly over at night, you see the reality as well. As much as this city wants to stress the services that have been restored: there are entire areas still living in darkness. No power. No lights. For three months.
The U.S. is at war. The holidays are coming. Americans are busy. And a whole lot of people in this area want people to know: life is still a daily struggle in this part of the world."
The Pink Flamingo Bar and Grill has some photos of Katrina damage as well
as some commentary about the media coverage of Katrina.
Tapscott's Copy Desk says FEMA would get the award for least popular government agency if such an award existed. Tapscott also says FEMA is hiding the results from its own customer satisfaction survey.
Is the EPA in denial about toxic levels in NOLA? Apparently, they are. The NRDC says toxins are widespread.
"New tests by the Natural Resources Defense Council and a Louisiana-based environmental chemist found dangerously high levels of industrial chemicals and heavy metals in the sediment covering much of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. The tests also found alarming levels of long-banned pesticides that flood waters carried from an abandoned factory into a residential neighborhood.
The tests found arsenic levels in samples from neighborhoods across the entire city, for example, that exceeded Environmental Protection Agency safety limits -- in some places by a factor of 30 -- and samples taken in residential neighborhoods near two toxic waste sites found high levels of DDT and other banned pesticides, and cancer-causing petroleum chemicals."
FEMA Pulls Out of Ninth Ward: Dozens of bloggers are
discussing a Washington Post article that said
FEMA pulled out of the NO's Lower Ninth Ward after threats of violence.
The Accidental Hedonist examines the status of New Orleans restaurants.
Ernie the Attorney says NO wants a new levee system: "All you have to do is click here and let the folks in Washington know that you think we should have a levee system that, well...you know, actually keeps the water out."
VatulBlog discusses the future of New Orleans in Day 95 and also expresses disappointment: "When America knew of the imminence of the Perfect Storm, why
were we so unrealistic, unprepared and uncaring? To make lemonade out of this
situation, I hope that the rest of the nation and world now understand the
horrible circumstances under which some Americans lived until the storm,
encouraged by a vicious cycle of government corruption and citizen apathy."
Construction Owners & Builders Law Blog cites a report that says the levees were poorly constructed and that they "were a disaster
waiting too happen."
The Orlando Sentinel blog blogs about a puppy rescue.
Lifesaver has posted some pics from Biloxi. Lifesaver also thanked Joe Scarborough of MSNBC for some long overdue coverage of the Biloxi area.
Andreson@Large has been blogging
about the deadline when FEMA will no longer pay for people from NO to stay in hotels at several locations around the U.S. Because these people still have no homes in NO they will likely be left homeless when the deadline is reached: "Though FEMA has extended the deadline for victims of Hurricane Katrina to 'transition from' (read: get the hell out) subsidized hotel rooms in 10 states, thousands of evacuees throughout the Katrina Diaspora may
be kicked to the curb (and here) 10 days before Christmas."