Posts tagged ‘Hurricane Katrina’

Obama Visits New Orleans on Katrina Anniversary

President Barack Obama waves as he enters Air Force One at the Cape Cod Coast Guard Station in Bourne, Mass., Aug. 29, 2010, after a vacation on Martha’s Vineyard. He will visit New Orleans for the 5th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. (AP Photo/Stew Milne)

August 29, 2010

(KATAKAMi / CBS / AP) President Barack Obama is aiming to underscore his commitment to a region weary of calamity as he travels to New Orleans on the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Obama ends his Martha’s Vineyard vacation Sunday and heads to the Gulf, five years to the day from when Katrina roared ashore in Louisiana. Eighty percent of New Orleans was flooded when the storm tore through protective levees.

More than 1,800 people along the Gulf coast died in the storm, mostly in Louisiana.

After years where halting progress mixed often with setbacks and despair, the city was getting back on its feet when the BP oil spill dealt another blow. The exploded well spewed more than 200 million gallons of crude into the Gulf before it was capped in mid-July.

Obama is to speak Sunday afternoon at Xavier University, a historically black, Catholic university that was badly flooded by the storm. The White House says he will discuss what’s been done and remains to be done in rebuilding from Katrina, and also talk about an oil spill cleanup that’s been complicated by conflicting assessments of how much oil remains and its long-term effects.

For Obama, one challenge is to reassure residents who remain skeptical of government promises after witnessing former President George W. Bush’s response to Katrina, which was criticized as out-of-touch and hamhanded. Although criticism of Obama’s response to the Gulf oil spill rarely reached the level of anger directed at Bush, some still saw it as lacking in speed and coordination. Obama has work to do to change that perception.

Moreover, Obama arrives as many residents of the Louisiana coast chafe under the moratorium on deepwater oil drilling he ordered in the wake of the spill, which is costing New Orleans’ oil-industry-dependant economy. And many residents would like to see a greater federal commitment to restoring the coast’s rapidly eroding wetlands which provide the first line of defense again hurricanes.

The one-day visit to New Orleans is the start of a grueling period for Obama, who must set a fall agenda amid punishing economic news. Crucial midterm elections loom in November.

Tuesday marks the formal end to combat missions in Iraq, and Obama is to address troops in Ft. Bliss, Texas, and deliver an Oval Office speech. The next day he plunges into Middle East diplomacy, hosting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas for individual talks and a joint dinner ahead of direct negotiations Thursday between the leaders.

And once Congress returns after Labor Day, more battles await as Obama tries to push his legislative agenda.

Photostream : Remembering the Fifth Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina

Rain cascades over the names of victims lost to Hurricane Katrina at he Hurricane Katrina Memorial for St. Bernard Parish in Shell Beach, La. , one day before the fifth anniversary of the storm, which took over 1,000 lives and devastated the region, Saturday, Aug. 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

Parishioners listen to a memorial service for Hurricane Katrina inside the church at Our Lady of Prompt Succor on August 28, 2010 in Chalmette, Louisiana. The casket was sealed and ritually buried beneath the Katrina Memorial in St. Bernard Memorial Garden in remembrance of the five year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina making landfall on the Gulf Coast, August 29. (Getty Images)

Musicians including Branford Marsalis (C) lead a second line parade on the eve the five year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana August 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

Second line paraders (L to R) Michael Kilgor, Shirley Cochran and Shirley Hayes dance to a brass band led by Branford Marsalis (rear) on the eve the five year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana August 28, 2010. (GettyImages)

Second line paraders pass a yard filled with debris on the eve the five year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana August 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

A note of remembrance is seen after people place notes and items in a “Katrina casket ” during an Ecumenical funeral service for Hurricane Katrina at Our Lady of Prompt Succor Catholic Church in Chalmette, La. , one day before the fifth anniversary of the storm, which took over 1,000 lives and devastated the region, Saturday,Aug. 28, 2010.

Notes and items which were placed by community members are seen in a “Katrina casket ” during an Ecumenical funeral service for Hurricane Katrina at Our Lady of Prompt Succor Catholic Church in Chalmette, La. , one day before the fifth anniversary of the storm, which took over 1,000 lives and devastated the region, Saturday,Aug. 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

A woman puts a note into a casket, during a symbolic funeral of Hurricane Katrina, on the eve of the storm’s five year anniversary in Chalmette, Louisiana August 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

The Hurricane Katrina Memorial for St. Bernard Parish is seen in Shell Beach, La. , one day before the fifth anniversary of the storm, which took over 1,000 lives and devastated the region, Saturday,Aug. 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

Thomas Stone, chief of the St. Bernard Parish Fire Department, lays a fireman’s helmet with handwritten messages into a casket, during a symbolic funeral of Hurricane Katrina, on the eve of the storm’s five year anniversary in Chalmette, Louisiana August 28, 2010. (Getty Images)

Police and firemen acting as pallbearers place a casket filled with written notes and memories of Hurricane Katrina inside the church at Our Lady of Prompt Succor on August 28, 2010 in Chalmette, Louisiana. The casket was sealed and ritually buried beneath the Katrina Memorial in St. Bernard Memorial Garden in remembrance of the five year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina making landfall on the Gulf Coast, August 29. (Getty Images)

A damaged Lower Ninth Ward church has yet to be repaired August 28, 2010 in New Orleans, Louisiana. The fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina is August 29. (Getty Images)

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(File) New Orleans areas flooded after Hurricane Katrina with oily water ( 2005)

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(File) Aerial views of damage caused from Hurricane Katrina the after the hurricane hit August 30, 2005