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http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2005/09/15/katrina_timeline/

Timeline to disaster: Salon's hour-by-hour account of the worst natural
disaster in U.S. history -- and how our government failed

continued...


Wednesday, Aug. 31

Morning: Gov. Blanco appears on several morning news shows to say that the
most pressing matter for New Orleans is to find a way to move 20,000
people from the Superdome out of the city. Conditions at the Superdome
have become, by this time, deplorable. The New York Times will report, "By
Wednesday the stink was staggering. Heaps of rotting garbage in bulging
white plastic bags baked under a blazing Louisiana sun on the main entry
plaza, choking new arrivals as they made their way into the stadium after
being plucked off rooftops and balconies. The odor billowing from toilets
was even fouler. Trash spilled across corridors and aisles, slippery with
smelly mud and scraps of food." The Los Angeles Times will note of
conditions there: "At least two people, including a child, have been
raped. At least three people have died, including one man who jumped 50
feet to his death, saying he had nothing left to live for."

Blanco issues an emergency proclamation allowing the state to commandeer
school buses to evacuate people (PDF). On CNN, she says state and federal
officials are looking into various ways to clear the Dome -- the
government may use buses, boats or helicopters. Blanco says she does not
know where the evacuees will be moved to. One idea is to house people on
cruise ships docked around the Gulf. Another is to look for small shelters
throughout the region. "This is something we have to work with FEMA on,"
she says. "You know, we don't have any answers right now on what we will
do with folks once we stabilize the situation. We're in a crisis mode. And
we simply have to move people and get them to safe ground. I think that's
what we have to do right now."

The Bush administration dispatches four Navy ships to the Gulf. The ships,
which are docked in Virginia, are expected to arrive in the affected
region by the weekend. The administration also decides to release oil from
the strategic reserve in order to keep down gasoline prices.

On his way back from Crawford, Bush surveys hurricane damage from the
window of Air Force One. When he gets back to Washington, Blanco calls him
and asks for more help: She wants 40,000 troops. The request sparks a
discussion in the administration over the question of federalizing the
effort. By law, active-duty troops aren't allowed to perform domestic
law-and-order functions; they can only do so if Blanco signs over control
of the effort to the federal government, or if Bush usurps her power by
invoking the Insurrection Act.

In Washington, Steven Blum, the chief of the National Guard, looks into
ways to bring more Guard into the region. He holds a videoconference with
Guard generals across the devastated region, and arranges for 3,000 troops
to come into New Orleans over the next 24 hours, according to the
Washington Post.

8 a.m. Emergency generators at two New Orleans hospitals -- Charity
Hospital and University Hospital -- run out of fuel. About 350 patients
and 1,000 staff and others are holed up in the hospitals; it's unclear how
or when they will leave the city, doctors say.

10 a.m. FEMA and Blanco announce an evacuation plan for New Orleans.
People at the Superdome and other shelters in the city will be bused in
convoys to Houston's Astrodome, they say. About 475 buses have been
secured for the evacuation. Officials give no indication of when the buses
will arrive, but they estimate that the operation will take two days or
less.

Midday: Maj. Gen. Don Riley of the Corps of Engineers tells the
Times-Picayune that water levels in the city and Lake Pontchartrain have
equalized, causing floodwaters to level off in the city. New Orleans has
essentially become a part of the lake. Water levels in the city will rise
and fall with the tides, he says. The Corps is attempting to fix the 17th
Street Canal levee by filling the breach with sandbags, but the Corps does
not have enough slings -- which hold sandbags in place while they're being
transported by helicopters -- to finish the job. At this point, though,
the efforts aren't very urgent; even if the levees are fixed, officials
are estimating that it will take months to pump the city free of water.

4:11 p.m. After meeting with members of his Cabinet, President Bush makes
his first public statement acknowledging the scale of the disaster. "The
vast majority of New Orleans, Louisiana, is under water," he says. "Tens
of thousands of homes and businesses are beyond repair. A lot of the
Mississippi Gulf Coast has been completely destroyed. Mobile is flooded.
We are dealing with one of the worst natural disasters in our nation's
history." Bush says that buses are moving in to evacuate people from the
Superdome. He spends a great deal of the speech listing resources the
federal government has provided, including "400 trucks to move 1,000
truckloads containing 5.4 million meals ready to eat, or MREs, 13.4
million liters of water, 10,400 tarps, 3.4 million pounds of ice, 144
generators, 20 containers of pre-positioned disaster supplies, 135,000
blankets and 11,000 cots." Bush adds: "And we're just starting." It is
unclear how many of these provisions are making it into affected areas.

Late afternoon: Mayor Ray Nagin orders 1,500 city policemen -- the bulk of
the force -- to abandon search-and-rescue efforts and instead fight the
increasing lawlessness in the city. Looting in the city is widespread. At
one Rite-Aid drugstore, a group uses a forklift to break open the place,
allowing in "a steady stream of looters, many wheeling shopping carts, to
stock up, primarily with food, candy, any soft drink or water or alcohol,
and cigarettes," a Times-Picayune reporter writes. Such incidents are
reported all over the city.

The city's descent into disorder is epitomized by the scene at the
convention center, which the news media begins reporting on late in the
day. Reporters on scene estimate that more than 3,000 people are there,
but more are coming in all the time, as officials around the city are
telling people that the convention center has food and, importantly, buses
to evacuate people.

In fact, people at the center are stranded, starving, and seemingly
forgotten about by the authorities. There is a dead body in a lawn chair
outside the center -- the body of Booker Harris, a 91-year-old man who was
dropped off there with his wife Allie, 93.

Booker's body is visible to all, including TV news correspondents, who
flock to the place. "I mean, this convention center is right in the heart
of downtown. I mean, picture any downtown where -- any city you live, Main
Street, wherever. The main building, there's a dead body that has been
sitting out there for two days. They put a blanket over him," CNN
correspondent Chris Lawrence reports. Lawrence also says, "These people
are hungry. They're tired. They've got nowhere to go. They've got no
answers, and they've got no communication whatsoever. And the officer
said, when night comes -- I'm watching the sun dip behind the buildings
right now, he was very afraid -- he said, 'I don't know which night it's
going to break, but these people have a breaking point. And I'm scared to
see what happens when they reach that point.'"

Despite the televised scenes, there is no public response -- from state,
local or federal authorities -- to the disaster there.

7 p.m. After a day of shopping for pricey shoes, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice attends a performance of the Monty Python musical
"Spamalot!" She is reportedly booed by some in the audience.

Evening: FEMA director Michael Brown appears on a slate of news shows,
declaring that contrary to what people have been seeing on TV, storm
victims are being helped in New Orleans. Larry King asks Brown, "All of
our correspondents, other people telling our correspondents that they're
frustrated, they're angry, they're mad at the government, state, federal.
They're not getting enough. And they're saying where is the help. So where
is the help?"

"Larry, the help is right there," Brown says. "And it's going to be moving
in very, very rapidly. I'm going to ask the country to be patient ... And
I must say this storm is much, much bigger than anyone expected." Moments
later Brown appears to contradict himself when he says that his agency has
long anticipated that a hurricane hitting New Orleans would be one of the
worst possible disasters. "We planned for it two years ago. Last year, we
exercised it. And unfortunately this year, we're implementing it."

Brown promises that relief will arrive tomorrow. "That help is there. We
have an agreement with [Defense] Secretary [Donald] Rumsfeld. the
president has stepped in. We're going to have air-lifting commodities in.
We're going to have those caravans moving tonight. So tomorrow you're
going to see that relief." The claim will prove largely false.

Thursday, Sept. 1

7 a.m. In an interview with ABC's Diane Sawyer, President Bush says that
the federal government's evacuation effort is well under way, and that a
"major transportation lift" is already getting people out of the
Superdome. He does not mention -- nor is he asked about -- evacuation
plans for the New Orleans convention center, where more than 20,000 people
are now stranded without food, water, medical attention or security.

The New York Times will later report that Bush only learns that there are
people at the convention center around the time of his interview with
Sawyer. Bush finds out about the convention center in an unusual way --
from a wire service news report that an aide hands to him. Aides will tell
the Times that the report angers Bush, because Michael Chertoff, the
secretary of Homeland Security, had not mentioned the convention center in
a morning briefing to Bush. Neither Chertoff nor his subordinate, FEMA
director Michael Brown, are aware of the situation there. Brown,
responsible for all federal disaster relief, will later say that he does
not learn that the convention center is being used as a shelter until
sometime on Thursday, two days after the city first opened the center for
evacuees, and a day after scenes from the convention center dominated TV
news.

In his chat with Sawyer, Bush suggests that federal government was
surprised by the scope of the storm damage. "I don't think anybody
anticipated the breach of the levees," he says. "They did anticipate a
serious storm. These levees got breached, and as a result, much of New
Orleans is flooded and now we're having to deal with it and will." In
fact, long before the hurricane struck land, many experts and officials --
including the Hurricane Center's Mayfield and Mayor Nagin -- warned that
the levees were vulnerable.

Morning: Authorities suspend evacuations at the Superdome -- evacuations
that had only just begun -- due to what they call increasing unrest
outside the arena, including reports of weapons fire at rescue helicopters
and fires deliberately set in the path of buses. Lawlessness in the city
is hampering rescue efforts all over, officials say. More than 28,000
National Guard troops have been called up to the city, but there are far
fewer actually in the area -- between 8,000 and 13,000. Only a few hundred
Guardsmen are present at the Superdome.

Observing the situation at the Superdome, Terry Ebbert, who heads New
Orleans' emergency operations, tells the Associated Press: "This is a
national disgrace. FEMA has been here three days, yet there is no command
and control. We can send massive amounts of aid to tsunami victims, but we
can't bail out the city of New Orleans. We have got a mayor who has been
pushing and asking, but we're not getting supplies."

Midday: President Bush has lunch with Federal Reserve chairman Alan
Grenspan to discuss the economic impact of the storm. Later, he holds a
press conference with two former presidents, his father and Bill Clinton,
whom he has asked to lead an effort to raise private money for hurricane
relief. At a press briefing, spokesman Scott McClellan is asked if Bush is
satisfied with the government's response to the hurricane. "This is not a
time to get into any finger pointing or politics or anything of that
nature," McClellan says. "This is a time to make sure all our resources
available are focused where they need to be, and that is on the people who
have been displaced or the people who have been otherwise affected by this
natural disaster. And that's exactly what we're doing."

At a press conference, Homeland Security secretary Chertoff insists that
his department has the situation in New Orleans under control. "The fact
of the matter is, the Superdome is secure," he says. "Understandably,
there are crowd-control issues. People are anxious, they're impatient,
they're hot, they're tired, they want to get someplace else. That is more
than understandable." Chertoff says people there are safe and their
evacuation is imminent. In fact, conditions at the Superdome are described
as chaotic and dangerous. Chertoff does not mention the convention center.

At almost exactly the same time, Mayor Ray Nagin sends out "a desperate
SOS" on CNN. "Right now we are out of resources at the convention center
and don't anticipate enough buses," Nagin says. "We need buses. Currently
the convention center is unsanitary and unsafe and we're running out of
supplies."

The network runs a montage of graphic scenes from the convention center,
including pictures of several dead bodies. Chris Lawrence, a CNN
correspondent, reports, "We spent the last few hours at the convention
center, where there are thousands of people just laying in the street.
They have nowhere to go. These are mothers. We saw mothers. We talked to
mothers holding babies. I mean, some of these babies, 3, 4, 5 months old,
living in these horrible conditions. Putrid food on the ground, sewage,
their feet sitting in sewage. We saw feces on the ground. It is -- these
people are being forced to live like animals." People at the convention
center tell Lawrence that National Guard troops have driven by and tossed
small amounts of food to them. But most people are hungry and thirsty. "
Lawrence says: "What these people are saying basically is, 'Give us some
water, give us some food. Don't leave us here to die. Or get us out of
here.' They're saying, "We're stuck here. We can't leave. They don't send
the buses. They won't take us out of here. And yet they won't come in with
truckloads of water and food to feed us.'"

The American Red Cross will later explain to Salon that the convention
center is not being serviced by the agency because, sometime during the
week, the Louisiana Homeland Security Department -- that is, the office
under Gov. Blanco -- tells the agency not to "come back into New Orleans
following the hurricane." Louisana officials have not responded to Salon's
request for an explanation of this order. According to the Red Cross, the
Homeland Security Department had been worried that a Red Cross presence in
the city would "keep people from evacuating and encourage others to come
into the city."

Evening: On NPR, anchor Robert Siegel asks secretary Chertoff several
times about reports that tens of thousands of people are starving at the
convention center. Chertoff dismisses such reports. He says, "You know,
the one thing about an episode like this is if you talk to someone and you
get a rumor or you get someone's anecdotal version of something, I think
it's dangerous to extrapolate it all over the place." Siegel insists that
reporters from NPR and other organizations have personally witnessed the
horrors at the convention center. But Chertoff refuses to believe Siegel.

On NBC, Brian Williams asks FEMA director Michael Brown why FEMA isn't
doing an airdrop of food and water to the convention center. " Brian, it's
an absolutely fair question," Brown says. "The federal government just
learned about those people today. And I've got to tell you, we are moving
heaven and earth to get pallets of food and water to those people."

Later on "Nightline," when Brown again says that the federal government
only learned of the convention center on Thursday, Ted Koppel asks, "Don't
you guys watch television? Don't you guys listen to the radio? Our
reporters have been reporting about it for more than just today." Brown
says, "We learned about it factually today that that's what existed."

At a press conference, Gov. Blanco criticizes House Speaker Dennis
Hastert, who earlier in the day said it might not make sense to rebuild
New Orleans. It's "unthinkable," Blanco says, that Hastert would "kick us
when we're down." Blanco also warns "hoodlums" in New Orleans: National
Guard troops in the city, she says, "have M-16s and they are locked and
loaded. These troops know how to shoot to kill ... and I expect they
will."

Late Thursday night, in an interview with WWL-AM radio in New Orleans,
Mayor Nagin sharply criticizes how state and federal officials have
handled the hurricane response. Referring to Gov. Blanco's earlier press
conference -- in which the governor said 40,000 National Guard troops were
heading in to help Louisiana -- Nagin said: "I don't want to see anybody
do anymore goddamn press conferences. Put a moratorium on press
conferences. Don't do another press conference until the resources are in
this city. And then come down to this city and stand with us when there
are military trucks and troops that we can't even count. Don't tell me
40,000 people are coming here. They're not here. It's too doggone late.
Now get off your asses and do something, and let's fix the biggest goddamn
crisis in the history of this country."

Friday, Sept. 2

4:35 a.m. A series of explosions at a chemical storage facility shakes New
Orleans. The blasts occur east of the French Quarter, near the Mississippi
River, but vibrations can be felt all the way downtown. Witnesses say the
explosions illuminate the predawn sky, and that a cloud of acrid black
smoke hangs over the area. Officials emphasize that the smoke is not
toxic, but nevertheless order that the surrounding area be evacuated.

8:05 a.m. Taking reporters' questions on the south lawn of the White
House, President Bush acknowledges that although "a lot of people are
working hard to help those who have been affected" by Hurricane Katrina,
"the results are not acceptable." He then leaves Washington for an
approximately six-hour air tour of the devastated coastal areas of
Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. Bush's tour will make several stops,
including one at the ongoing repair of the 17th Street Canal breach in New
Orleans, but will bypass more troubled sites like the convention center,
the Supderdome and the makeshift trauma center at the city's Louis
Armstrong New Orleans International Airport. On the flight down to the
Gulf Coast, Bush catches up on the catastrophe by watching a DVD of
hurricane news coverage that presidential aide Dan Bartlett has compiled
to help the reality sink in.

Also around this time, commercial airlines begin assisting the evacuation
effort by airlifting refugees from the New Orleans airport. Most major
U.S. airlines participate, including American, Continental, Delta,
JetBlue, Southwest and United. FEMA issues a statement saying it will
oversee the evacuation; at least at first, evacuees will go to San
Antonio's Lackland Air Force Base.

10:35 a.m. Bush holds a press briefing at the Mobile Regional Airport in
Mobile, Ala. In a four-minute speech, he praises the rescue and relief
efforts of the Coast Guard, the governors of the affected states, and FEMA
director Brown: "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job." Bush also says:
"The good news is -- and it's hard for some to see it now -- that out of
this chaos is going to come a fantastic Gulf Coast, like it was before.
Out of the rubbles of Trent Lott's house -- he's lost his entire house --
there's going to be a fantastic house. And I'm looking forward to sitting
on the porch."

At another stop in Biloxi, Miss., Bush backs off a from his earlier
statement that the results were "not acceptable": "I am satisfied with the
response. I'm not satisfied with all the results," he clarifies.

12:49 p.m. Congress passes an emergency measure providing $10.5 billion
for Hurricane Katrina rescue and relief efforts, which the president
promises to sign upon his return to Washington that evening. But Rep.
Karen Carter, a Democrat whose district includes New Orleans' French
Quarter, tells reporters the region needs transportation help more than it
needs cash: "Don't give me your money. Don't send me $10 million today.
Give me buses and gas. Buses and gas. Buses and gas. If you have to
commandeer Greyhound, commandeer Greyhound ... If you don't get a bus, if
we don't get them out of there, they will die."

Midday: A convoy of National Guard troops arrives in the city, and a
thousand troops are dispatched to the convention center to deliver food
and water and provide much-needed security to an estimated 20,000
evacuees. Some people there cheer the arrival of supplies, while others
are upset that the Guard lacks the one thing many people need -- buses to
leave.

Evacuation of the Superdome resumes, with an estimated 8,000 to 10,000
people standing in 100-plus degree heat and wading through knee-deep trash
to board buses. Seven hundred evacuees who have been staying at a
neighboring Hyatt hotel are allowed to board the buses before Superdome
evacuees, reportedly so that the Hyatt can be prepared to house emergency
workers. Given that conditions in the Hyatt were less dangerous and more
sanitary than those in the Superdome, National Guard Capt. John Pollard
calls the decision to let the Hyatt evacuees go first "very poor.''

After being postponed due to gunshots on Thursday, evacuations of the
beleaguered New Orleans Charity Hospital and Louisiana State University
Hospital resume and are completed: more than 600 people, including 110
patients, are evacuated from University Hospital, and about 2,200 people,
including 363 patients, are evacuated from Charity Hospital. Three
terminally ill patients die during the Charity Hospital evacuation;
flooding of its morgue hamper efforts to ascertain how many bodies are
inside. Conditions at Charity, which has been without power since Monday
and without water since Tuesday, are said to be desperate.

Remaining staff and patients at Tulane University, Methodist and Kindred
hospitals are also evacuated.

In Houston, Mayor Bill White announces that, with 15,000 evacuees inside,
the city's Astrodome is full. The city opens the Reliant Center, which
will hold another 11,000 evacuees. A total of 22,000 evacuees have taken
refuge in Houston so far. Meanwhile, First Lady Laura Bush tours another
evacuation center, the Cajundome in Lafayette, La., where approximately
6,000 refugees are sheltered. During a press briefing, she remarks, "This
doesn't really look like what we're seeing on television."

President Bush, along with Sen. Mary Landrieu, visits the 17th Street
Canal breach in New Orleans, where sheet piling has stopped the flooding
into the city. For security reasons, all air traffic in the area is
grounded until Bush departs; three tons of food intended for delivery by
helicopter to evacuees in St. Bernard Parish and Algiers Point are delayed
on the Crescent City Connection bridge until nightfall.

Gov. Blanco takes several official actions on the relief effort. She sends
Bush an open letter reiterating her previous requests for many things,
including "an additional 40,000 troops; trailers of water, ice and food;
commercial buses; base camps; staging areas; amphibious personnel
carriers; deployable morgues; urban search and rescue teams; airlift;
temporary housing; and communications systems." The letter additionally
requests "the expeditious return of the Headquarters of the 256th Brigade
Combat Team as they have completed their mission in the Iraqi theatre of
operations and they are urgently needed here at home." Also on Blanco's
list of requests: an operating base for relief efforts in Baton Rouge,
additional radio frequencies and tower crews to help restore cellphone
service and public safety communication throughout the state, aerial and
ground firefighters, a fleet of military vehicles, 175 generators, and
public-health and livestock assistance.

Blanco emphasizes that state and local authorities cannot complete relief
and rescue efforts without help: "Mr. President, only your personal
involvement will ensure the immediate delivery of federal assets needed to
save lives that are in jeopardy hour by hour."

The Bush administration does not respond specifically to these requests,
but in his meeting with Blanco later in the day, Bush is reported to
promise more resources.

In a press briefing, White House spokesman Scott McClellan says that
bringing troops back from Iraq is not necessary because there are enough
National Guard units at home to handle the situation.

Blanco also issues an executive order declaring a state of public health
emergency and suspending Louisiana medical licensing requirements for
out-of-state doctors and medical personnel providing emergency treatment,
provided that those doctors and personnel prove that they are licensed in
their home states. Because practicing medicine without a license is a
crime carrying severe penalties, out-of-state doctors have been barred
from volunteering their services in the wake of the hurricane; this
belated order finally allows volunteer doctors to begin providing
treatment.

Finally, Blanco issues a second executive order authorizing the state
Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness to commandeer all
school buses for evacuation purposes, replacing a similar but less
comprehensive order she issued on Wednesday. The order suspends the
requirement that bus drivers have commercial driver's licenses, apparently
in response to reports that many licensed bus drivers are unwilling to
drive into lawless parts of New Orleans.

Members of the Congressional Black Caucus hold a news conference blasting
the federal response and charging that it was due to indifference to New
Orleans' poor population.

5:01 p.m. Before departing the region for Washington, President Bush makes
another statement to the press from the tarmac at the New Orleans airport.
He thanks relief workers and reassures residents of several southern
Louisiana parishes that "people are paying attention to them." He also
reminisces about his party days in New Orleans, when he says he visited
the city "to enjoy myself -- occasionally too much."

While still on the airport tarmac, Bush invites Louisiana Sen. Landrieu,
Gov. Blanco, and New Orleans Mayor Nagin aboard for a meeting. If there
are tensions between Bush and Nagin -- given Nagin's candid radio
interview from the previous night -- neither man shows it. Bush invites
Nagin to take his first shower in five days aboard the plane. Nagin says
of meeting Bush, "He was brutally honest. He wanted to know the truth ...
And we talked turkey. I think we're in a good spot now."

On board, Bush also asks Blanco to request a federal takeover of
Louisiana's National Guard forces. The move would allow the federal
government to exert unified control over all of the forces in the state,
both active duty as well as National Guard. Federal officials believe such
unified control will improve the efficiency of the hurricane response
operation. Some state officials are suspicious of this request, fearing
that once the federal government takes over, Bush officials will be free
to blame all previous problems on state mismanagement. Blanco asks Bush
for some time to think about his request.

Administration officials will later say that Bush lawyers determined that
they could wrest the mission away from Blanco without her consent by
invoking the Insurrection Act, but political worries prevented them from
doing so. "Can you imagine how it would have been perceived if a president
of the United States of one party had preemptively taken from the female
governor of another party the command and control of her forces, unless
the security situation made it completely clear that she was unable to
effectively execute her command authority and that lawlessness was the
inevitable result?" an unnamed aide rhetorically asks the New York Times.

Late afternoon: A bus carrying an estimated 50 Superdome evacuees
overturns on the highway 130 miles west of New Orleans, killing one
passenger and injuring at least 17 others. Police say the crash was a
result of a struggle between a passenger and the bus driver, but one of
the bus's passengers says there was no struggle and that the driver just
wasn't looking at the road. FEMA director Brown announces that, as of
Friday afternoon, 7,000 people have been rescued from rooftops and flooded
regions by Urban Search and Rescue forces and Coast Guard teams. Some
15,000 people have been evacuated from the Superdome to the Astrodome in
Houston; evacuations to Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas,
continue. Additionally, Brown estimates that 2,000 patients have been
evacuated from the trauma center at the New Orleans airport.

At NBC's celebrity-studded Concert for Hurricane Relief Friday night,
singer Kanye West expresses his outrage at the slow pace of the federal
response, saying, "George Bush doesn't care about black people."

Shortly before midnight: The White House sends Gov. Blanco a legal
memorandum formalizing its proposal that she request a federal takeover of
the mission to evacuate New Orleans.

Saturday, Sept. 3

Early morning: The Superdome is mostly evacuated. Lt. Kevin Cowan, of
Louisiana's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness,
estimates that 2,000 people remain in the Superdome, though a spokesperson
for the Texas Air National Guard says the figure could be as high as
5,000. Air-conditioned buses are diverted to the convention center to
begin evacuating the nearly 25,000 refugees housed there. The National
Guard reports that it has served approximately 70,000 meals at the
convention center already and has supplies to serve 130,000 more.

9:06 a.m. President Bush reads his weekly radio address from the White
House Rose Garden, an unusual spectacle. Bush says he is sending more than
7,000 active-duty troops to the region devastated by the hurricane in the
next 72 hours. The active-duty troops -- which will come from Army's 82nd
Airborne from Fort Bragg, N.C., 1st Cavalry Division from Fort Hood,
Texas, and the Marines' 1st and 2nd Expeditionary forces from Camp
Pendleton, Calif., and Camp Lejeune, N.C. -- will join 4,000 active-duty
troops already in the region. The Pentagon announces that an additional
10,000 National Guard forces will be deployed to the region, bringing the
number of Guard in the area to about 40,000.

Throughout the day: Gov. Blanco declines Bush's offer of a federal
takeover for Louisiana's National Guard. This leaves Blanco in charge of
all Guard troops in the region and will prohibit active-duty troops from
maintaining law and order. Instead, she hires James Lee Witt, who served
as the head of FEMA under President Clinton and who has previously
criticized the decision to have FEMA report to the Homeland Security
Department, to help direct Louisiana's hurricane relief efforts.

DHS secretary Chertoff, along with Bush aides Housing Secretary Alphonso
Jackson and White House domestic policy advisor Claude Allen, holds a
two-hour meeting with members of the Congressional Black Caucus to discuss
the roles of race and poverty in the federal government's hurricane relief
efforts. Also in attendance are NAACP president Bruce Gordon and National
Urban League president Marc Morial, a former mayor of New Orleans.

Evacuation of the Superdome resumes and is completed. Members of the Texas
National Guard who have been supervising the evacuation cheer as the last
evacuee, an elderly man in a Houston Rockets cap, boards the bus. Later,
more evacuees arrive at the Superdome, and the evacuation effort
continues.

Col. John Smart, chief operations officer for Joint Task Force Katrina
West, reports that, as of Saturday afternoon, 42,000 people have been
evacuated from New Orleans by bus, air and Amtrak trains.

FEMA director Brown warns that "hot spots" of crime remain in New Orleans.
"Some of these kids think this is a game. They have a gun and they think
it is a game they are playing," he said. Brown also says that any "idiots
with a gun on a rooftop" would soon be meeting with force from active-duty
troops. Brown declines to estimate how many stranded New Orleanians remain
to be rescued: "There is no humanly possible way of knowing at this stage
how many people like that still exist in this vast urban area," he says.

The body of Sgt. Paul Accardo, a New Orleans police officer, is found in
an unmarked patrol car in a downtown parking lot. The cause of death is
suicide.

Rosalie Guidry Daste, a 100-year-old woman who had been stuck in her
flooded nursing home for four days, dies moments after she's rescued from
the facility.

At a press briefing in Washington, DHS secretary Chertoff expresses "full
confidence" in FEMA director Brown. Chertoff also deflects responsibility
for the disaster's handling, saying the reason federal support did not
arrive more quickly was "because our constitutional system really places
the primary authority in each state with the governor."

New Orleans deputy police commander W.S. Riley counters with criticism of
the federal response: "My biggest disappointment is with the federal
government and the National Guard. The Guard arrived 48 hours after the
hurricane with 40 trucks. They drove their trucks in and went to sleep.
For 72 hours this police department and the fire department and handful of
citizens were alone rescuing people. We have people who died while the
National Guard sat and played cards. I understand why we are not winning
the war in Iraq if this is what we have."

Sunday, Sept. 4

FEMA announces that "one hundred percent of evacuees housed in the New
Orleans Superdome and Convention Center have been evacuated." FEMA
anticipates that more evacuees will arrive at the Superdome and convention
center, and that they will be relocated on a flow basis. Authorities in
New Orleans will report that 24 people died in the convention center and
10 died at the Superdome, though causes of death are not yet known.

Also in FEMA's progress report: All patients from New Orleans' top 12
hospitals have been evacuated; 563 shelters in 10 states are housing a
total population of 151,409 evacuees; and cruise ships are being brought
into the coastal areas to provide temporary housing to approximately 8,000
additional evacuees.

Jefferson Parish, La., president Aaron Broussard appears on NBC's Meet the
Press, along with DHS secretary Chertoff, and claims that FEMA prevented
aid from reaching his parish. Broussard cries when telling the story of an
elderly woman who was promised aid for days before drowning on Friday.
"Bureaucracy has committed murder here in the greater New Orleans area,
and bureaucracy has to stand trial before Congress now...," he says.
"Nobody's coming to get us. The secretary has promised. Everybody's
promised. They've had press conferences. I'm sick of the press
conferences. For God sakes, shut up and send us somebody."

The Times-Picayune of New Orleans runs an open letter to President Bush
criticizing the federal response to the disaster saying, "Every official
at the Federal Emergency Management Agency should be fired, Director
Michael Brown especially."

The Chicago Tribune reports that the massive Marine ship the USS Bataan,
which has been in the region since the worst of the storm subsided, has
offered its extensive hospital facility and supplies to the relief effort,
but that so far federal authorities haven't made use of most of the ship's
resources. Though helicopters from the Bataan's deck were involved in
early rescue efforts in New Orleans, relief efforts have not made use of
the ship's doctors, six operating rooms, 600 hospital beds, food and water
supplies, or its ability to produce 100,000 gallons of clean, fresh water
each day.

New Orleans police shoot and kill at least five residents, after those
residents open fire on a group of 14 government contractors traveling
across the city's Danziger Bridge to make repairs.

Monday, Sept. 5

President Bush returns to Louisiana, visiting with evacuees at the Bethany
World Prayer Center in Baton Rouge and at Pearl River Community College in
Poplarville. Staff members in Gov. Blanco's office says the White House
didn't notify them that Bush would be visiting, and that they found out he
was coming by watching the news.

Kellogg, Brown & Root Services, long criticized for its lucrative no-bid
Iraq reconstruction contract, begins work on a $500 million U.S. Navy
contract for emergency cleanup and repairs following Hurricane Katrina.

The patching of New Orleans's 17th Street Canal breach with 300-pound
sandbags and bags of rock is completed. The canal is reopened, so it can
be used to pump water out of the city. Army engineers report that the
breach in the London Avenue Canal is also closed.

Former First Lady Barbara Bush, accompanying President George H.W. Bush on
a tour of the evacuation center at Houston's Astrodome, opines that many
of the Gulf Coast's evacuees are better off: "What I'm hearing, which is
sort of scary, is they all want to stay in Texas. Everyone is so
overwhelmed by the hospitality. And so many of the people in the arena
here, you know, were underprivileged anyway, so this -- this [she chuckles
slightly] is working very well for them."

Tuesday, Sept. 6

Mayor Nagin orders a forced evacuation of New Orleans. Police and National
Guard forces go door-to-door to usher an estimated 10,000 holdouts into
boats and helicopters.

The Associated Press reports that hundreds of firefighters who have
volunteered to assist in hurricane relief efforts "have instead been
playing cards, taking classes on the history of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency and lounging at an Atlanta airport hotel for days while
they await orders. Some have been waiting for four days. FEMA's Tony
Russell says only that the agency is trying to deploy the firefighters as
quickly as possible but that it us unsure where to send them -- FEMA
"wants to make certain they are sent to the right places," he says.
Meanwhile, the Salt Lake Tribune reports that approximately 1,000
firefighters, many of whom thought they had volunteered to be emergency
workers, were instead being trained in Atlanta to be public relations
officers for FEMA.

FEMA denies journalists' requests to ride in rescue boats as they search
for storm victims. An agency spokesperson tells newswire service Reuters,
"We have requested that no photographs of the deceased be made by the
media."

With the Army Corps of Engineers pumping water out of the New Orleans via
the 17th Street Canal, the floodwaters are beginning to drop. Mayor Nagin
estimates that 60 percent of the city remains under water. "Even in areas
where the water was as high as the rooftops, I started to see parts of the
buildings," he says after taking an aerial tour. "I'm starting to see rays
of light."

Democratic Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barbara Mikulski call for FEMA
director Brown to resign. They also introduce legislation that would
separate FEMA from the Homeland Security Department, restoring it to being
an independent Cabinet-level federal agency. Meanwhile, House Democratic
leader Nancy Pelosi tells President Bush she thinks Brown should be fired.
According to Pelosi, Bush thanks her for her suggestion.

Responding to criticism of the federal response to Hurricane Katrina,
President Bush volunteers to lead an investigation into the relief effort.
Bush also announces that Vice President Dick Cheney will tour the
devastated region on Thursday -- a week and a half after the hurricane
struck.

Wednesday, Sept. 7

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention chief Dr. Julie Gerberding
announces that sewage-related bacteria in the New Orleans floodwaters are
at 10 times the maximum allowable level and warns those still in the city
not to touch the water.

The White House announces that it will request Congress to approve $51.8
billion in supplemental hurricane-relief funding, in addition to the $10.5
billion that went through the previous Friday. Press secretary Scott
McClellan says $50 billion of the supplemental request will go to FEMA,
$1.4 billion will go to the Defense Department, and $400 million will go
to the Army Corps of Engineers.

NBC's Brian Williams reports that he and his film crew have been prevented
from filming members of the National Guard at work in New Orleans, and
that a member of the local police aimed her gun at several members of the
media who were reporting on the relief effort.

Without consulting congressional Democrats, Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist and House Speaker Dennis Hastert announce that a bipartisan joint
congressional committee will investigate the hurricane relief effort.
Republicans would have the majority on such a committee, allowing them to
determine the focus and scope of the investigation.

At the annual meeting of the National Baptist Convention of America in
Miami, Democratic Party chairman Howard Dean says that race played a role
in the government's hurricane response efforts: "We must ... come to terms
with the ugly truth that skin color, age and economics played a deadly
role in who survived and who did not."

Thursday, Sept. 8

President Bush, citing a national emergency, signs an executive order
suspending the Davis-Bacon Act of 1931, effectively allowing
reconstruction efforts in storm-ravaged areas to pay workers less than
prevailing local wages.

Time magazine raises questions about FEMA director Brown's résumé, noting
discrepancies in online profile and his official biography and suggesting
that the Bush administration inflated his credentials.

The state of Mississippi has recorded 201 deaths resulting from the storm,
and Louisiana has recorded 83, bringing the total death toll near 290.

Friday, Sept. 9

The Bush administration removes FEMA director Brown from his role as the
head of hurricane relief efforts. Brown is still head of FEMA, but the
Coast Guard's chief of staff, Vice Adm. Thad Allen, will oversee the
federal response to the storm. Of his immediate plans, Brown says, "I'm
going to go home and walk my dog and hug my wife and, maybe get a good
Mexican meal and a stiff margarita and a full night's sleep. And then I'm
going to go right back to FEMA and continue to do all I can to help these
victims."

Officials in New Orleans announce a "zero access" media policy for New
Orleans. The announcement is made by Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré, who is
overseeing the federal relief effort in the city, and Terry Ebbert, the
city's homeland security director; Ebbert justifies the ban by saying that
they consider photographing corpses to be improper.

Vice President Cheney arrives in the Gulf Coast region. While the vice
president is answering questions on live television, a local doctor who
lost his home yells out, "Go fuck yourself, Mr. Cheney," a reference to
the comment Cheney made to Sen. Patrick Leahy in 2004.

Relief workers in Houston announce that they have contained a viral
outbreak that leaves hundreds of evacuees reporting vomiting and diarrhea.
An estimated 700 evacuees are treated for the symptoms, and 40 evacuees
remain quarantined.

In response to the zero-access media policy in New Orleans, CNN files suit
against FEMA director Brown. CNN also files for a temporary restraining
order against the policy, which U.S. District Court Judge Keith Ellison
issues.

Former Bush Secretary of State Colin Powell criticizes the hurricane
relief effort during an interview with Barbara Walters for ABC's "20/20."
"When you look at those who weren't able to get out, it should have been a
blinding flash of the obvious to everybody that when you order a mandatory
evacuation, you can't expect everybody to evacuate on their own. These are
people who don't have credit cards; only one in 10 families at that
economic level in New Orleans have a car. So it wasn't a racial thing --
but poverty disproportionately affects African-Americans in this country.
And it happened because they were poor," Powell says.

Saturday, Sept. 10

With CNN's lawsuit pending and Judge Ellison considering issuing a
permanent injunction against the zero-access media policy in New Orleans,
Joint Task Force Katrina spokesperson Col. Christian deGraff announces
that it will not enforce the policy. The task force, deGraff says, "has no
plans to bar, impede or prevent news media from their news gathering and
reporting activities in connection with the deceased Hurricane Katrina
victim recovery efforts."

The total number of hurricane-related deaths climbs to 372, with 154
confirmed dead in the New Orleans area.

The former associate dean at the University of Southern California Law
School, donating her services to help people with emergency legal needs,
arrives in Gulfport, Miss. She and other legal volunteers end up spending
most of their time trying to track down a mobile kitchen and provide basic
human needs. "It was day 13 after Katrina struck, and no one was
coordinating the relief effort in one of the poorest communities along the
coast. We never found a resident who had ever seen even one FEMA
official," Karen A. Lash wrote later.

Sunday, Sept. 11

Rescue and recovery personnel find 45 bodies in the flooded Memorial
Medical Center in New Orleans, bringing state's death toll near 280.

Monday, Sept. 12

Michael Brown resigns his directorship of FEMA. The White House appoints
the head of FEMA's preparedness division, R. David Paulison, as Brown's
interim successor.

President Bush denies that race played a role in hurricane relief: "When
those Coast Guard choppers, many of who were first on the scene, were
pulling people off roofs, they didn't check the color of a person's skin
... The storm didn't discriminate, and neither did the recovery effort."

Water levels in New Orleans drop substantially and the streets become
visible in even the most flooded neighborhoods, which only two days before
were under 6 to 8 feet of water. A Guard staff sergeant in the city's
Lower 9th Ward says, "The water's gone down so fast, we can't keep up with
it. It's like the whole place dried up overnight." But many of the city's
buildings, particularly those made of wood, are ruined after being under
water for days and will have to be destroyed.

Rescue workers uncover four more bodies in Mississippi and 82 more in
Louisiana, bringing the hurricane's total death toll to 513.

Tuesday, Sept. 13

10:35 a.m. At a press conference with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani in
the White House's East Room, President Bush acknowledges some personal
responsibility for the failures of the hurricane relief effort: "Katrina
exposed serious problems in our response capability at all levels of
government. And to the extent that the federal government didn't fully do
its job right, I take responsibility. I want to know what went right and
what went wrong."

Local authorities arrest the owners of St. Rita's nursing home in St.
Bernard Parish and charge them with 34 counts of negligent homicide for
failing to evacuate their patients, 34 of whom perished in the flooding.
Authorities offered to evacuate the facility's inhabitants before the
storm, but the owners, Mable and Salvador Mangano, declined the offer.

Louisiana's Department of Health announces that the state's official death
toll has risen to 423, a marked increase from the previous day's tally of
279. The total number of hurricane-related deaths in Alabama, Florida,
Louisiana and Mississippi is currently 657. Estimates of the total cost of
the hurricane's damage range from slightly more than $100 billion to close
to $200 billion.

- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer
Farhad Manjoo is a Salon staff writer.

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