September 25, 2005
In Plans to Evacuate U.S. Cities, Chance for Havoc
By JOHN M. BRODER
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/25/national/nationalspecial/25evacuation.html
?ei=5094&en=dd86b7779263e6b4&hp=&ex=1127620800&partner=homepage&pagewanted=p
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LOS ANGELES, Sept. 24 - The chaotic evacuations of New Orleans and Houston
have prompted local officials across the country to take another look at
plans for emptying their cities in response to a large-scale natural
disaster or a terrorist attack. What they have found is not wholly
reassuring.

>From Los Angeles to Boston, from Seattle to Miami, plans to relocate, house
and feed potentially hundreds of thousands of displaced people are embryonic
at best and nonexistent at worst. As the chaotic exodus from Houston this
week demonstrated, in many places highways would clog quickly, confusion
would reign and police resources would soon be overtaxed. New Orleans
offered a different and more deadly example of what could go wrong, as tens
of thousands of people, many of them poor and lacking private
transportation, could be left to fend for themselves in cities without basic
services or law enforcement.

Most major American cities have made preparations for localized emergencies
like fires, floods or large toxic spills that might involve the relocation
of a few thousand or tens of thousands of people. Since Sept. 11, 2001,
cities have received billions of dollars from the newly formed Department of
Homeland Security to prepare for a major terrorist attack with bombs or
unconventional weapons.

But few have prepared in detail for a doomsday possibility like Hurricane
Katrina, the storm that engulfed New Orleans and left much of the city a
wasteland. Nor have they prepared workable plans to evacuate millions of
people with little or no notice, as the residents of the Gulf Coast of Texas
learned to their dismay late this week.

"Obviously, if you have no notice, it makes it that much more chaotic and
confusing," said Henry R. Renteria, director of the Governor's Office of
Emergency Services in California, the state's top disaster-planning
official. Evacuating a large urban area is difficult in the best of
circumstances, Mr. Renteria said, but California's geography and diverse
population - many residents are newcomers, and more than 100 languages are
spoken - make it doubly complicated here.

And no plan ever survives an encounter with reality, he said.

"I'm never satisfied with any plan we have in place," Mr. Renteria said.
"They have to be constantly looked at, constantly re-evaluated and
constantly revised in light of the lessons learned from those who have been
through this experience."

Los Angeles, the nation's second-most-populous city, sits atop a spider web
of earthquake faults, several of which could slip with devastating
consequences, leveling large parts of the city and touching off widespread
fires and explosions. But the city has no plan for moving and sheltering the
large number of people who would be made homeless by such a disaster,
officials concede.

"What happened in Houston is very significant," said Mayor Antonio R.
Villaraigosa of Los Angeles. "What they've demonstrated is the difficulties
in evacuating that number of people. We're a much larger area. If you'd ever
have to evacuate that number of people here, there's no question it would be
problematic."

Emergency response planners for the region acknowledge that no plans exist
for moving hundreds of thousands, and potentially millions, of Southern
Californians out of harm's way. No evacuation routes are marked, and no one
has ever explored the possibility of reversing the flow of freeways to speed
an evacuation - that is, if the freeways were even passable after a
significant earthquake.

"We're going back to the drawing board," said Sandra S. Hutchens, chief of
the office of homeland security at the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department, the lead disaster-preparedness agency for the Los Angeles
metropolis. "With an earthquake or a major terrorist attack, we'd obviously
have no warning. We haven't looked at mass evacuation or temporary housing
for hundreds of thousands of people."

San Francisco's evacuation plans depend in large part on the two main
bridges that connect the city with Oakland to the east and Marin County to
the north. Both are vulnerable to a major earthquake, as is the Bay Area
Rapid Transit tunnel beneath the bay. The plans call for the use of fishing
boats and ferries to get people across the bay if other routes are blocked,
a stopgap solution at best.

Philadelphia is also dependent on bridges and elevated highways to get
people out in an emergency, and the city has drawn up no detailed plans for
mass evacuation since early in the cold war, officials said. Gov. Edward G.
Rendell has ordered every city in Pennsylvania to prepare for large-scale
evacuations, with particular emphasis on the large number of people in major
cities who do not own cars.

New York, more than most American cities, has the advantage of a sprawling
mass transportation system. Eight million people a day use the system, and
officials count on it to be useful in an emergency as well. That could be
vital, because city traffic, already a problem in an ordinary rush hour,
would pose a significant challenge.

Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly says the city has two general
evacuation plans, one for hurricanes and another for terrorist attacks. The
plans include the opening of hundreds of shelters, mostly in schools. But
officials acknowledge that despite the plans, many elements of an evacuation
would have to be improvised.

Boston is further along than many large cities, having devised a plan in
advance of last summer's Democratic National Convention for moving as many
as a million people from the central city in the event of an attack or a
major storm. But exercises revealed some flaws in the plan, known as
Operation Exodus, including a lack of adequate public transportation and a
shortage of temporary shelter away from the danger zone.

Mayor Thomas M. Menino has asked that the plan be updated to reflect the
lessons learned in Texas and Louisiana.

"We have an evacuation plan in place that we had during the Democratic
National Convention," Mayor Menino said in a telephone interview. "As soon
as we saw what happened with Katrina, we asked our homeland security
director to look at the plan and determine how we can enhance the plan."

Washington is one of the few cities that have actually tried to exercise a
mass evacuation plan. Last summer, after the Fourth of July fireworks that
annually draw a half a million or more people to the National Mall, the city
used a system it devised to change the timing on stoplights on major
arteries leading out of downtown.

"The purpose of the drill was to test our system, to test the assumptions
underneath it," said Edward D. Reiskin, Washington's deputy mayor for public
safety. The test revealed some glitches, like confusion among drivers and
pedestrians stuck at very long stoplights. Some traffic-control devices were
also misplaced, Mr. Reiskin said. But the drill was useful in gathering
data.

"Now we know that in X number of minutes, we can reasonably expect to move Y
number of people," Mr. Reiskin said.

But the test was unrealistic in at least one respect, he added. The crowds
leaving the Mall were confused, but not panicked. "It's not exactly
comparable to an emergency evacuation," Mr. Reiskin said. "Human behavior,
we're certainly seeing now, is certainly a significant factor."

Chicago officials were reluctant to discuss emergency evacuation plans in
detail, citing security concerns. But Andrew Velasquez III, executive
director of the city's Office of Emergency Management and Communications,
said that officials had identified senior housing, nursing homes and
homeless shelters across the city and had plans in place to transport their
residents to safety in the case of an emergency. He also said the city had
an automated telephone system capable of making 1,000 calls a second to
alert citizens of an evacuation order.

But the public must be informed and cooperative, Mr. Velasquez said. "It
requires both the participation of government as well as the community," he
said.

South Florida has more experience than most regions with killer storms and
large evacuations. Signs marking evacuation routes are posted along the
coastline, and millions of Florida residents have had to pack up and flee
hurricanes.

Carl Fowler, a spokesman for the Broward County Emergency Management Agency,
said his county was better situated and better prepared for hurricanes than
was New Orleans. Although the coastal county, just north of Miami, is flat,
it is above sea level, unlike parts of New Orleans. And the county has a
number of major east-west arteries that help coastal residents move quickly
inland as a storm approaches.

"We have evacuation routes, and signs posted year round as to what those
routes are," Mr. Fowler said. Officials direct traffic toward shelters
within the county and away from the state's Interstate highways, to prevent
the monumental and dangerous traffic jams that Texas had in advance of
Hurricane Rita.

David Schulz, director of the Infrastructure Technology Institute at
Northwestern University, said the evacuations of New Orleans and Southeast
Texas had revealed significant weaknesses in coordination between the local,
state and federal authorities. He also said that Texas' experience showed
poor communication between local officials and residents, tens of thousands
of whom took to the already-jammed highways even though they were not under
a mandatory evacuation order.

In Texas, officials acknowledged that they had perhaps overly alarmed
residents, leading to an evacuation that proved larger than necessary. They
are now concerned about managing the flow of more than two million people
back to their homes.

"It doesn't make any sense to have a mass evacuation plan if you don't tell
anybody about it ahead of time," Mr. Schulz said. "I do think that it's
important that public officials make the public aware in a very forthright
and fairly location-specific way what the evacuation strategy is, and I
think if we've learned anything the last three weeks, we've certainly
learned that."



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