Georgia Tech Examines Impact of Hurricane Katrina

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Georgia Tech Media Relations
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Roundtable Initiative

Georgia Tech’s national media roundtable initiative brings together thought leaders from different organizations to discuss important issues.

This was Georgia Tech’s fourth roundtable. Others examined the future of online learning in higher education and how to attract more female engineers and African-American men into STEM.

This initiative is the result of a partnership between Georgia Tech’s Office of Development, Institute Communications, Office of Government and Community Relations and individual colleges.

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Summary Sentence:

Georgia Tech, National Academy of Engineering hosted a roundtable discussion on disaster readiness.

Full Summary:

Georgia Tech, National Academy of Engineering hosted a roundtable discussion on disaster readiness.

Media
  • Video Recap: Hurricane Katrina Roundtable in Washington D.C. Video Recap: Hurricane Katrina Roundtable in Washington D.C.
    (YouTube Video)

As the nation prepares to mark the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, a panel of experts discussed what this country has learned and how prepared U.S. cities are for the next natural disaster.

The Georgia Institute of Technology and the National Academy of Engineers hosted a media roundtable Wednesday in Washington, D.C., on the topic: “10 Years after Katrina: Are American Cities Ready?”

While Katrina remains one of the deadliest and costliest hurricanes in U.S. history, in the immediate aftermath many people thought the problem was isolated to New Orleans because it was built below sea level, said Georgia Tech President Emeritus G. Wayne Clough.

Opinions have changed in recent years, said Clough, who led an independent panel investigation of the Department of Defense and response to the storm.

“Hurricane Sandy was a wake-up call that this could happen to anyone,” Clough said. “Sandy changed people’s minds and … in many ways had more of an impact than Katrina did.”

Panelists listed several cities at risk, including Miami, Tampa, Charleston and Norfolk.

Some cities are at risk because of geography, rising sea levels and climate change. However, too many cities fail to have the needed discussions and preparations because they have not recently felt the impact of a natural disaster, said Reggie DesRoches, the Karen and John Huff School Chair of Georgia Tech’s School of Civil and Environmental Engineering.

Increased emphasis on local communities is something government leaders, engineers and others should do to improve disaster resilience response, panelists said. While communities will receive help from their region, state and the federal government, there are many things local citizens must decide.

“Will they move off a barrier island or elevate their homes or invest in communications?” asked Lt. General Thomas Bostick, commanding general of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. “How do you adapt and come out stronger than you were?”

Since Katrina, the Corps is working more closely with stakeholders and is taking a more systematic approach that goes beyond infrastructure, Bostick said. This approach includes collaborating with local communities. During the recent flood season, the Tulsa district turned to social media and had more than 65 million hits, he said.

During the nearly 90-minute discussion, the six panelists answered questions posed by reporters from the Associated Press, Science News and U.S. News & World Report. Audience members, including guests of Georgia Tech and the National Academy of Engineering, also participated in the discussion.

While the panelists agreed much has been learned since Katrina and improvements have been made, they said deficiencies remain.

For example, there needs to be a deeper understanding of the social science and behavioral component surrounding natural disasters, said Lauren Sauer, associate director of the National Center for the Study of Preparedness and Catastrophic Event Response at Johns Hopkins University.

Alton Romig Jr., executive officer of the National Academy of Engineering, said there is a lack of clarity when it comes to communication and authority around natural disasters. A lot of tools fail to get “into the right hands at the right time,” he said.

Reporters asked about the logic in designing the New Orleans levees and floodwalls to withstand a 100-year storm – one with a 1 percent chance of occurring in any year. While that design allowed the city to withstand Hurricane Isaac, there are questions as to whether something stronger should have been built.

Greg Baecher, professor of civil engineering at the University of Maryland, explained the 100-year storm was based on protecting real estate. This country needs to come to an agreement as to what is an acceptable or tolerable risk for human life, said Baecher, who conducted inter-agency federal risk analysis after Hurricane Katrina.

“What is the right level of protecting people,” he asked. “It’s probably less frequent than a 1 percent storm.” 

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Categories
Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy, Engineering
Related Core Research Areas
Bioengineering and Bioscience, National Security, People and Technology
Newsroom Topics
Earth and Environment, Science and Technology
Keywords
climate change, disaster readiness, engineering, rising sea levels
Status
  • Created By: Laura Diamond
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Aug 5, 2015 - 1:07pm
  • Last Updated: Oct 7, 2016 - 11:19pm