As the floodwaters are pumped out and the decomposing bodies are
collected, the slow and difficult task of rebuilding this ruined city
will begin. Amid the wall-to-wall media coverage of the aftermath of
Katrina – an event which will almost certainly go down as the
worst natural disaster in this nation’s history – a
great
deal of discussion regarding the future of New Orleans, and by
extension the entire Gulf Coast, is occurring. What will a rebuilt New
Orleans look like? Will it be able to retain its unique culture in the
wake of this calamity? How many people will return to the city? Should
the city, which sits below sea level, be rebuilt at all? These
questions have spawned numerous articles in numerous publications, from
the Boston
Globe to the Chicago
Tribune to the Dallas
Morning News to USA
Today. Even local
bloggers are engaging in the discussion.
Most fundamentally, does it
make sense to spend billions of dollars to rebuild the flooded city at
all? Jack Shafer at slate.com says "no" while George
Friedman at stratfor.com
says “yes.” Friedman’s argument is that
New Orleans
“is a terrible place for a city to be located, but exactly
the
place where a city must exist” due to its location at the
mouth
of the Mississippi River. There needs to be a place where the river
barges carrying goods and materials from the Great Plains and the
Midwest are offloaded onto ocean-going vessels, and
vice-versa.
The Port of New Orleans is critically important to our
nation’s
economy, and for that reason the city that supports it will return,
“because it has to.”
Even if New Orleans is rebuilt – and I think that much of it will be – it will clearly never be the same city it was before Katrina obliterated it. For one, it will be much smaller. It’s impossible to stay at this time just how many of those who called New Orleans home on August 28th will return once it is safe to do so, but it is clear that many of those who have left – some having been evacuated to places as far away as Utah or Alaska – have nothing to return to and very likely will not be coming back. Those that do return to the region are likely to choose a location that is not as vulnerable to tropical storms. That’s why I believe that Baton Rouge, which in the same general region but many miles upriver from New Orleans, and whose population has been swelled by refugees from New Orleans, will probably eventually surpass New Orleans to become Louisiana’s largest and most dominant city, much the same way Houston overtook Galveston to become Texas’s major city after the 1900 Hurricane.
Even if New Orleans is rebuilt – and I think that much of it will be – it will clearly never be the same city it was before Katrina obliterated it. For one, it will be much smaller. It’s impossible to stay at this time just how many of those who called New Orleans home on August 28th will return once it is safe to do so, but it is clear that many of those who have left – some having been evacuated to places as far away as Utah or Alaska – have nothing to return to and very likely will not be coming back. Those that do return to the region are likely to choose a location that is not as vulnerable to tropical storms. That’s why I believe that Baton Rouge, which in the same general region but many miles upriver from New Orleans, and whose population has been swelled by refugees from New Orleans, will probably eventually surpass New Orleans to become Louisiana’s largest and most dominant city, much the same way Houston overtook Galveston to become Texas’s major city after the 1900 Hurricane.
Houston’s future,
likewise, will almost certainly be different. A New York Times article (reprinted
in the International Herald Tribune)
declares that “no city in the United States is in a better
spot
to turn Katrina’s tragedy into opportunity” and
notes that
corporations are already moving their headquarters from New Orleans to
Houston, even if only on a temporary basis. Added to this is the influx
of tens of thousands of evacuees from New Orleans, many of whom are
likely to stay. There will be a short-term economic boost as evacuated
businesses fill vacant office space, evacuated residents fill empty
residential space, and millions of dollars in federal aid for the
displaced flows into Houston. The long-term economic, demographic and
cultural effects of Katrina on Houston are less clear but are
nonetheless likely to be positive. And the positive coverage Houston
has received from the media regarding the city’s generosity
and
compassion for the victims of Katrina is likely to boost the
city’s national image as well.
(Retroblogged on August 23, 2015. Unfortunately, a lot of these links are now dead. The tenth anniversary of Katrina is approaching and I will probably write something about it later this week.)
(Retroblogged on August 23, 2015. Unfortunately, a lot of these links are now dead. The tenth anniversary of Katrina is approaching and I will probably write something about it later this week.)
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