Hurricane Gustav (pronounced /ˈgʊstɑːv/) was the
second most destructive
hurricane of the
2008 Atlantic hurricane
season. The storm was the seventh
tropical cyclone, third
hurricane, and second major hurricane of the
season. Gustav caused serious damage and
casualties in Haiti, the Dominican
Republic, Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, Cuba and the United States.
Gustav caused at least $6.6 billion (2008 USD) in
damages. Gustav triggered the largest evacuation in United States
history. More than 3 million people fled the oncoming
hurricane.
It formed
on the morning of August 25, 2008, about southeast of Port-au-Prince
, Haiti
, and rapidly
strengthened into a tropical storm that afternoon and into a
hurricane early on August 26. Later that day it made
landfall near the Haitian
town of Jacmel
.
It
inundated Jamaica and ravaged Western Cuba and then steadily moved
across the Gulf of
Mexico
.
Once into the Gulf, Gustav gradually weakened because of increased
wind shear and dry air.
It weakened to a Category 2 hurricane late on
August 31, and remained at that intensity until landfall on the
morning of September 1 near Cocodrie, Louisiana
. Weakening continued, and Gustav weakened to
a tropical storm that evening and to a tropical depression the next
day as it meandered around the south-central US. The weak system
became extratropical on September 4 and was absorbed by another low
on September 5.
In total,
an estimated 153 deaths had been attributed to Gustav in the
U.S.
and Caribbean
. Damage in the U.S. totaled to
$4.3 billion (2008 USD) with additional damage of $2.1
billion in Cuba and $210 million in damage in Jamaica.
Meteorological history
Gustav formed out of a
tropical wave
that had previously produced rain and
squalls
in the
Lesser Antilles. It developed
well-defined
curved bands
and briefly exhibited an upper-level
eye
feature. The NHC designated it
Tropical Depression Seven and dispatched
a
hurricane hunter aircraft to
investigate the system. At the time, the system had a well-defined
outflow in all but the
southeast and southwest quadrant,and data from the hurricane-hunter
aircraft confirmed that the tropical depression had strengthened
into a tropical storm, which was soon designated Tropical Storm
Gustav.A brief period of disorganizationproved to be temporary as a
well-defined eye wall formed that same night.In the early hours of
August 26, as the storm approached Haiti's southwestern
peninsula,another hurricane hunter aircraft confirmed what
forecasters already suspected—that Gustav had strengthened into a
hurricane with winds topping 90 mph (150 km/h).Before
reaching Haiti, its satellite presentation continued to intensify,
a
central dense overcast
became more prominent,and the minimum central pressure fell.
Hurricane Gustav regained a pronounced eye as it made landfall on
Haiti, with winds,near the town of Jacmel.As the hurricane moved
over Haiti's mountainous terrain its circulation was disrupted and
it lost a little strength.Although downgraded to a tropical storm,
it still had a pronounced eye in its mid- and upper-level
structures. Its outflow improved throughout the night of August
26,and the system was not very disrupted when it moved back over
water into the
Gulf of
Gonâve.However, the storm's movement slowed, and continued
interaction with nearby Haiti, combined with the incursion of
mid-level dry air from the northeast, resulted in further weakening
during the day on August 27.The storm began a west-southwesterly
movement that brought it closer to Jamaica. On the morning of
August 28 it was found that, overnight, Gustav had either reformed
farther to the south or had moved farther to the south than
previously thought. The storm was also found to have restrengthened
nearly to hurricane status.It then was upgraded to a hurricane
again during the late afternoon of August 29. At 11:00 a.m
EDT (1500 UTC) on August 30, as
Gustav neared the west end of Cuba, it was upgraded to a
Category 3 hurricane on the
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane
Scale,with sustained winds near 125 mph (205 km/h).
Gustav continued its
rapid deepening
trend, and three hours later, it had already reached
Category 4 strength. Gustav's maximum sustained winds had
reached 155 mph (250 km/h)with a minimum pressure of
941 millibars.
On August
30 Gustav made landfall twice on Cuba
: first, on
Isla de la
Juventud
and then on the mainland near the community of
Los
Palacios
in Pinar del Río Province.
By the early hours of August 31, Gustav entered the Gulf of Mexico
with maximum sustained winds of and minimum central pressure of
958 millibars.During August 31, the storm moved in a northwest
direction slightly losing its strength (despite passing over a
shortened
Loop Current) with sustained
winds at 115 mph. On the evening of August 31, Gustav weakened
to a Category 2 hurricane and remained at such intensity until
landfall. Gustav made landfall along the Louisiana coast with
105 mph (170 km/h) winds near Cocodrie, at about 9:30 a.m
CDT (1430 UTC).
By 10 PM
CDT, Gustav had been downgraded to a Tropical Storm with winds of
60 mph (95 km/h) about 20 miles (30 km)
southwest of Alexandria
, Louisiana and by 4 AM CDT on September 2 Gustav
had diminished to a Tropical Depression with a threat of severe
flooding in the lower Mississippi
Valley and eastern Texas.
Preparations
Hispaniola
Immediately upon the storms designation as a
tropical depression it was expected to strengthen into a tropical
storm and strike the island of Hispaniola
, shared by the Dominican Republic on the east and
Haiti on the west. Tropical storm warnings were issued from the
coast of the Dominican
Republic
south of Santo Domingo
to the Haitian coast south of
Port-au-Prince. A tropical storm watch was issued for the
Haitian coast, north of Port-au-Prince to the northern border with
the Dominican Republic. Hours later, when Gustav was upgraded to a
tropical storm, the tropical storm warning was upgraded to a
hurricane warning and the tropical storm watch was upgraded to a
hurricane warning.
The Haitian government ordered emergency shelters to prepare. The
country is particularly vulnerable to floods and landslides as
rainfall
runs off its largely
deforested mountains. The government
issued a red alert and advised the population to take precautions,
but few Haitians took heed. Fair weather led many to doubt whether
a hurricane was even approaching. American Airlines canceled all of
its flights into and out of Port-au-Prince on August 26, stranding
travelers hoping to escape the storm.
Jamaica and Cayman Islands

Hurricane Gustav, just after making
landfall in Jamaica, August 29, 2008
On August
25, Carnival Cruise Lines
diverted one of its ships from Montego Bay
, Jamaica
, to Mexico
in order to
avoid the storm. Jamaica's
Office
of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management (ODPEM)
readied response systems in anticipation of Hurricane Gustav
affecting the island.
In the
Cayman
Islands
, a hurricane watch was issued at 6 p.m.
August 25 and upgraded that to a warning on 6 p.m. August 27. Banks
and non-essential government services were closed Friday to allow
residents to prepare. Extra flights were organized to get tourists
off the island and, per usual practice, further visits were banned
until the All Clear was given. Stores and gas stations were busy
and each district office offered free plywood to protect windows
and residents hurried about to secure their business interests and
property.
Cuba
Infared Satellite loops of Hurricane Gustav crossing western Cuba
at peak strength.
60,000 were evacuated overnight on August 29 from Cuba's western
coasts. Gustav was projected to strike Cuba on the afternoon of
August 30. Additional evacuations were ordered on the afternoon of
August 30 as Gustav strengthened to a strong Category 4
hurricane, particularly in the low-lying Pinar del Río Province
where 190,000 were evacuated. On Monday, September 1, Cuban
officials reported that Gustav's winds damaged or destroyed 90,000
homes in Pinar del Río, and knocked down 80 high-tension towers.
The combined damage estimate from Gustav and the subsequent
hurricanes
Ike and
Paloma is about $9.4 billion (USD), with
about 2.1 billion of that from Gustav.
United States
On August 31, the NHC predicted with 45% probability that Gustav
would remain at Category 3 or above on September 1. This
influenced preparations, although in fact Gustav had dropped just
below the Category 3 threshold to Category 2 by landfall,
and Category 1 shortly afterwards.
Louisiana
On the
morning of August 26, with Gustav still over Haiti, Louisiana
emergency preparedness officials met several times
to discuss predictions that Gustav would reach the state as a major
hurricane in three to five days. Several areas of Louisiana
planned for evacuations.
Several parishes in the New Orleans
area announced plans for voluntary evacuations
beginning Saturday, August 30. New Orleans Mayor
Ray Nagin said that it was possible thousands of
people who need city help could start leaving on Saturday, as the
first wave of a full-scale evacuation. Later, he ordered the
mandatory evacuation of the whole of New Orleans commencing on the
morning of August 31, calling Gustav "the storm of the
century ... the mother of all storms." On August 31, Nagin
also declared a dusk-to-dawn
curfew and the
cessation of city assistance in evacuations by the afternoon. By
that afternoon, 1.9 million people had evacuated southern
Louisiana, with 200,000 being residents of New Orleans alone,
making it the largest evacuation in the history of Louisiana.
Officials had finalized evacuation plans, which proposed assisted
evacuations as early as August 29:
Contraflow lane reversal on all
major highways, and 700 buses to help move evacuees. For those
evacuees in need of shelter, the state government secured tens of
thousands of shelter beds.
Wary of repeating the
mistakes of Hurricane Katrina, authorities chose not to use the
Louisiana
Superdome
and New Orleans Convention Center
as emergency shelters. The following day,
Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal declared a
state of emergency, activating between
3,000 and 8,000 members of the
Louisiana National Guard.
Mayor of
New Orleans Ray Nagin shortened his appearance at the Democratic National
Convention in Denver
, Colorado
, to assist in preparations. The residents of
low-lying Grand Isle, Louisiana, were under a voluntary evacuation
order beginning August 29. Traditionally, the community is one of
the first to vacate when tropical storms threaten.
Residents of lower
Cameron
Parish
, Louisiana
, were also given a voluntary evacuation order on
August 29. Mandatory evacuation orders have since been
given.
In
Plaquemines
Parish
, Parish President Billy
Nungesser flew in a helicopter counting the number of vessels
and barges that potentially would be a safety issue to people,
property, and the levee system during a hurricane. Parish
officials called the owners of about 150 vessels and told them to
move the vessels or the parish would sink them. 70 of the 150 were
sunk, some by the parish, some by the owners.
[703549] Also, parish officials started a
last-ditch effort to save Belle Chasse
by constructing a sand levee across Louisiana Highway 23.
Approximately eight hours later, the parish government announced
the completion of the levee.
The
Mississippi River was shut to
all ship traffic between the Gulf of Mexico and New Orleans on
August 30. Pilots at Lake Charles in west Louisiana, and Sabine
Pass in east Texas, also were making plans as of August 30 to halt
traffic.
Tulane University
, Loyola
University New Orleans, the University of New Orleans, and
Xavier
University of Louisiana
all closed their campuses for the entire week but
resumed classes on the following Monday of September 8,
2008. The University of Louisiana at
Lafayette also canceled classes for September 2 and 3, as did
for Louisiana
State University
and Baton
Rouge Community College.
On
September 1, Plaquemines Parish officials asked the residents of
Braithwaite, Louisiana
to leave, as levee failure was considered
imminent. FEMA had estimated there were only about
10,000 people left in New Orleans on September 1.
Local events
One major sporting event was directly affected by the disaster
preparations. On August 30, Louisiana State University (LSU) opened
its 2008 football
season against
Appalachian State.
The originally scheduled kickoff time of 4 p.m.
CDT would have conflicted
with the start of contraflow lane
reversal, and Interstate
10 is a key evacuation route through Baton Rouge
. Accordingly, LSU moved kickoff to 10 a.m.
CDT.
A
college football game between Nicholls State University and
New Mexico
State University
, scheduled for September 4, was canceled.
The Triple-A baseball
New Orleans
Zephyrs cancelled the final three games of their season because
of the impending approach of Gustav and evacuation preparations.
The
New Orleans Saints of the
National Football League
(NFL) proceeded with plans to evacuate from New Orleans and headed
to Indianapolis
, where they practiced at Lucas Oil
Stadium
. The Saints returned to New Orleans to play
their first home game as scheduled on Sunday, September 7,
defeating the
Tampa Bay
Buccaneers 24–20.
Hotel and business closures related to Gustav had impact on New
Orleans'
Southern Decadence celebrations, which were scheduled
for August 27 through September 1, 2008.
Texas
Texas
Governor
Rick Perry activated 5,000 members of the
Texas Military Forces on
August 29 in response to the possible crisis, in addition to
preparations made by other agencies. As of August 29, other
preparations in Texas to deal with Gustav and its effects were
implemented.
Some evacuees were being placed in Northeast
Texas, including in Dallas County
, Tarrant
County
, and Tyler
, Texas
.
In
Harris
County
, Texas, Judge Ed Emmett said that the Reliant
Astrodome
will not be used as a shelter for evacuees if
Hurricane Gustav hits New Orleans, because Houston is also
vulnerable to Hurricane Gustav; according to Emmett, it would make
more sense to evacuate to a more inland area.
Voluntary
evacuations of Jefferson
and Orange
Counties started on August 30 with mandatory
evacuations in the two counties started on August 31. Also,
the Texas Governor deployed other assets to help handle the
oncoming disaster.
Mississippi and Alabama
On August 27, requests and orders began for evacuations along the
Mississippi Gulf Coast.
All schools in Harrison
County's
five public school districts were closed until
September 2. Several schools in Pearl River County were also
confirmed closed until September 2.
The University
of Southern Mississippi
was closed on September 2, as well as the Alcorn State
University
.
Much of
the Alabama
National Guard was mobilized to assist evacuees
from the other states. Governor Bob Riley called for
mandatory evacuation of Dauphin Island, Plash Island, Gulf Shores,
as well as everything south of Fort Morgan Road, Gulf Shores on
August 31.
The Mobile Regional Airport
closed on August 31, and remained closed September
1. It is reopened September 2.
The Bankhead
Tunnel
in Mobile
, Alabama
, closed on August 31.
Multistate agencies
On Friday, August 29 several
state rural
waters associations activated their Water Agency Response
Networks to prepare for Gustav’s landfall. WARN systems are
agreements between rural water associations and government agencies
in neighboring states that coordinate the response to large water
emergencies. Water technicians and trailers of portable generators,
pumps, spare parts and testing equipment were readied along the
gulf coast and neighboring states to respond to the
emergency.
Impact
Operationally, Gustav went from a tropical depression to a
hurricane in 14 hours, tying
Hurricane Humberto's record of
14 hours, although this may be disputed in post-season
analysis.
In the
aftermath, the Canadian
government sent a C-17
airlifter, with a medical team, from CFB Trenton
to assist in the evacuation of New Orleans. and two
C-130 Hercules airlift planes from
Greenwood
, Nova
Scotia
and from Winnipeg
, Manitoba
. The United Kingdom
sent HMS Iron
Duke and RFA Wave
Ruler to provide emergency assistance and assess the
damage caused by Gustav. Anheuser-Busch
provided canned water to affected residents.
Russia
announced
it would send 4 cargo planes with tents, construction materials,
food, and essential supplies to Cuba.
Hispaniola
In the Dominican Republic, a landslide in a rural area killed eight
people. Two persons were injured. Government authorities said that
some 67,255 persons were evacuated and more than 1,239 homes were
damaged with 12 destroyed. 50 communities were isolated by the
flooding.
Gustav made landfall in Haiti at approximately 1 p.m. EDT on August
26, about 10 miles (16 km) west of the city of Jacmel.
While inland, Gustav's rains triggered a landslide in the community
of
Benet which killed one person. Two
more were killed in southwestern Haiti when their house collapsed.
Another two deaths were caused by an explosion inside a house,
thought to be possibly related to Hurricane Gustav. The southern
town of Jacmel, where the hurricane made landfall, was bisected by
floodwaters.
According to Haiti's National Director of Civil Protection,
77 people died as a result of the hurricane. Some 2,100 houses
were destroyed and another 8,150 damaged, causing an estimated
7,200 people to live in temporary shelters, including
churches, community centers and schools.At least some 3,500 other
families, 20,000 people, are affected, but when information
becomes available it is thought that the actual number may be
25,000–30,000 families.
Jamaica
In Jamaica, 15 deaths were reported after Gustav swept through the
area as a tropical storm. Flash flooding was also reported on the
island as a result of Gustav's heavy rains.
The banana sector in
the parishes of St. Thomas
, St. Mary
and Portland
suffered significant damage.The Hope River Bridge
linking the capital Kingston
with the eastern reaches of the city including
Harbour View and St. Thomas collapsed and the Georgia bridge in
Portland was destroyed. Jamaica's government ministry
initially estimated US$41.8 million in damage to the road
infrastructure in the country. Total damage in Jamaica was
estimated at $210 million.
Cayman Islands
In the
Cayman Islands, Gustav's heavy rains and storm surge flooded the
streets of Cayman
Brac
and Little
Cayman
, the smaller easternmost "Sister Islands" in the
chain. More than 1,100 people spent the night in
government shelters in the three islands as high waves and heavy
winds battered the chain, the National Emergency Operations Center
said in a statement. Most people waited out the storm in private
homes or hotels.
Cuba

Waters churned up by Hurricane Gustav
off the coast of Northern Cuba
On
Saturday August 30, 2008, Gustav made landfall on mainland Cuba
near the community of Los Palacios
in Pinar del Río—a region that produces much of the
tobacco used to make the nation's famed cigars. In Los
Palacios some 7,000 homes were roofless and many with their walls
collapsed. The rice and banana farms sustained much damage.
At least 300,000 people were evacuated from Gustav's path as
140 mph (220 km/h) winds toppled telephone poles and
fruit trees, shattered windows and tore off the tin roofs of homes.
Cuban authorities declared that Gustav is the worst hurricane to
hit the country in 50 years. Authorities called the storm
damage the worst since 1956. The 211 mph (341 km/h) wind
gusts registered in the city of
Paso Real de San Diego were the
highest in Cuba's history, according to the provincial newspaper,
the
Guerrillero.
Winds were so strong that the weather station instruments broke.
Gustav is considered Cuba's worst hurricane in 45 years, the
last hurricane that was worse than Gustav for Cuba was
Hurricane Flora in 1963, which was the
deadliest Cuban storm since the
1932
Cuba Hurricane.
Cuban Civil defense authorities initially stated that there were
"many people injured" on Isla de la Juventud, an island of
87,000 people south of the mainland. Nearly all the island's
roads were washed out and some regions were heavily flooded. No
fatalities have been reported in Cuba, despite the extreme
damage.
By September 3, Cuba's President
Raul
Castro said that 20,000 of the 25,000 houses on Isla de la
Juventud were damaged. More than 90,000 homes were damaged in the
western province of Pinar del Río according to government news
agency AIN. 3,306 tobacco houses were destroyed, with 906 tons of
tobacco leaves wet. More than of crops were ruined, including of
grain and nearly 1,500 of fruit. 42,000 cans of coffee were
destroyed, and 3,100 tons of grapefruit lost. 930,000 chickens had
to be euthanized.
According
to Pinar del
Río
civil defense authorities, 86,000 homes were
damaged, 80 electric towers and 600 electric posts fell.
Cuba's
electric company, indicated that a total of 136 electric towers
toppled over and that the electrical grid on Isla de la
Juventud
was 100% damaged. In all, damage from
Hurricane Gustav totaled $2.1 billion in Cuba.
United States

Total rainfall from Gustav in the
United States
Although the storm was still in its formative stages on August 26,
fears that Hurricane Gustav might eventually disrupt oil production
in the Gulf of Mexico caused oil prices to rise. On August 27, U.S.
oil and natural-gas companies began evacuating personnel from their
oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico amid continued forecasts that Gustav
would strengthen and move into the gulf. By August 30, 76.77% of
oil production and 37.16% of
natural gas
production in the Gulf of Mexico had been
shut in. By mid-day August 31, 96% of
oil production had stopped. Out at sea, one death was
reported.
Louisiana
In the state of Louisiana, 34 parishes were declared as disaster
areas.
Hurricane Gustav reached the Louisiana coast
on the morning of September 1, making
landfall near Cocodrie,
Louisiana
(see rainfall map); however, at 9 a.m.
wind speed at Grand Isle
had been 115 mph ( km/h), the highest eyewall
speed, indicating the eyewall had traveled over 4 hours along
the coast. The center of the storm continued northwest
across the state, so damage and deaths were widespread in many
areas.
48 deaths in the state of Louisiana were blamed on Hurricane
Gustav. Five were due to falling trees, two due to a tornado and
the rest were indirect deaths.
After
Gustav weakened to a tropical depression, several tornadoes were
spawned including one (rated EF2) that killed two near Mamou
during the early hours of September 3. The
tornado also injured two others.

Hurricane Gustav just after U.S.
landfall.
In
Baton
Rouge
, wind damage from Gustav was the worst of any storm
in memory. The damage was severe enough to effectively shut
the city down for several days. Most businesses remained closed
through September 5, five days after landfall.
Power lines along Baton Rouge's tree-lined
streets were easily brought down as thousands of trees were
uprooted and snapped in half by Gustav's fierce
winds. Entire sections of the city were cut off by the
mountains of
debris. Few homes escaped roof
damage as the storm passed over the capital city.
Many signs were blown
down, including a large portion of the Interstate 10 Highland Road/Nicholson Drive
exit sign, which blew off of the Bridge
and into the Mississippi River. It would be two
weeks before power was restored to all residents. Debris cleanup
was still ongoing at the end of 2008, four months after the storm
had passed.
Around 1.5 million people were without power in Louisiana on
September 1.The state reported about 100,000 people remained
on the coast, after evacuation. Nearly 2 million people had
evacuated from south Louisiana in the days before Gustav's
arrival.
The city of New Orleans had the official reopening date on Thursday
(Sept. 4), after crews had restored most electric power and other
services.Damage assessments came as residents returned to inspect
their properties. Damage included numerous trees down in various
locations, such as around some Marriott hotels, and large tree
limbs were broken from oak trees along St. Charles Avenue. Millions
of smaller branches were scattered throughout neighborhoods, blown
by the strong winds. Area hotels planned to reopen the week of
September 8, some by Saturday, September 6 (such as the
InterContinental & 16 area Marriotts, which already had
electricity restored).
The Associated
Press reported on the floodwall along the Industrial
Canal
(the Inner Harbor Navigation Canal
), which connects Lake Pontchartrain
to the Mississippi River, and is susceptible to
surges via the Gulf Outlet
. High water splashed over the floodwalls
onto new splash guards (designed to prevent foundation erosion),
but the walls were not breached. Minor street flooding began in the
upper
Ninth Ward of New
Orleans.
The
community of Houma
, Louisiana
and the surrounding area in south-central Louisiana
sustained extensive wind damage. The winds blew off many
roofs, blew windows out of houses and knocked down many trees and
left much of the region without power. Shingles and awnings were
scattered throughout downtown Houma. At Ellender High in Houma, the
school's new gym was heavily damaged, with a rear wall collapsed.
The roof of the Houma-Terrebonne Chamber of Commerce was also blown
away. Overall, the area was considered to have dodged a bullet. Had
the storm come ashore farther west, the Intracoastal Waterway would
have been a highway for storm surge to penetrate into the heart of
Houma. However, flooding was relatively minor in the region.
Central Louisiana was also hard
hit. Many trees and power lines were knocked down in that region as
well, and many houses sustained damage from the winds and localized
flooding. Part of the roof at the
Alexandria Mall collapsed. Two people died
in the region — one was electrocuted and one had a tree crush
her trailer.
The area's water supply was also hampered as
power was knocked out to most of the water wells in the Alexandria
and Pineville
areas.
Damage and significant power outages were reported as far north as
northern Louisiana, in the
Interstate
20 corridor.
Highest rainfall totals received thus far
across the state include near Bunkie
, Louisiana
, and at Barataria Bay Pass.
President Bush declared 34 Louisiana parishes as disaster areas and
visited the area on September 3.
On Wednesday, September 3, field staff and emergency supplies from
the
Arkansas Rural Water
Association departed to assist the
Louisiana Rural Water Association
restore water and wastewater service to impacted communities. Staff
and supplies from other state associations, including Alabama,
Mississippi and Florida went on stand-by the same day. By Friday,
September 5, response teams from Arkansas, Georgia, Alabama and
Mississippi were assisting efforts to restore water and wastewater
service. There was little structural damage to the water
infrastructure, with power loss the primary difficulty. Rural water
teams provided 771 on-site technical assistance visits to 370
affected water and wastewater systems. Later, the LRWA efforts
received applause from the Louisiana Joint Select Committee on
Homeland Security.
The LSU
football team postponed their game, scheduled for September 6,
against Troy
University
and
rescheduled it for November 15 after damage was caused to Tiger
Stadium
. The swirling wind in the stadium tore
awnings, threw team benches from the sidelines of the playing field
into the stands and littered the stadium with debris.
Mississippi and Alabama
The
National Weather Service reported 14 confirmed tornadoes spun by
Gustav from Biloxi
to
Mobile
.
All
during September 1, numerous tornado
warnings (more than 100) were issued from Mobile all the way to
Natchez
, Mississippi
, based on radar-rotation patterns that indicated
strong circulating winds.
In Mississippi, damage from Gustav was far less severe than that
caused by
Hurricane Katrina, with
its 2005 storm surge of 27 ft (7 m); however, Gustav's
storm surge was high as 15 feet (4.5 m) in places on the
Mississippi Gulf Coast.
Sections of
U.S. Route 90 (including Gulfport
and Biloxi) were flooded and some houses were
flooded. Two people from Metairie
, Louisiana
died near Vicksburg
in an automobile accident while evacuating from
the storm.
In
Alabama
, scattered damage already reached multi-million
dollar levels, with the destruction of the Dauphin
Island
berm (sand dune barrier) by
storm surge waves, flood damage to island roads & homes, and
extensive flooding around Bayou La Batre
. The manmade sand berm took about two years
to complete, and there is no official plan yet to construct another
berm for Dauphin Island, which acts as a barrier island for the western Alabama
coastline at Mobile
Bay
.A fuller assessment of damage can be
expected when more residents return to the coastal areas and
further
insurance claims are
filed.
Florida
The state
of Florida was affected by both the Cuba landfall, with Gustav
traveling past the Florida
Keys
, and the Louisiana landfall (September 1),
affecting the Florida panhandle,
with storm surge and outer band tornadoes and thunderstorms.
Several
tornado warnings were issued around the Pensacola
area. Panhandle beaches had rip currents,
and officials in
Pensacola Beach had
been passing out pamphlets warning of deadly rip currents that
could continue for days. Four people died in rip currents on
Florida beaches.
The
USS
Oriskany
, now an artificial
reef off the coast of Pensacola, shifted 10 feet deeper leaving
the flight deck at following Gustav.
Four
people died in a car accident on Interstate 20 near Carrollton
, Georgia
while evacuating from Louisiana. Two other
people in the car were alive and airlifted to nearby
hospitals.
Arkansas
Because of Gustav's slow motion across northwest Louisiana and
Arkansas on September 2 and September 3, significant rainfall
accumulation was seen statewide.
The maximum amount in Arkansas was at
Hamburg
, where had fallen,making Gustav the third
wettest tropical cyclone to affect the state since 1972.
Texas
Especially affected was the small southeast Texas coastal town of
Bridge City where nearly the entire town
received heavy water damage.
Political implications
United States
Hurricane Gustav was expected to make landfall near New Orleans
almost exactly three years after
Hurricane Katrina struck the same region.
It also arrived in the midst of the campaign for the
2008 U.S. presidential
elections and during the week the
2008 Republican National
Convention was scheduled to start. The federal and state
administrations, as well as the candidates for the 2008
presidential election were sensitive that Gustav was likely to
remind U.S. voters of the
"botched response" by state
and local municipalities and subsequent federal aid authorities
to the earlier storm.
On August 30, President
George W.
Bush and Vice President
Dick Cheney canceled their planned attendance at
the 2008 Republican National Convention. Because of the expected
U.S. landfall, governors and some other political leaders from
Louisiana and other states chose to stay home from the 2008
Republican National Convention. As the hurricane approached the
coast, presumptive Republican presidential nominee
John McCain canceled all non-essential
opening-day festivities at the convention and said that he might
give his acceptance speech via satellite from the affected
area.
Democratic presidential nominee
Barack
Obama and Vice Presidential nominee
Joe
Biden, monitoring the situation in the Gulf Coast, encouraged
New Orleans residents to evacuate. Obama also announced that he
would ask his large network of donors and volunteers to contribute
money, goods and work to assist victims of the storm according to
what was most needed after the storm hits.
Louisiana's Congressional primary election, originally scheduled
for September 6, was delayed to October 4, which then delayed the
general election for two races that required a runoff vote to
December 6, 2008.
Cuba
Fidel Castro addressed in a
"reflection," published on September 1 in the official daily
Granma. "Two days ago
... out of 11 international press reports
devoted to Cuba, none told about the hurricane that moved toward
our island and the feverish efforts of our Civil Defense," Castro
writes. Instead, the news services, "echoing a Yankee press
organization dedicated to the media war and campaigns against
Cuba," reported about the defection of TV actor
Yamil Jaled. (The "Yankee press organization"
appears to be an allusion to
El
Nuevo Herald, which broke the news of Jaled's arrival in
Miami.) "What a patriot! What a democrat! What a brilliant
example," wrote Castro. "This way, the world is informed about a
character a lot less known and important than Hurricane Gustav.
They want to make a sacred cow out of him."
Retirement
Because of the damage and deaths, on April 22, 2009 the
World Meteorological
Organization retired the name
Gustav from their
rotating naming lists. It will be replaced with Gonzalo in
2014.
See also
References
- Emergency shelters were open across the island with several
schools converted into shelters.
- Summary
- Reuters 9-2-08
- Southern Decadence Official Website
- Ward, Mirk "Texas mandatory evacuations to start
Sunday" Austin American-Statesman
- Gustav School/Business Closings
- CoCoRaHS. Total Precipitation Summary for Louisiana: September 1-3,
2008. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.
- MesoWest. Location of EGIL1. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.
- Climate Prediction Center.
U. S. Rainfall from September 1. Retrieved on
2008-09-03.
- Climate Prediction Center.
U. S. Rainfall from September 2. Retrieved on
2008-09-03.
- Michael Brennan. PUBLIC ADVISORY NUMBER 41 FOR TROPICAL DEPRESSION
GUSTAV. Retrieved on 2008-09-03.
- David M.
Roth. Tropical Cyclone Rainfall for the Gulf Coast.
Retrieved on 2008-09-03.
External links