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Old 08-31-2005, 03:12 PM
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Coast Guard Report (mentions rig status)

ST. LOUIS -- The Coast Guard’s current emphasis is the safety and security of people in the areas impacted by Hurricane Katrina, and is working closely with federal, state and local partners on that goal. Coast Guard air and boat crews have assisted in the rescue of 1,259 people, and they are continuing to respond to distress calls.
The Coast Guard is working with FEMA, and is delivering relief supplies aboard its C-130 cargo planes.


There are approximately 4,000 Coast Guardsmen currently in the area working on response and recovery, as well as 15 cutters, 37 airplanes and rescue helicopters, 63 small boats, three maritime safety and security teams, three oil and hazardous material response teams and five aid to navigation teams.


This hurricane caused catastrophic devastation, and the Coast Guard anticipates that there will be prolonged waterways management and environmental cleanup operations. Currently, five oil rigs from West Delta Platform are missing, one submersible rig is grounded at south pass, two mobile offshore drilling units are adrift, two semi-submersibles are listing, and the MARS facility is severely damaged.


A high priority is reopening ports and waterways and Outer Continental Shelf reconstitution. The Coast Guard anticipates prolonged waterways management issues and environmental cleanup operations. Currently, all Gulf ports remain closed. The Coast Guard is beginning to conduct port surveys and is moving assets into the area to reconstitute the aids-to-navigation system on the Mississippi River and other waterways.

Four Coast Guard personnel from Coast Guard Sector Mobile have not been accounted for. Coast Guard facilities have experienced varying degrees of damage. Early reports indicate Coast Guard Station Gulfport, Miss., was destroyed. Station Venice, La., is partially submerged. Station Grand Isle, Ala., sustained slight damage to the group building and Coast Guard housing. Station New Orleans appears to have sustained little damage, but remains inaccessible by car.

"As part of a commited team, we have been working tirelessly to help those in need and to begin work on the ports and waterways," said Rear Adm. Robert Duncan, the Coast Guard incident commander. "Some of our own people are missing. Many of the Coast Guard personnel responding to this disaster have likely lost their properties. We will be here helping these communities as long as it takes."
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Old 08-31-2005, 03:39 PM
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I talked to guy who friends son was stationed at Gulfport, but was recently transferred to the east coast. He said "there was no sign of the Gulfport CG Station!" according to his buddies son.


It was bad!

Any one think they will to rebuild New Orleans? Or will they move it to a new higher-drier spot?
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Old 08-31-2005, 06:47 PM
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Captn C,
I am afraid that they will just patch up what was there. My thinking is that they'll say it lasted how long? They'll feel that another hit is once in a century right...
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Old 08-31-2005, 07:09 PM
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I think that they have to rebuild the city. It is too important to the oil and gas industry and the port is too important to commerce. It would be a good opportunity to bulldoze the houses, haul in dirt, and build the city up like they did in Galveston after 1900.
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