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Number of hurricane evacuees sheltered in various states, cities




Number of hurricane evacuees sheltered and housed in various states


Estimates of hurricane evacuees sheltered in various states, cities
Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com
September 7, 2005



The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development has established a toll-free number (866-641-8102) for the public to get information on housing needs. Below are estimates of the number of hurricane victims housed in various states and cities.


FEMA has chartered three Carnival Cruise Lines cruise ships and one from Scotia Prince Lines for a period of six months to house refugees from Hurricane Katrina. Two ships, with a capacity of about 2,600 passengers each, will be based in Galveston, Texas, and started boarding occupants yesterday. A third ship is scheduled to arrive in Mobile, Ala. on Thursday, Sept. 8, to begin lodging about 1,800 displaced persons. Details about a fourth ship that will hold 1,000 occupants will be provided soon. Currently, it is preparing to move from Charleston, S.C., to head for the Gulf Coast. Evacuees are chosen by state and local authorities with priority given to the elderly and other people with special needs. No one should self-report to any ships, but work with local emergency officials if shelter is needed.



Michael D. Brown, head of FEMA, said the housing mission is being aided from a wide variety of sources across the nation including state parks, military bases, available housing stock and private homes. “The response has been overwhelming and we’re working to place people in safe shelter as quickly as possible,” he said.



More than 485 Red Cross shelters have been opened in 18 states including Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Missouri, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, Tennessee, Utah, Virginia and West Virginia with more on standby. More than 142,000 evacuees are being sheltered by the American Red Cross.



Below is a list for some of the shelters for hurricane victims.



In Texas, about 250,000 Hurricane Katrina evacuees are sheltered in cities including Austin, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Killeen, Beaumont, and Tyler. 139,000 hurricane refugees were in 137 shelters in Texas, and another 100,000 were estimated to be in hotels and motels, said Robert Black, spokesman for Gov. Rick Perry.



In San Antonio, the former Kelly Air Force Base began accepting people on buses that were turned away from the Astrodome. Up to 7,000 people could be accommodated in an air-conditioned office building and warehouse.



In Houston, the Astrodome has 17,500 evacuees, Reliant Center has 3,800, Reliant Arena houses 2,300 residents and the George R. Brown Convention Center holds 1,300 people.



In Alabama, Jeff Emerson, a spokesman for governor Bob Riley, said an estimated 25,000 refugees were in the state Tuesday with more expected in days to come. Alba Rivera, an American Red Cross spokeswoman, said her group was housing 5,380 evacuees in 49 Alabama shelters. Brian James, spokesman for the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel, said 10,000 of the state’s 59,000 motel rooms were occupied by emergency workers and evacuees.



In California, Governor Schwarzenegger said the state would accommodate at least 1,000 evacuees. San Diego will take 600; San Francisco, 300; and San Jose, 100, he said. Los Angeles County plans to accommodate 2,000 evacuees.



In New York, Long Island will host up to 300 evacuees.



In Arkansas about 60,000 are scattered at shelters across the state, although another 10,000 to 30,000 expected.



About 1,530 people were staying in hurricane shelters across Tennessee as of Tuesday afternoon, according to the governor’s office said. Around 15,000 evacuees total are now in Tennessee.



These lists of shelters have been compiled from various press and government reports.

Links to news on shelters in other cities and states


Alabama

Arizona

Arkansas

Atlanta

Austin

Baton Rouge

Beaumont

Birmingham

California

Chicago

Dallas

Florida

Georgia

Houston

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Jackson

Kansas

Kansas City

Kentucky

Killeen

Little Rock

Memphis

Missouri

Montgomery

Nashville

Nebraska

Nevada

New Mexico

Oklahoma

Phoenix

San Antonio

St. Louis

Tennessee

Texas

Tyler

Other resources:

  • Personal account of hurricane destruction along Mississippi Gulf Coast: The following is an eyewitness account of hurricane destruction along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Included is information on plans to provide pro bono services from out of state lawyers to the storm victims, many of whom will need assistance in dealing with insurance companies, relief bureaucracies, and possibly personal or small business bankruptcies in the aftermath of the storm.
  • White alligator, sea otters, penguins at New Orleans Aquarium OK, fish are not 6-September-2005
    Despite escaping Hurricane Katrina with little physical damage, the Aquarium of the Americas in New Orleans has suffered significant loss of animal life. According to the American Zoo and Aquarium Association (AZA), the aquarium has lost most of its fish. A skeleton staff is preparing to move some animals out of the facility and caring for surviving animals in the collection. The sea otters, penguins, leafy and weedy seadragons, birds (macaws and raptors), and the white alligator are fine.
  • Hurricanes getting stronger due to global warming says study August 29, 2005
    Late last month an atmospheric scientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology released a study in Nature that found hurricanes have grown significantly more powerful and destructive over the past three decades. Kerry Emanuel, the author of the study, warns that since hurricanes depend on warm water to form and build, global climate change might increase the effect of hurricanes still further in coming years.
  • Environmental problems worsened Hurricane Katrina’s impact August 31, 2005
    The loss of coastal marshlands that buffer New Orleans from flooding and storm surges may have worsened the impact of Hurricane Katrina. In the past, the region’s wetlands have served as a natural buffer that slows hurricanes down as they come in from the Gulf of Mexico and helps protect New Orleans from storms. But all this has changed.

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