12 Years After Katrina, Hurricane Harvey Pummels Gulf Coast and Its Climate Science-Denying Politicians

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As the remnants of Hurricane Harvey (now a tropical storm) continue to flood Houston โ€” just daysย before the 12th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina โ€” I visitedย Shannon Rainey, whose house was built on top of aย Superfundย siteย in the Upper Ninth Ward of New Orleans. Rainey is worried about family members in Houston. She knows all too well how long it can take to get back what is lost in aย storm.ย โ€œI still live with Katrina every day,โ€ she toldย me.

New Orleans remains threatened by bands of rain extending from Harvey, causing many residents with fierce memories of Katrina to remain onย edge.

Shannon Rainey stands across from Katrina-damaged homes in New Orleans' Upper Ninth Ward
Shannon Rainey in front of her home in Gordon Plaza across from Press Park in New Orleansโ€™ Upper Ninthย Ward.

Earlier this month, the city proved it was ill-prepared for hurricane season nearly a year after Baton Rougeโ€™s 1,000-year flood. Rain inundated New Orleans, with more than nine inches falling in only threeย hours, exposing that the cityโ€™s pump system could not operate at full capacity. The city is still scrambling to make the needed repairs and clean the sewer systemโ€™s catch basins, which remain clogged in manyย places.

โ€œThis city isnโ€™t ready to handle a lot of rain, let alone a hurricane,โ€ Rainey said, while glancing across the street at damage caused by Katrina, still there almost 12 yearsย later.

Debris and trash outside a Ninth Ward strip mall abandoned since Hurricane Katrina
A strip mall in New Orleansโ€™ Ninth Ward, left in ruins sinceย Katrina.

A home covered in graffiti in New Orleans' Ninth Ward
A blighted home covered in graffiti in New Orleansโ€™ Ninthย Ward.

Abandoned home from Hurricane Katrina overgrown with weeds and vines
A home damaged by Katrinaโ€™s floodwaters in New Orleansโ€™ Lower Ninth Ward now overtaken byย vines.

New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu agreed. On August 27 he said residents should remain prepared for possible heavy storms and flash flooding in the middle of theย week.

From Raineyโ€™s front steps in the Upper Ninth Ward, one can see, and sometimes smell, the blighted remains of Press Park, a housing project abandoned after Hurricaneย Katrina.ย 

The inside of a Press Park housing unit exposed to the outside from missing walls
Aย Press Park housing unit torn open in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Residents nearby complain about the smell that comes from the blighted structures after itย rains.ย 

On August 28, theย Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)ย was set to re-sample the soil in Gordon Plaza, part of a subdivision the city developed on top of the Agriculture Street landfill inย 1981. Rainey was hoping to get the agency to sample the soil under her home, but the EPA cancelled due toย Harvey.ย 

The Stench Before theย Storm

Bryan Parras,ย the Sierra Clubโ€™sย Beyond Dirty Fuels Gulf Coast organizer, lives in Houston. He is riding out the storm and monitoring industrial sites as best he can. He has no doubtย communities in the Houston area will experience similar hardships as people like Rainey. Before joining the Sierra Club, Parras worked with underserved communities in the area with t.e.j.a.s.ย (Texasย Environmental Justice Advocacy Services), a community-based activist organization in East Houston thatย monitors chemical releases and the impacts on fencelineย communities.

Bryan Parras takes a photo across the water from heavy machinery at a recycling facility in Houston
Bryan Parras, across from Sims Metal Managementโ€™s Proler Southwest recycling facility, while leading a tour of toxic places in East Houston on June 4,ย 2016.

Some of the areaโ€™s refineries started shutting down operations leading up to Harvey, including ExxonMobil,ย Petrobras, Shell, and Chevron Phillips Chemical. This process adds to airย pollution because it leads to flaring off excess toxic gases, together with natural gas and oxygen, to keep the chemicals from building up to dangerousย pressures.

Before the worst of Harveyโ€™s rain, Parras drove around industrial sites near fenceline communities on Houstonโ€™s east side. On August 26, he met with people living next to the Valero Houston Refineryย in Manchester who told him the fumes were unbearable. They were trapped, sheltering in place.ย The air pollution has been affectingย Parras too, reaching his home two miles away. โ€œWe are being gassed,โ€ he lamented. โ€œNoxious toxic gas is in the atmosphere over a wideย area.โ€

Flare from a petrochemical facility behind a school in East Houston
A flare most likely coming from Texas Petrochemical, now called TCP Group, behind a school in East Houston. Photo by Bryanย Parras

A flare from a TCP Group Texas petrochemical plant in East Houston
A flare from aย TCP Group petrochemical facility, located behind a school in East Houston,ย as it starts to shut down before Hurricane Harvey. Photo by Bryanย Parras

The Texas Commission on Environmental Qualityย also shut down its air quality monitors in the Houston area to avoid water and wind damage related to the storm. This move has left refineries on the honor system, according to the Houston Press.

Furthermore, the Houston Press reports that โ€œthe federal Environmental Protection Agency even waived certain Clean Air Act fuel requirements for Texas while refineries work to make up for the inevitable shortages in fuel due to Harvey, so companies are operating with even less oversight thanย usual.โ€

The Valero refinery in Manchester isnโ€™t planning to shut down, raising questions about how much air pollution it might release without regulatorsย watching.

A Political Flood of Climate Scienceย Denial

It frustratesย Parras thatย climate change is not a concept most politicians in the area are willing to grasp. Acknowledging that the climate is changing is as far as many politicians in oil- and gas-producing regions will go. They typically stop short of accepting mankindโ€™s role, even as their districts feel its effects.ย 

Climate scientist Michael Mann summed up the current stormโ€™s climate change connection: โ€œHarvey was almost certainly more intense than it would have been in the absence of human-caused warming, which means stronger winds, more wind damage and a larger stormย surge.โ€

Damaged homes marked with graffiti in New Orleans' Press Park housing project
Blighted structures in Press Park, a housing project in the Ninth Ward which was abandoned after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans inย 2005.

Parras hopes that Harvey will be the storm that snaps politicians out of their climate-denial status:ย โ€œAt this point, ignoring facts to the detriment of peopleโ€™s lives is what makes themย culpable.โ€

Top Texas politicians, including Governor Greg Abbott and U.S. Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn, are in the climate-denier camp, along with President Donald Trump. Thatโ€™s despite 97 percent of climate scientists actively involved in research agreeing that humans are causing climate change. The few scientists who deny climate science are often funded by the oil, gas, and coal industries. The same companies who are payingย off climate science-denying scientists also donate to the Political Action Committees (PACs) and politicians pushing disinformation on climate change and stalling action onย it.

Senator Cruz urged Trump to keep his promise to pull the U.S. out of the Paris Climate Accord in May this year, and Senator Cornyn praised the president when he withdrew on June 1.

Unfortunately, the federal governmentโ€™s lack of action on climate change policy will likely get worse. Shortly before Hurricane Harvey hit Texas, President Trump signed anย executive order reversing an Obama-era requirement which increased floodย standards for public infrastructure projects to protect them from the consequences of climateย change.

Trumpโ€™s order equates climate change considerations with slowing downย the permitting process for infrastructure projects, namely through environmentalย reviews.

Extensive development in Houstonโ€™s 100-year flood plain exemplifies the need to consider climate change in infrastructure planning. Urban planning that doesnโ€™t account for climate-related changes, such as greater precipitation, storms, and sea level rise, will undoubtedly exacerbate extreme flooding events.

Because of Harvey, gas prices are expected to spike as production shuts down, and flooding along the heavily industrialized Gulf Coast will inevitably cause damage to oil, gas, and chemical facilities, with spills of hazardous materials toย follow.

โ€œAmerica is poised to become a net energy exporter over the next decade. We should not abandon that progress at the cost ofย weakening our energy renaissance and crippling economic growth,โ€ย Senator Cruz wrote in a CNN op-ed on May 29. Did Cruz consider that when extreme weather devastates the Gulf Coast, those industriesย he is trying to promote are crippled asย well?ย 

Like other recent extreme weather events, Harveyโ€™s rains are exposing the peril of ignoring climate science. Policymakers who support Trumpโ€™sย rollback of climate protections, which arguably were already inadequate, will own a large portion of the blame for the impacts that follow. But, at that point, it could be tooย late.ย 

Spray painted signs by Hurricane Katrina search and rescue workers on a boarded-up home
Telltale mark left on a boarded-up home which search and rescue workers left after Hurricaneย Katrina.

Main image: The abandoned Press Park housing project in New Orleans 12 years after Hurricane Katrina. Credit: Julieย Dermansky

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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