I completely agree, Lisa.
To answer some of the questions/points in previous posts:
The Superdome has been used as a refuge in previous storms, so it must have been used as a part of a plan. There was food and water there.
And to those who were saying that you should start acting as soon as the hurricane hits the gulf without waiting for a warning...
People like us probably should. By people like us, I mean people who have the Internet, time to watch TV and see what the hurricane is doing, and money to takes trips to WDW. And in fact, a lot of the people like us did start to prepare early. Most people didn't start to actually leave until Saturday morning, but they did board up their houses, make sure everything was ready to go, etc.
NOLA is made up with a lot of people who aren't like us. You can't even get a handle on if you haven't really ever been there. And by being there, I don't mean staying at a hotel on Bourbon Street. In addition to living there, I've done mission work in the inner city. These people are poor like you've never seen poor before. Many don't have cars. They work several jobs and don't have time to watch TV. They may not be able to feed their families if they miss one shift at their jobs. Even if they do evacuate, they have to somehow figure out where a shelter is because they don't have money for the Holiday Inn.
People, and the government of New Orleans, can't afford to evacuate until they KNOW that it will be bad. And you can't just say that we knew on Saturday that it would be bad. You don't really know until it hits. You probably don't closely follow hurricanes that hit areas where you don't have close friends or family. You may not be aware that about every other year there is a prediction that there's a hurricane coming that will destroy New Orleans. I don't remember which one it was, but last year I sat glued to the TV one morning, watching a hurricane blow in that was supposed to cause flooding so bad that there would be water up to Jackson's nose on the statue of him in Jackson Square in the heart of the French Quarter. At the last minute, it turned. Jackson didn't even get his feet wet.
Will things change because of Katrina? I certainly hope so. I hope that the plan for moving people in AFTER the storm becomes much more efficient. I hope they start keeping food, water, and emergency equipment in places like Baton Rouge, Jackson, MS, and other locations just out of reach of the worst damage, and that they come up with a plan to get these things in quickly and efficiently as soon as needed. I also hope that people will take more personal responsibility. I hope that more people will make a better effort to get out ahead of time, and I hope that those who choose to stay with have over a week's worth of water, food, and for goodness gracious, formula if they have a nursing baby. And I certainly hope they keep a pick axe in their attics. But would I recommend mass government evacuations before the storm for able bodied people? No. It's more efficient to get the people out afterward IF it ends up being necessary.