A Natural Disaster, a Man-Made Catastrophe, and a Human Tragedy
Ted Steinberg
Chronicle of Higher Education, September 9th 2005
Is Hurricane Katrina "our tsunami," as the mayor of Biloxi, Miss., A.J.
Holloway, has said? Does it make sense to compare today's disaster to a catastrophe
that killed upwards of 200,000 impoverished people, injured roughly half a
million, displaced millions more, and was felt across a huge geographic span
that included Sumatra, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, and eastern Africa?
In searching for meaning in the current calamity, we can learn something
about the root causes of such disasters by pinpointing the proper historical
analogy.
Although it is no doubt an overstatement to compare Katrina to the 2004
tsunami, the two have some things in common. Both demonstrated the vulnerability
of the poor in the face of natural calamity. Consider Katrina's victims who
suffered through the aftermath at the Louisiana Superdome and the New Orleans
convention center. That was a man-made disaster that clearly could have been
averted if the federal government, specifically the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, had quickly marshaled the political will and resources to evacuate
those without access to cars, instead of promoting on its Web site a faith-based
charity that was clearly no match for the problem.
Likewise, both disasters demonstrated the tragic consequences of reckless
coastal development. In Asia, industrial fish farms, tourist resorts, and
refineries combined over the last generation to destroy huge stretches of
coastal mangrove forest. The forest helps stabilize the land, and offers a
form of natural protection that can soften the blow of a tsunami. Bangladesh
experienced many fewer deaths in the disaster because of the conservation
of the coastal mangroves than did Indonesia, where two-thirds of the forest
has been destroyed.
In New Orleans, meanwhile, the dredging of channels to accommodate petrochemical
companies has compromised huge amounts of marshland. Such changes, combined
with the erosion of the area's barrier islands, and the Bush administration's
policy of opening up more wetlands to development, weakened the natural frontline
defense against a hurricane storm surge and left the city more vulnerable
to death and destruction.
Both disasters also show the problems with neoliberal imperatives, based
in a theory of political economy that idealizes the free market and chips
away at the public sector at home, while worshiping at the altar of free trade
and investment abroad. Foreign capital, whether in the form of tourism or
the cash-cropping of fish, played a role in opening the coast around the Indian
Ocean to the destructive force of the tsunami. In the aftermath of the disaster,
the World Bank is leading the effort to expand the reach of those very same
enterprises at the expense of the poor. The poor suffered the most in the
calamity, and they are now experiencing the brutalizing effects of what the
activist journalist Naomi Klein has rightly termed "disaster capitalism,"
as foreign corporations seek to profit from the reconstruction while the
residents of the fishing villages that formerly occupied the area are being
forced to relocate. In June 2005, Oxfam found that, because the flow of aid
has tended to go to business people and landowners, many of the poor have
been made even poorer by the disaster.
What form the post-disaster rebuilding of America's Gulf Coast region will
take remains to be seen. But this much is clear: Those poor people who had
to suffer through the stench, the heat, and the overflowing toilets were victims
of a way of thinking that goes back 25 years. Neoliberalism is a philosophy
that has been shared by Republicans and Democrats alike (which is, by the
way, why I'm not entirely convinced by those who argue that this kind of
mistreatment would not have happened under a Kerry administration), and it
was the root cause behind the failed evacuation. It is an ethos that deludes
its adherents into thinking that "a thousand points of light" are better
at solving America's problems than the federal government. It is a worldview
that would rather put its faith in volunteer efforts than pony up the money
and resources to safely evacuate the roughly 120,000 people in New Orleans
who, we knew in advance, had no access to cars.
When it comes to hurricane evacuation, American officials ought to take
a page out of Fidel Castro's handbook. The American news media never misses
an opportunity to poke fun at the Communists. I would not want to defend all
of Castro's policies, but whatever their faults, the Communists in Cuba have
figured out how to use government resources to organize an efficient civil-defense
system for protecting their people -- staging exercises to practice evacuation,
providing shelters in advance with medical personnel, and even bringing in
trucks before a storm so people can save their material possessions. It hardly
needs mentioning that being alive is one of the prerequisites for enjoying
the freedom that Americans value so much.
So there is a great deal that the tsunami and the present hurricane share
in common. But a much better historical comparison exists closer to home,
one that highlights the irresponsible decision making and denial on the part
of government officials that, combined with profit-driven land development,
largely explains why the poor pay with their lives in such disasters. I have
in mind the 1928 hurricane that took the lives of at least 1,836 people in
Florida, the vast majority of them poor migrant workers who drowned as the
waters of Lake Okeechobee rose up over a dike and pounded them to death.
That disaster is comparable to what is happening in the wake of Hurricane
Katrina not just because the victims in both cases are overwhelmingly poor
and African-American. They compare because, in both cases, there were clear
signs, in advance, that they were disasters waiting to happen -- literally,
unnatural disasters.
In the case of the 1928 Florida hurricane, the warning was telegraphed several
years in advance. Earlier in the century, state authorities had overseen a
vast drainage project that reclaimed land around the shores of Lake Okeechobee
and turned it into valuable agricultural enterprises. Yet living around the
lake had its price. In 1922 heavy rains caused the water to rise more than
four feet and flooded Clewiston and Moore Haven, towns along the lake's southern
shore that housed the black laborers who worked the rich agricultural land
nearby.
In 1924 storms again raised the lake level, causing more flooding. Then,
in the summer of 1926, heavy rains raised the level of the lake yet again,
leading a journalist named Howard Sharp to beg state officials to take steps
to lower the water: "The lake is truly at a level so high as to make a perilous
situation in the event of a storm," he wrote in The Tampa Tribune.
The Everglades Drainage District, headed by some of the highest officials
in the state, including Gov. John W. Martin and Attorney General J.B. Johnson,
took no action to lower the water. By September 1, the level of Lake Okeechobee
exceeded 18 feet. The levees around the lake were built to only 21 feet, and
anyone even remotely familiar with the area knew that a stiff wind could cause
the lake to rise as much as three feet. The mathematics of fatality and destruction
were painfully obvious. Yet the drainage commissioners, beholden to wealthy
agricultural and commercial interests -- who wanted the lake water high to
help with irrigating crops and with navigation -- refused to act.
Nobody listened, and on September 18, 1926, a Category 4 storm ripped across
Florida and caused the waters of Lake Okeechobee to wash over a dike and kill
at least 150 people (though 300 seems more likely) in Moore Haven, which had
an entire population of only 1,200 at the time.
After the disaster, the attorney general explained: "The storm caused the
loss and damage. ... It is not humanly possible to guard against the unknown
and against the forces of nature when loosed." Interpreting the event as a
"natural" disaster masked the calamity's man-made causes and scarcely moved
anyone to action to help ward off a future catastrophe, which, it turned out,
was just around the corner.
On September 16, 1928, a powerful storm, with a barometric low of 27.43
inches -- even lower than that recorded in 1926 -- swept ashore near Palm
Beach. After the notorious 1900 Galveston hurricane (which left at least
8,000 dead), it was the deadliest storm in 20th-century American history.
Most of those who died were black migrant workers, virtually all of whom
drowned in the towns along the southern shore of Lake Okeechobee, as the
howling winds sent a wall of water crashing over the dikes in a grim repetition
of what had happened two years before.
Sightseers, brimming with morbid curiosity, filed into the region to see
the mounds of swollen, rotting corpses firsthand. According to one report,
"The visitor would stare for moments entranced, then invariably turn aside
to vomit." Bodies were still being found more than a month after the disaster,
when searching ceased for lack of funds.
Again, Sharp seemed remarkably prescient, writing a week before the storm
that those who advocated a high water level in Lake Okeechobee were taking
"a terrible responsibility on themselves." And again, a member of the Everglades
drainage commission -- this time Ernest Amos, the state comptroller -- called
the disaster an "act of God," in what is surely one of history's more irresponsible
outbursts of denial.
After Hurricane Katrina swept through New Orleans, President Bush, sounding
much like state officials in Florida in the 1920s, said: "I don't think anybody
anticipated the breach of the levees." Seeing the calamity as primarily the
work of unforeseen and unpredictable forces, however, amounts to a form of
moral hand-washing.
In fact, multiple warnings had gone out. The Federal Emergency Management
Agency has known about the potential for large loss of life in New Orleans,
probably for a generation. Ten years ago, Weatherwise magazine called New
Orleans "the Death Valley of the Gulf Coast" because the city is surrounded
by water and not particularly well served by major roadways. In 2000, in talking
about the general decline in death rates from natural disasters in the 20th
century, I called attention in my book Acts of God to New Orleans and wrote,
"Think twice before assuming that high death tolls are a thing of the past."
Mark Fischetti, a contributing editor to Scientific American, made the same
prediction in an excellent report in the magazine in 2001. The journalists
John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein reported extensively in 2002 on the potential
for calamity in The Times-Picayune. And as recently as May 2005, Max Mayfield,
director of the National Hurricane Center, was quoted as saying, "I can't
emphasize enough how concerned I am with southeast Louisiana because of its
unique characteristics, its complex levee system."
Is the current disaster the American tsunami? No, it's the Hurricane Katrina
calamity. But the same blind faith in the free market and private enterprise,
coupled with the brutal downsizing of the public sector, and a very explicit
pattern of denial in the face of impending natural calamity, help explain
why America's most vulnerable saw their lives washed out to sea.
Ted Steinberg is a professor of history
and law at Case Western Reserve University. Among his books are Acts of God:
The Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America (Oxford University Press,
2000), Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History (Oxford University
Press, 2002), and the forthcoming American Green: The Obsessive Quest for
the Perfect Lawn, to be published by W.W. Norton & Company in March.