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Response
- Louisiana Sea
Grant Education compiled and posted on its Web site (www.lamer.lsu.edu)
links for students and teachers to find accurate information about
the science of hurricanes and other storms. Located on the site are
links to imagery, safety, recovery and available classroom materials
for teachers.
- Sea Grant Education
and the LSU Department of Curriculum and Instruction developed a PowerPoint
on levees and storm surge which was presented at teacher conferences
in October 2005 and February 2006.
- Louisiana Sea
Grant Education developed an interactive, hands on map activity to
help children, adults and educators grasp an the size and scope of
the storms’ damage as it relates to geography, cities, local
area evacuation routes, populations, major cities and road ways. The
map teaches fundamental principles in geography, math, demographics
and economics and is a useful tool for introducing the topic of hazards,
such as hurricanes, tsunamis and earthquakes.
- Hurricane Rita
left the canals at Cypremort Point filled with sediment and debris,
which prevented boats from using the waterways. Marine Extension agent
Glenn Thomas aided in connecting local officials with state and federal
representatives who could help with clearing the channels. LSG agents
also helped local officials document the damage in order to receive
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assistance. (Fall 2005)
- Marine Extension
agent Mark Shirley helped assess damages to crawfish and alligator
farms, as well as recreational fishing ponds, following Hurricane
Rita. Shirley estimated that 25,000 acres of crawfish ponds in Vermilion,
Iberia and St. Martin parishes were directly impacted by flood waters,
and that little or no production could be expected in the affected
areas during the coming season. Alligator farms received varied degrees
of damage from the storm. However, marshes where eggs are harvested
flooded with saltwater, and egg production will have to be monitored
for a few years to calculate the full impact of Rita, Shirley determined.
(Fall 2005)
- The Louisiana
Restoration Science Community prepared a position paper and recommended
to the Governor’s Advisory Commission on Coastal Restoration
and Conservation that existing freshwater diversion structures be
used during spring 2006 to assist with mitigation of future hurricane
damage to local marshes. LSG wetlands and coastal resources professor
Rex Caffey was the lead author of the position paper, which also recommended
that additional expenditures on the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet
(MRGO) be limited until long-awaited studies conducted for the MRGO
Re-evaluation Study are available for further review by the wider
community, and that a natural resource expert be included on the Louisiana
Recovery Authority. (Winter 2005)
- LSG research
professor John Supan chaired the strategic planning committee that
helped implement the Louisiana Oyster Task Force Oyster Recovery Plan.
Marine Extension agent Rusty Gaude’ served on the committee.
Supan also served as chair of the Louisiana Oyster Task Force’s
research and development committee, and he assisted the Louisiana
Oyster Dealers and Growers Association with the establishment of the
Louisiana Oyster Community Relief Fund. (Fall/Winter 2005)
- Marine Extension
agent Rusty Gaude’ assisted the Louisiana Department of Wildlife
and Fisheries on a project enlisting local fishermen in Plaquemines
and St. Bernard parishes to assess the area’s oyster beds. Marine
Extension agent Thomas Hymel instructed participants in the proper
use of Global Positioning Systems. (Fall/Winter 2005)
- Many educational
events for students and teachers across the state were cancelled because
of the hurricanes. Despite some logistical hurdles, LSG Education
elected to hold Ocean Commotion 2005, a one-day marine education
fair, as scheduled at LSU to bring some normalcy to the school year.
Fifty exhibitors responded positively to the decision and participated,
many featured hurricanes as a topic. Several pre-registered schools
required additional spaces for evacuee students. In all, about 100
of the 1,900 students attending were evacuees, as well as a few exhibitors.
(Fall 2005)
- Responding to
the need for information in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, LSG
Communications launched www.laseagrant.org/hurricane/index.htm
(the Louisiana Hurricane Recovery Resources site). Officially unveiled
Sept. 19, 2005, the site offered visitors information on topics such
as wetlands, seafood, water quality, ports, economic impacts and rebuilding
concerns. Through a question-and-answer format with experts from a
variety of fields, residents, business owners and community leaders
could find the information they needed to make decisions about their
immediate future. (Fall 2005)
- Not long after
Hurricane Katrina, concerns about the safety of Louisiana seafood
began to crop up in the media and in communities across the country.
Those same concerns arose again following Hurricane Rita. LSG Communications
took a proactive role following Katrina in combating misinformation
concerning seafood safety by preparing, with the assistance of an
LSG food scientist, a set of talking points that extension personnel
could use when speaking with constituents and members of the media.
Additionally, LSG Communications prepared a media pitch concerning
seafood safety that was distributed to local, regional and national
media. The pitch resulted in LSG food scientist Jon Bell serving as
a source for a seafood safety news story that aired on the NBC affiliate
in Shreveport on Sept. 23. Additionally, LSG professor Rex Caffey
addressed the issue of seafood safety on CNN’s “Daybreak
with Carol Costello” on Oct. 13. (Fall 2005)
For questions, comments
or suggestions, please contact the Web Coordinator.
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