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Bil-Jac's Katrina Effort

Needed to tell the story of helping old folks into the attic and then onto the roofs as the water rose. Not knowing if they would live another day. Of how God saved and delivered them back to the living. Many weren't saved. They wanted to hug anyone who cared to listen. There weren't many who could listen in the curfew area. I guess I understand a little bit as I'm feeling like I need to talk. So this is the way I'll do it.

Sorry if I ramble. First a huge thanks to all that helped. You probably will never know how much it meant to us and those that really needed it.

The Geography:
As we all know, Katrina came ashore with record intensity. She made landfall in eastern Louisiana and western Mississippi. Mississippi took the worst hit from the winds as it was on the eastern eye wall where the wind and storm surge are the most intense. Their extreme damage came from the wind and waves. New Orleans suffered from flooding.

The Damage: (staggering)Bil-Jac's Katrina Effort
From Pasqugoula to the Louisiana border, 100 miles or so, the destruction is absolute as far as 4 blocks inland from the ocean. Only foundations remain. The rubble from all of these buildings and cars, as well as barges, containers, boats and anything else washed in from the sea, is in what could be described as a surf line blocks from the ocean. This 100 mi. long rubble pile is as much as 15 ft. high and impenetrable. The rubble stopped being pushed inland finally as it created it’s own barrier against buildings. Anyone who was in those houses by the beach is still buried in those piles. Where there was a street the rubble pushed further inland up the roads. This made the roads near the beach impassable to say the least. The rubble stopped at this surf line but the water came on and covered houses far inland. Miles from the beach, where there was any waterway or river, the houses were submerged. Houses in the south have no need for earthquake hold-downs so many floated off of their foundation and were destroyed. Even miles from the beach when we went into houses looking for critters we found a 3 inch layer of mud, sewage, rotten food, and chemicals on everything. Black mold on the walls and all the contents of the house in random piles. Imagine your home and everything in it in this state. Family pictures were everywhere. People and animals died in some of these houses. Pictures and words cannot tell the story of what is there.

The Organization:
The Disaster Animal Response Team (DART), through the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), was tasked with the job of animal rescue by the Miss. E.O.C. They were the only private group permitted in. This to provide a coordinated plan of rescue and a single place for the holding of rescued animals to insure they had the best chance of being reunited with their families. The HSUS set up holding facilities 75 miles inland at Hattiesburg, in a massive horse facility. Animals were transported from the field in air conditioned trailers to this facility. The care and maintenance of recovered animals is handled largely by volunteers. The VMET group provided vet care and some limited guidance to the volunteers.

A forward camp, as close to the recovery area as was permitted, provided some support for the people in the field and a place to pitch our tents.

Bil-Jac's Katrina EffortThe Job:
7 of us from Birds and Animals arrived at the forward camp just outside Biloxi with the Sumter Co. Fla. DART team the day it was opened for animal rescue. That was 6 days after the storm. I understand it takes time to clear small tracks through the rubble for vehicles and the human rescue and body recovery take time, but 6 days is too long to make animals wait in those unbelievable conditions. Fear. Terror. Our guys at our Fla. facility have worked with the DART team in Sumter Co. on local issues and they were glad to have our help. The recovery team in Miss. varied from 20 to 30 people. That doesn’t sound like many but a truck can cover lots of area in a long day and it was sufficient. Over the next two weeks we worked our way along the Miss. coast to the western state line.

Our day was searching houses, yards, streets, alleys and rubble piles. Pleading with terrified animals to trust us so we didn’t have to add to their trauma by capturing them. Not many did. Most we captured, which only added to their nightmare. The option was to leave them in the slime and take away their chance to see family again. Most of them wanted desperately to believe we were friends. Tails wagged, cats approached purring and rubbing, but the horror they had survived kept them 20 ft. away. The odd brave soul that took the leap of faith, after long pleading, and could be scratched, petted, fed, watered, kissed on the nose and nicely put in the truck was our only relief from the nightmare. They were very few.

Bil-Jac's Katrina EffortAnimals were in every conceivable place and circumstance. They ran in small groups. They were under houses in the mud. They were in locked houses. Some had been in trees where they had found a limb when they were swimming. Some had found people to be near. Some pitbulls, chows and rottweilers that belonged to dog fighting owners were still tied to trees 14 days after the storm. Their owners houses were destroyed and they were all but left. A neighbor might water them every third day. It was near 100 degrees every day. Some were near starvation.

Humans in the main are amazing. The few people still living in destroyed houses took their time and resources to feed animals. Many had animals of their own that had survived with them. Nobody had animal food. We carried food in the trucks. We couldn’t carry enough. It seemed like every person we met was desperate for food for their own animal or ones they were leaving food for. Even in the worst adversity the human-animal bond is important to us…even the most unlikely of us.

Bil-Jac's Katrina Effort

Folks soon discovered there was dog food in our camp and we had to delegate people to handle the distribution. They came day and night, and were feeding animals in the worst possible places, in the worst possible circumstances.

Bil-Jac's Katrina EffortThe volunteer crew at Hattiesburg was challenged to the extreme. When we left, close to 1000 animals were being cared for. They slept in tents and worked brutal hours. HSUS had minimal support for them. No medic that I could see and feeding was spotty.

We left when we felt the remaining job had become a local animal control issue and the cat trapping was under expert control. It was unbelievably sad. Worth it all, even for Bobby Scott who did so much crawling in the mud under houses. I learned I can still get tears in my eyes.

Lessons:
Just like the human recovery effort there were lessons learned. HSUS did and does a great job. The task I’m sure was far greater then anticipated. Even so I hope next time they hire someone with animal capture experience to plan for the field camp equipment and supply a medic on sight in this highly charged and dangerous environment. Hope they understand next time that teenage volunteers are not qualified to make decisions about who handles the dangerous dogs and how. Hope they understand next time that the hundreds of people that they ask to volunteer to care for the animals at the holding facility must have basic support and medical cover.

Bil-Jac's Katrina EffortFor everyone who wants to support the rescue group, whoever they are, please discover which group has been tasked with the job. I’m sure it changes with each event. Disasters are a great time for all non- profits to solicit donation. They will all be important down the road to house and care for these animals but if your interest is to support the acting rescue please ask questions. Please ask groups not sanctioned to be in the field to restrain from crossing the lines. Animals taken in this event by groups other then HSUS are not in the Hattiesburg center and have much less chance to be recovered by their families. Unsanctioned animal groups and animal oriented TV. Networks were forced out of the field by authorities. These authorities then were less sympathetic to the HSUS mission and clearance into new areas suffered.

Let your dog or cat sleep on the bed tonight. Kiss him on the nose before you go to sleep.

All the best,
Gary

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