The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

We need to heed the storm’s message or pay the price

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Nobody wants to pick on Texas, or especially Houston, after a 1,000-year weather event that for several days turned the city into a lake and dispossess­ed thousands of their homes, belongings and, in some cases, loved ones.

The ultimate effects of the storm blandly named Harvey are yet to be fully understood. What is known is that most of the homes destroyed were uninsured for flooding and that U.S. taxpayers will be doing much of the bailing.

Meanwhile, comparison­s to Hurricane Katrina 12 years ago are intriguing, if one is fortunate enough to be hugging dry land. Chief among the obvious difference­s is the death toll. Katrina took close to 2,000 lives. As of Friday, Harvey’s toll was 46, and the figure wasn’t expected to rise significan­tly.

Numbers matter little to those in mourning, but such comparison­s can be instructiv­e. In explaining difference­s between Katrina and Harvey, most experts naturally examine the weather itself and topography. During Katrina, New Orleans, which is shaped like a bowl, was hardest hit. Flooding from burst levees, as well as the colossal tidal surge driven by winds, essentiall­y filled the bowl.

In Houston during Harvey, the main force of the storm came from the skies, which dropped 9 trillion gallons (nearly 50 inches) of water onto the city, the flat topography of which gave residents an obvious advantage over New Orleans. Although cataclysmi­c over time, Houston’s flooding was less abrupt and gave people more time to find higher ground.

A couple of distinguis­hing psycho-techno-sociologic­al factors came into play. First, in 2005 when Katrina hit, there was no widespread use of smartphone­s — iPhone hadn’t hit the market yet — and social media was in its incipient stages. Facebook was only a year old and still restricted to college students.

A second important factor affecting outcomes was the way people responded to the storm. Many New Orleans residents, given their historical distrust of public officials, disregarde­d warnings and failed to heed evacuation orders. In Houston, there was no call to evacuate.

And though many of the poor in both cities often had no means of personal transporta­tion, nearly every household in sprawling Houston has at least one car, according to the Census Bureau. New Orleans in 2005, by contrast, had the fourth highest rate among 300 metropolit­an areas of individual­s without access to a household car.

Thus, the storms were very different, as were the people primarily affected. Reaction to the two storms also was initially different, though a common denominato­r seems to be the God factor.

Recall that when Katrina hit New Orleans, some members of the cloth, including the Rev. Franklin Graham, Catholic priest Gerhard Wagner and televangel­ist John Hagee, opined that God was punishing the city for its legendary indulgence­s and supposed sins.

Already, one pastor is saying that Harvey was retributio­n for Houston’s leniency toward the LBGT community. And Ann Coulter suggested that Harvey was more likely God’s punishment for Houston’s lesbian mayor than a result of climate change.

No matter what one’s religious beliefs or commercial incentives, it is absurd to blame cities or their residents for natural disasters. When otherwise intelligen­t people engage in such hyperbolic rhetoric, they encourage the sort of dumbing down that gets people killed.

But make no mistake: We are being warned. Storms of the Harvey variety will become not onein-1,000-year events but onein-100.

And then, well, who knows beyond worse-is-coming? The least we can do is exercise our free will — and our reasoning powers — to mitigate the effects of human activities on global warming to the extent possible.

If we don’t, Mr. President, we’re going to need a bigger ark.

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