20 years later: Survivors recall the storm that changed the gulf coast
Share and Follow

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

NEW ORLEANS — It’s been 20 years since Hurricane Katrina slammed the Gulf Coast as a Category 3 storm. The disaster is remembered not just for its winds, but for the crushing surge of water that devastated rural Louisiana parishes and tore through the heart of New Orleans. 

Woman walks through storm debris after Hurricane Katrina in Buras, LA.

A woman searches through storm debris in Buras, LA, following Hurricane Katrina’s landfall on Aug. 29, 2005. The storm left widespread destruction across the Mississippi-Louisiana border. (Sarah Alegre)

Katrina weakened before making landfall on Aug. 29, 2005, but still struck the Louisiana-Mississippi border as a Category 3 storm. The storm surge flooded homes, took more than a thousand lives and turned reality into a nightmare along the Gulf Coast.

“It was just heart-stopping, the area I grew up in, I’ve lived here all my life,” Papania said. “You didn’t even know where you were.”

The husband and father of four also lost his home.

Rupert Lacy, who helped coordinate law enforcement and emergency management during the storm, remembers it vividly.

“For Katrina, I had that vision that this is what I’m going to see…I just didn’t realize it was going to be on steroids,” Lacy said.

It wasn’t the first monster storm he had seen. As a child in 1969, he lived through Hurricane Camille, whose surge flattened entire communities.

“You’ve got to understand the force of water,” Lacy said. “Buildings that survived Camille did not survive Katrina.”

Today, emergency officials say lessons from Katrina continue to guide their response.

“We do plan for the potential failures of our systems,” said Matt, an emergency leader in Gulfport. “We do have paper backups, we have alternate forms of communication.”

Still, for Papania, the memories remain close.

“I always say I wouldn’t trade the experience I had in Katrina, but I absolutely don’t want to do it again,” he said.

Share and Follow
You May Also Like
The question at center of Mets' Devin Williams signing

Mets’ Strategic Move: Unpacking the Impact of Devin Williams’ Signing

Devin Williams finds himself at the intersection of two distinct narratives, a…
'Home Improvement' star Zachery Ty Bryan arrested over Thanksgiving weekend

Zachery Ty Bryan, ‘Home Improvement’ Actor, Faces Arrest During Holiday Weekend

This incident marks the sixth time in five years that the former…
What should you do? | Crime and safety expert shares advice after road rage ends in shooting

Expert Tips: Staying Safe on the Road Amid Rising Road Rage Incidents

Following a road rage incident on Monday that escalated into a shooting,…
Jefferson County jury awards $10 million to deputy attacked by K9 in Hueytown

Jefferson County Jury Grants $10 Million in Landmark Case: Deputy’s K9 Attack Sparks Major Verdict

In a significant legal decision, a Jefferson County jury has delivered a…
Judge blocks ICE from making warrantless arrests in DC without flight-risk proof

DC Court Halts ICE Warrantless Arrests: New Ruling Requires Flight-Risk Justification

A federal judge issued a ruling on Tuesday that curtails the Trump…
Illegal immigrant allegedly driving drunk at extreme speed killed woman in violent crash: DHS

Tragic High-Speed Crash: Alleged Drunk Driving by Undocumented Immigrant Claims Woman’s Life, Says DHS

A tragic incident involving an undocumented immigrant has sparked widespread anger over…
Republican wins closely watched Tennessee special election

Republican Victory in Tennessee Special Election Captivates Nation: Key Takeaways and Implications

(The Hill) – In a closely watched special election in Tennessee’s 7th…
WestJet airline under fire after agent tears up passenger’s boarding passes for filming bumped flight dispute

WestJet Faces Backlash After Agent Destroys Passenger’s Boarding Passes During Filming of Flight Dispute

A major Canadian budget airline is facing criticism after a staff member…