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miakoda
09-10-2005, 11:43 AM
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=496 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top width=496><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=496 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/090805jeffpup_SI.jpg</TD><TD width=1 bgColor=#ffffff height="100%">http://news.bestfriends.org/images/spacer.gif</TD><TD id=fullImageBack width="100%">http://news.bestfriends.org/images/spacer.gif</TD><TD width=1 bgColor=#6d675b>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/spacer.gif</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=496>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/pixel_white.gif</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=496><TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=496 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top width=463 bgColor=#dcd2b6>Time running out in Orleans Parish









</TD><TD width=1 bgColor=#ffffff>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/spacer.gif</TD><TD vAlign=top width=32 bgColor=#dcd2b6>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/btn_print0.gif (http://javascript<b></b>:popWindow(8,%20'3BC64F17-BDB9-396E-9521B47F9B13545F');) </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=496>http://news.bestfriends.org/images/pixel_white.gif</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=496>September 9, 2005 : 12:43 PM ET




Reported by Troy Snow, Best Friends team member and photographer: We exit the I-10, drive down the off-ramp, and park our truck at the water’s edge of what were once the streets of New Orleans. Two bloated human bodies lie half-in, half-out, looking like they may explode any moment.

Ken Ray unhitches the boat. He’s a volunteer from Alabama, who came out to help, discovered we need boats, and drove another 700 miles to go and get his own boat.

We spend the day in roughly just a 3-block area. Three of us are on this boat: Ethan and Jeff, staffers from Best Friends Dogtown, and me, Troy, helping them and taking a few photos. First, we see two pit bull dogs standing on the edge of a recreational boat parked in a driveway. They must have been standing there since the hurricane blew in 11 days ago. We cut through the fence to let our boat come closer and pull up to the dogs. They jump aboard and smother us in kisses. These must have been fighting dogs. One of them is covered in old scars.

Next, we see two more pit bulls standing on the roof of a car. One of them dives into the water and starts swimming to us as we pull closer. We pull him aboard and navigate our way toward his pal. He is tired and fearful and not sure whether we’re friend or foe. … OK, now we have him. He’s smiling now. He knows he’s safe.

In all, we gather up just 10 dogs. Each one means navigating up to fenced yards, cutting through the fence to get the boat in, grabbing tree branches to pull up toward the porch. Some pets are on porches, some still indoors. At one address where we have permission to enter, we hear a dog barking through the windows. We pull up to the window and see him inside, standing on the bed to stay above the water line. At other houses, we can’t break through the fence although we hear meowing.

Several times during the day, we go back to the freeway off-ramp to deliver the dogs to Ken who’s waiting at water’s edge. On one trip, we’re joined by a reporter from the Los Angeles Times who’s seen us from the freeway and stopped to see what we’re doing.

At the end of the day, with a boatful of dogs, we return to the freeway ramp once again. It’s beginning to get dark. We hitch the boat back up to the truck and are about to leave when we hear an eerie howl in the dusk, echoing across the neighborhood. First we say to ourselves, we’ll get him tomorrow. Then we look at each other, and unhitch the boat again. The dog is about 300 yards away, standing in the back of an old truck. Again, he’s been sitting there for 11 days, bewildered, emaciated, dehydrated. The water there is about five feet deep. We bring him aboard.

On the way back we see a cat on a roof. Try to get there. Can’t do it.

We have photos, details, and addresses of every animal we’ve picked up. Hopefully, one day, they’ll all be reunited with families – at least if their families are not like the ones lying there on the off-ramp, half-in half-out of the water.

What we’ve done today is really just a drop in the bucket. There are thousands upon thousands more animals stranded like this, with only days, if that, before they too will just give out. Why are we the only people in this entire area of town? Why are others being turned back when there is so much to be done? Will we even be allowed in tomorrow? At least, as we drive back to the sanctuary out of town, we have a few furry refugees with us. We comfort them as they comfort us. All photos by Troy Snow.

http://news.bestfriends.org/images/hurricane/bf-swimming-090805-tslo.jpg
A pit bull sees the boat and jumps into the toxic waters, swimming desperately to save himself. We got him - he's safe now.

http://news.bestfriends.org/images/hurricane/bf-stranded-090805-tslo.jpg
Stranded, alone, and desperate on top of a car hood. Don't worry, this beautiful girl was rescued by our team



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miakoda
09-10-2005, 11:49 AM
Here are some more of animals who were rescued (thank God):
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19401696.jpg
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19367569.jpg
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19366963.jpg
A dog who refused to leave her deceased owners body.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19367741.jpg
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19366959.jpg
http://www.chicagotribune.com/media/photo/2005-09/19349611.jpg
http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2005-08/19205843.jpg
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 align=center border=0><TBODY><TR><TD align=middle>http://img.coxnewsweb.com/B/01/55/21/image_1821551.jpg</TD></TR><TR><TD class=photocredit align=right></TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption align=middle>Spc. Rani Rathburn of the Georgia National Guard tends to an injured, homeless beagle in Louisiana.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

CRD
09-10-2005, 01:54 PM
Its been a tragic experience for the animals. So sad.

The Watcher
09-10-2005, 01:56 PM
Mia, I sent u PM's that I would appreciate answered???
F.

miakoda
09-10-2005, 02:01 PM
Mia, I sent u PM's that I would appreciate answered???
F.
??? I don't remember getting it. I thought I responded to all of them. SORRY! Lemme go back & look!

searkkennels
09-10-2005, 02:02 PM
MIa that is so awesome. very good of you to save all those animals. mosr of us can't even imagine what ya'll went through. we have so many refugees in our town that we are helping out. is is jus very dis heartning to see and hear their stories.
best wishes
seark

The Watcher
09-10-2005, 02:05 PM
??? I don't remember getting it. I thought I responded to all of them. SORRY! Lemme go back & look!Im lookin at the message, anyhow, I have some things for U sent by members. Please PM me an addy.
F.

searkkennels
09-10-2005, 02:07 PM
fifty why don't you be a lil sociable and take ur name off invisible. low key huh

The Watcher
09-10-2005, 02:08 PM
fifty why don't you be a lil sociable and take ur name off invisible. low key huh
you first........;)

searkkennels
09-10-2005, 02:10 PM
Lol...........

miakoda
09-10-2005, 02:17 PM
Fifty, I just read your message & replied. Check your pm's.

Luigi
09-10-2005, 02:40 PM
Heart breaking, and those are just a few---not to mention all the people, too . . .

That skinny white pitty towards the end is heart wrenching. I wonder how many will even recuperate, and how many more are still waiting and wasting away . . . : (

nappydawg
09-10-2005, 02:50 PM
thats very heart breaking it is so easy to forget about the lil victims in all this

CB
09-10-2005, 06:40 PM
Just saw some nice news on the local new channel .There is operation Halo that is going on in LA and misouri for searching for pets and have alot of food medication crates ect. They came from Charlotte, Nc and are bring all the pets back here to Charlotte and are putting them up for adoption. So that was pretty good news.

aznhipmunk
09-10-2005, 06:43 PM
prayers to everyone out there and their pets too. You're a pet's gaurdian angel Mia.

missybee16
09-11-2005, 01:35 AM
Oh, how terrible the sites are. I'm so happy they could be picked up. THANK YOU FOR ALL YOU DO!!!! Poor lil guys, how sad. It just broke my heart in 2.

Zoe
09-11-2005, 04:04 AM
Those pictures just made me burst into tears. One of the rescue organizations I foster for is getting a little 8 week old pup rescued from Katrina. I put my name up to take in some as well. It's just killing me. That poor little rednose swimming for it's life. I can just imagine how lost and scared he must feel. I can't imagine the terror these animals are going through that not only lost their families but are starving, lost, confused, without their pack. My heart is literally breaking for them.

Judy
09-11-2005, 07:12 PM
Those pics are so sad but so nice that the animals have been rescued. God bless everyone who is helping.

Defend2DaEnd
09-12-2005, 07:25 AM
That made me cry, sent shivers up my spine, I could just imagine what is going through those poor animals minds. How brave of that dog to just dive off the house, he knew those people where there to save him.

RIVES PITS
09-12-2005, 01:33 PM
That Is Some Tuff Stuff To Even Look At Muchy Less Live Through My Hat Goes Off In Gratitude For All Who Suffered A Loss Of Anything!

Marty
09-12-2005, 01:36 PM
Bush Vows a `Sober Look' at Federal Katrina Response (Update2)

Latest news on Katrina...

Federal authorities outlined plans to temporarily house Hurricane Katrina survivors in trailers as President George W. Bush promised to take ``a sober look'' at how emergency agencies reacted after the storm.

The president, making his third tour of the U.S. Gulf Coast region in the two weeks since the Katrina hammered Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, said in New Orleans this morning that every citizen of the affected areas will get aid.

Responding to criticism that the federal government moved too slowly in the immediate aftermath of Katrina, the president vowed that Congress and the administration will ``take a sober look at the decision-making that went on.''

The president made his remarks after touring the city's French Quarter and other neighborhoods in a caravan of military vehicles along with Mayor Ray Nagin and Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco. Before heading out, he got his first on-scene briefing by Coast Guard Vice Admiral Thad Allen, who replaced embattled Federal Emergency Management Agency Director Michael Brown Sept. 9 as the federal official in charge of relief and recovery operations in the region.

Allen said the trailers are being brought in to serve as stopgap housing. Thousands of people uprooted by the hurricane and unable to afford temporary quarters have been housed at emergency shelters, sports arenas, military bases and the homes of family and friends across the country and even cruise ships.

Permanent Homes

``The ultimate goal is to get them into homes permanently,'' Allen told Bush aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Iwo Jima, which is moored at a dock in downtown New Orleans to serve as a command center for military operations.

The government has ordered about 100,000 two-bedroom mobile homes and recreational vehicles from several manufacturers around the country to help fill housing needs for about 300,000 people, said James McIntyre, a spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

The government has taken delivery of 12,000 units so far, he said, at a rate of about 500 a day, up from 450 yesterday. Mobile homes and RVs are being shipped by railroad or truck to staging areas in Selma, Alabama; Purvis, Mississippi, Baton Rouge, Louisiana and Texarkana, Texas.

Income and Race

Many of those most in need of shelter come from the poorest areas of New Orleans and Mississippi and Alabama. In New Orleans, thousands were stuck for days after the Aug. 29 storm in overcrowded and under-supplied shelters. Bush rejected suggestions from some New Orleans residents that income and race played a role in how quickly relief was delivered.

``The storm didn't discriminate and neither will the recovery effort,'' Bush said after touring the city today. ``When those Coast Guard choppers, many of whom were first on the scene, were pulling people off roofs, they didn't check the color of a person's skin.''

Still, he said, the federal government's response to the storm and the complaints about a lack of coordination with local emergency officials must be examined and shortcomings fixed.

``I think it's very important for Congress to take a good close look at what went on, what didn't go on, and come up with a series of recommendations,'' Bush said.

Rebuilding

He promised that New Orleans citizens will be able to create their own vision of how the city should be rebuilt.

``The best policy is one which says the federal government doesn't come down and say here is what your city should look like,'' he said.

He also called ``preposterous'' questions about whether the government would have been able to move in troops more quickly if the military weren't stretched thin by the war in Iraq. ``We've got plenty of troops to do both,'' he said.

Bush heads to Gulfport, Mississippi, another area hit hard by Katrina, later today.

Political Price

The president is trying to expedite the rebuilding effort as polls show he may be paying a political price for the complaints about the federal government's initial response to the disaster.

In three national polls conducted last week -- for Time, Newsweek and the Associated Press -- the president's job approval rating fell to career lows. Thirty-eight percent of those surveyed in the Newsweek poll approved of the way Bush was handling his job as president, 42 percent approved in the Time poll and 39 percent in the AP/Ipsos poll.

`` As far as my own popularity goes, I don't make decisions based upon polls,'' Bush said today.

Among the actions taken last week by the administration, Bush said he would grant special ``evacuee status,'' to those uprooted from the region with making them eligible for cash grants of $2,000 and easier access to government services such as Medicaid, mental health services, housing assistance and unemployment insurance.

FEMA chief Brown was removed from overseeing hurricane recovery efforts and returned to Washington last week after a flood of criticism from Democrats and Republicans of how the agency handled the hurricane response and questions about whether he had the proper background to manage emergency efforts.

miakoda
09-12-2005, 04:29 PM
George Bush wasn't the problem. Our own Gov. Blanco AND Mayor Nagin screwed up big time by 1)not forcing a mandatory evacuation on Sat. (instead of Sun.) and 2. NOT ALLOWING the federal gov't to get involved until Wed. AFTER the hurricane. You heard me right. Gov. Blanco REFUSED or just plain forgot (but in truth it's more of a mixture of both) to ask for help from the federal gov't & even ALLOW the help the federal gov't tried to send! She didn't WANT to turn over the situation to the federal gov't at first! In my mind, her head should roll, not his......................

devinben3
09-12-2005, 04:41 PM
sad pictures, but i'm glad they got rescued. there were ones that wern't as lucky though...they will all be in our thoughts and prayers...