~Bob Marshall
Most of Louisiana's coast still flooded by Ike
Flooding, outages still plague region~Kathy Reckdhal
Gustav blow knocks back retailers still in recovery
~Emilie Bahr
Landrieu Announces Disaster Recovery Hearing on Hurricanes Ike and Gustav
Hat T'n'T - GN
Dejà vúdoo~Kevin Allman
Ike Pictures coming in from TX:
Editilla Notellas~This is a site that I have found with the most aggressive coverage.
Grim scenes greet rescuers post-Ike ~update
Texas rushes Ike relief as health crisis looms ~update
Houston Struggles After Ike as Midwest Hit by Floods
~Demian McLean
~In addition to seven people killed in Texas, six were dead in Louisiana, two in Tennessee, one in Arkansas, four in Ohio, six in Indiana, two in Illinois, three in Missouri and one in Kentucky, the AP said.
~32 Gone.
Please Bless Their Souls and Families to Peace.
I'm going to take this little bone in my heart.Politicians, FEMA blame each other for relief missteps ~Houston Chronicle
I'm gonna put it in a Glass Box
with some candles
and some broken clocks
just to see the sea of faces
stopped in the dark dark.
Texas City bounces back ~update
Coast Guard Crew Sickened Surveying Damage
Ike Brings Empty Pumps from North to South ~update
Early assessments indicate gulf platform damage from Ike
Oil companies check for damage after Ike~This article provides a nice list of companies to follow up as they report on their operations. These are the sites to follow the money.
~More from Bloomberg
Ike skews gas; some stations ask $5 a gallon
Minerals Management Service
~The Minerals Management Service (MMS), a bureau in the U.S. Department of the Interior, is the Federal agency that manages the nation's natural gas, oil and other mineral resources on the outer continental shelf. The agency also collects, accounts for and disburses more than $8 billion per year in revenues from Federal offshore mineral leases and from onshore mineral leases on Federal and Indian lands.
Malfunctioning Equipment
~Our New Orleans Saints
Eggs in Purgatory~Serious Eats
Book Review~Jacques Boudreau
~The Good Pirates of the Forgotten Bayous:
Fighting to Save a Way of Life in the Wake of Hurricane Katrina, by Ken Wells.
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