In Gulf, Bush Warns Of "Disaster Fatigue"
Surveying Hurricane Ike's Damage, President Urges Americans To Donate To Recovery Effort
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President Bush is in Houston, his first stop on a daylong trip through Texas' most storm-battered areas. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
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Marine One, with President Bush aboard, during an aerial tour of the damage from Hurricane Ike near Galveston, Texas Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2008. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
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A beachfront home stands among the debris in Gilchrist, Texas on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico on Sunday, Sept. 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Smiley N. Pool)
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Motorists line up to get gas in Houston, Monday, Sept. 15, 2008. The shutdown of Gulf refineries sent wholesale gasoline prices spiking last week; prices at the pump rose over $4 a gallon in several states. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)
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Members of the National Guard return a casket vault back to the Hollywood Cemetery in Orange, Texas, Sept. 15, 2008. Flooding has caused the vault to float from its gravesite and come to rest on a nearby roadway. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
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Play CBS Video Video Bush To Tour Ike Devastation President Bush is back in his home state to take a tour of Hurricane Ike's devastation in Texas' coastal communities. Millions there are still without power. Hari Sreenivasan reports.
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Video Ike's Trail Of Misery Hurricane Ike left a trail of misery from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest. At least 34 deaths are blamed on the storm and more than 3.8 million people remain without power. Mark Strassmann reports.
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Video Ike's Effects Linger In Texas Evacuees are barred from returning home to Galveston, Texas, which is still without power and clean drinking water. Mark Strassmann reports.
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Photo Essay Ike Smashes Texas Giant hurricane roars over Galveston, Houston
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Interactive Hurricane Ike The gigantic storm pummeled the Texas Gulf Coast.
The president also asked frustrated people who were displaced by the storm "to listen to state and local authorities before you come back." Many areas remain without power and are dangerous because of unstable buildings.
"It is their considered judgment which is important for you," Mr. Bush said.
Mr. Bush spoke to reporters from Houston, his first stop on a daylong trip through some parts of Texas hardest hit by Ike. He landed at Ellington Field to sunny skies, and was briefed on the storm and its aftermath inside a U.S. Coast Guard hangar.
The president called the destruction a "tough situation."
"I have been president long enough to have seen tough situations, and have seen the resilience of the people to be able to deal with the tough situations," he said. "I know with proper help from the federal government and the state government, there will be a better tomorrow."
He then took an aerial tour of the damage, with his helicopter flying low along the Texas coastline. From the air, he could see homes left with only foundations, roofs torn from buildings, and roads and beaches strewn with debris.
The president's next stop was Galveston, which suffered far greater damage as the place where Ike made landfall on Saturday as Category 2 storm with 110 mph winds. Areas such as the resort barrier island of Bolivar Peninsula, just east of Galveston, were nearly completely wiped out. The eye missed Houston, but still caused problems such as widespread power outages in the nation's fourth-largest city. As Ike slogged through Texas and Louisiana and into the nation's midsection, it has caused over three dozen deaths.
It was Mr. Bush's third trip to survey Gulf Coast hurricane damage in two weeks. Earlier this month, Mr. Bush scrapped his planned opening-night speech at the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Minn., to fly instead to emergency command centers in Texas just as Hurricane Gustav hit. He returned to the region later that week to visit Louisiana, also socked by Gustav.
Meanwhile, just a few months after near-record flooding in the Midwest, authorities in towns along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers fear a soggy repeat following heavy rain from the remnants of Ike.
As Mr. Bush flew back to Texas Tuesday, the president was monitoring twin crises. He talked by phone with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson to discuss turmoil in the financial markets. He also received a storm briefing on the plane from FEMA Director David Paulison, Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt and his homeland security adviser Ken Wainstein, who all traveled with him to the region.
Mr. Bush singled out the American Red Cross as needing Americans' support. The federal government relies on the nonprofit agency and other private organizations to help organize a disaster response, and that takes private donations. The Red Cross in particular is scrambling to replenish its disaster relief funds after repeatedly doling out aid in this busy hurricane season.
"It is very important for our citizens to support the American Red Cross," the president said. "I hope the country does not have disaster fatigue. The Red Cross is a vital part of helping people recover."
The main needs for people in the storm zone are food, water and ice. More than 2 million in Texas alone lack power and could face weeks before the lights come back on. Many thousands also face weeks in shelters, and Mr. Bush assured them personally and publicly that the federal government would reimburse them for their costs, up to 30 days, of interim housing.
There is one glimmer of good news for U.S. regions prone to severe storms: the peak time for Atlantic hurricanes is now past, noted CBS Early Show weather anchor Dave Price.
Paulison said that the rescue phase is winding down and that officials are turning toward a focus on providing blankets and tarps to victims as well as working on long-term housing solutions. An estimated 70 percent of Houston should have power by the end of the week, but Galveston won't fare as well, he said.
Mr. Bush noted the damage to infrastructure was extensive, but still not as bad as some had predicted.
Ike missed the largest concentrations of oil and gas refineries. But at least 14 Texas refineries closed before the storm made landfall, removing more than 20 percent of the nation's petroleum refining capacity. Ike also destroyed at least a dozen production platforms and drilling rigs in the Gulf of Mexico - though only a tiny fraction of those there - and production is still shut down in the critical region.
Two major pipelines are up and running again, and power has been restored to a number of massive refineries. But it may be several weeks before the nation's refining capacity is restored.
Mr. Bush's trip on Tuesday took the place of a fundraising swing he had planned for the day through Topeka, Kan., and Fort Worth, Texas; those duties were being performed instead by first lady Laura Bush.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 161 CommentsWhat''s wrong with "REPORTS"
disaster fatigue"?
"WARNS" suggests that we better stop
something or that we should prepare
for something that is about to happen.
WHO''s he "WARNING" ?
US?,,God?,,Cheney?,,
And since when is he ABLE TO feel
"fatigue" or ANY OTHER hardship or
emotion experienced by others ??
If suddenly he IS now able to "feel"
others'' pain, suffering or "fatigue"
we should soon be seeing the topic,,
Bush Warns Of "George Bush Fatigue"
And for THAT "warning" of "fatigue"
we could prepare a trip
to The Hague.
Come on religious right - where is your outrage about the lies McCain and Palin are spewing? Where is your moral compass??? I just don''t understand how good people can be so easily tricked. Think, think, think.
You, Bush, are the disaster we are tired of.
See you at the war crimes and treason trials.
Get used to 100 year events coming closer in secession.
will be giving 3 million dollars to Cuba. Not to even
mention all the millions of dollars Bush has given to
Israel. Wait until our bridges start to fall down again
and our roads fall apart. (They already are!!!!!!)
BUSH = MORON
However in the present, when he has played santa clause with our money to others, we are really not in conditions to be givers.
Correct.
After 8 years of republican rule, and the disasters they have created AGAINST America, we are most definitely suffering from disaster fatigue.
But pardon me Mr. Bush, could you please leave the gulf region? Don''t you think these people have suffered enough?
Posted by notso9 at 02:29 PM : Sep 16, 2008
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People choose to live below sea level on an island in the Gulf of Mexico? You''re right I don''t care all that much. If you think the disasters wrought on this country and the world in the past eight years aren''t screaming for your attention over a the self-healing effects of a storm (exacerbated by the non-existent environmental policies of this administration), then I guess I can understand why you probably also think Sarah Palin is cute.
So where is relief for our citizens when we need it ? Oh it''''s over in Iraq paying for their infrastructure where the Iraqi''''s are sitting on large oil profits.
Everyone who voted for Bush should pay for disaster relief. God knows the nation''s coffers have been drained on an unnecessary war.
So where is relief for our citizens when we need it ? Oh it''s over in Iraq paying for their infrastructure when they Iraqi''s are sitting on large oil profits.
Here''s the bottom line:
If you are happy with the way things are in America right now, vote for the people who made it that way.
If you think we are on a disastrous path and want things to improve, vote for the people who will honestly try to bring about those improvements.
It''s really very simple, but as we have proven in the past, so are we...
All the rest is noise.
And God bless the residents of Texas who have been so severely hurt by Hurricane Ike. You are in our prayers (even us Godless Liberals).
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