英语视听 CET大学英语四六级 雅思托福 博客 法语 日语 德语 博客英语周报 出国留学 英语培训 外语品牌 社区
 
 
 | 首页 | 听遍世界 | 英语电台 | VOA慢速英语 | VOA标准英语 | 听力教程 | 英语考试 | 教学英语 | 动画英语 | 英语资源 | 实用英语 | 英文歌曲 | 博客百科 | 
页面导航: 博客英语网 >> 英语电台 >> VOA常速英语 >> VOA常速英语2007 >> VOA常速英语2007年5月 >> 文章正文
Alabama, Mississippi Coastal Residents Dread Start of Hurricane Season
Updating Time:2007-6-4 8:55:12

 

By Greg Flakus
Bayou La Batre, Alabama
31 May 2007
 

Gulf Coast
Gulf of Mexico coast
Hurricane season officially begins on June first and runs until November and residents of the U.S. Gulf coast areas are anticipating the coming months with a certain degree of dread.  Hurricane Katrina devastated the area less than two years ago. As VOA's Greg Flakus reports from Bayou La Batre, Alabama, many communities along the coast are still struggling to recover from Katrina.

Bayou La Batre is a pleasant little town on Alabama's Gulf of Mexico coast, where shrimping and shipbuilding are the major industries. But much of the town remains shut down, nearly two years after Katrina rolled through.

Vien Dong food market is one of few shops reopened since Hurricane Katrina
Vien Dong food market is one of the few shops reopened since Hurricane Katrina
One exception is the Vien Dong food market, where immigrants from Vietnam and other Asian nations gather to shop and visit.

Many of them work on shrimp boats here and temporarily lost their employment when Katrina devastated the port and destroyed many boats. But they are back now, hoping nature's wrath will spare the town this hurricane season.

The same sentiment can be heard all along the coast, especially in places like Long Beach, Mississippi. It took the full brunt of Katrina. The storm knocked many beachfront homes off their foundation slabs and most owners have yet to come back to rebuild.

One of the few hardy ones who has returned is 80-year-old Anna Berry. "This is my house or where my house was before Katrina and it was just down to the slab after Katrina," she points out. 

She and her family lost their home once before, to Hurricane Camille in 1969.  But they love living here, so they rebuilt.  "We made the mistake of thinking there would never be another storm like Camille, but nature proved us wrong."

Even though she lost her home here twice to hurricanes, Berry says she had to come back. "My children grew up here and this is home to them, so we decided we would do it one more time."

Slabs still exist where homes used to sit
Slabs still exist where homes used to sit
Although the beach remains, Katrina swept away much of the area's charm and Berry says it may take some time to feel fully at home again.

"Even now, when you drive along this very familiar stretch of highway 90, sometimes you think, 'Well, where exactly am I?' because some of the street signs have not been replaced and the landmarks are gone," she explains.

Wrangles over insurance payments and fear of future hurricanes have slowed recovery along the Gulf coast, but those who have come back say life here is worth the risk.

Rodney McGavran works in the shipyards at Bayou LaBatre. He says the worst is now over and the area is starting to recover. "The cleanup took a little while -- I mean it was months before people actually got back going again. Probably there are some of them who will never get back."

He plans to stay, but he remains nervous about what might come.

"I just hope we don't have a bad hurricane season,” he says. “That is what I hope, because we don't need that."

 
© 2008 www.EnSalon.com  All Rights Reserved.

关于我们 | 网站地图 | 招聘启事 | 管理团队 | 网站广告 | 合作媒体
博客英语网工作组 版权所有 媒体关注 | 联系我们