![](https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/web/20130216135544im_/http://www.youngstown.afrc.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-061227-034.gif)
Click the photo to watch a short video of a Hurricane Katrina Aerial Spray mission over the city of New Orleans, La.
During the months of September and October 2005, the states of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas suffered from terrible circumstances resulting in the aftermath of Hurricane's Katrina and Rita.
Hundreds of thousands of people were displaced from their homes while entire communities were wiped away by the storms or resulting flood conditions that left prime breeding grounds for mosquitoes and filth flies.
The potential for these bugs to spread disease among the population would have been very high had it not been for the aerial spray mission personnel from the 757th Airlift Squadron who deployed to Duke Field, Fla. to set up a base of operations in order to conduct aerial spray missions over Louisiana and Texas.
When it was all said and done, the 757th aircrews had sprayed 2,880,662 acres, or 4,501 square miles--an area equivalent in size to the state of Connecticut. Fourteen thousand gallons of the pesticide Dibrom® were used, costing FEMA $1.6 million. The missions comprised 191.4 hours of total flying time with 46.5 hours of actual "Spray-On" time flying at 150 feet above ground level. |
|