Statement from Mississippi State University President Mark E. Keenum on the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina:

When Hurricane Katrina made landfall on August 29, 2005, entire communities were wiped out, infrastructure lay in ruins, and tens of thousands of our friends and neighbors were left homeless. Katrina decimated our state and the Gulf South and reverberated across the nation. The disaster demanded decisive leadership, innovative thinking, and coordinated federal and state responses. The recovery became one of the most complex and costly efforts in American history.
At the time, I saw firsthand the destruction Katrina wrought as Chief of Staff to the late U.S. Senator Thad Cochran. We flew into Keesler Air Force Base in Biloxi on a military plane the day after landfall to see what we could do to help. As Mississippi’s senior senator and chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Senator Cochran and our staff worked with federal agencies, state officials, and local leaders to ensure Mississippi’s immediate and long-term needs remained front and center in Washington. Thanks to his leadership and the hard work of many, we secured unprecedented levels of federal aid for Mississippi and the Gulf Coast.
For Mississippi, the path to recovery was paved by leaders like Thad Cochran and Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour. They understood the urgency of the moment and the complexity of the challenges ahead. I am very proud of the significant role Mississippi State University played in the recovery effort and the rebuilding of the Mississippi Gulf Coast as well. I am also very proud that our university continues to fulfill its land-grant mission to serve the entire state, including the Coast and its many special communities and people. In fact, nearly 20 years to the day after I flew into Keesler with Senator Cochran, I was back at Keesler to celebrate the groundbreaking of the MSU-led Mississippi Cyber and Technology Center. The two occasions could not have been more different — one an unprecedented catastrophe and the other a celebration.
Today, as President of Mississippi State University, the lessons I learned from Hurricane Katrina continue to inspire me to serve others just as so many people did in the aftermath of that terrible storm’s devastation. The greatest lesson from Katrina remains one of renewal and hope as we all pulled together and worked with our neighbors to get the job done. On this day, my thoughts and prayers are with those who lost so much and all who built it back.