Disaster declared for Louisiana floods
that have killed five
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[August 15, 2016]
By Byrn Stole
BATON ROUGE, La. (Reuters) - U.S. President
Barack Obama issued a disaster declaration on Sunday for flood-ravaged
Louisiana, where at least five people have died and emergency crews have
rescued more than 7,000 people stranded by historic flooding.
Governor John Bel Edwards said residents had been pulled from swamped
cars, flooded homes and threatened hospitals across the southern part of
the state. The already soaked region is expected to get more rain from a
storm system stretching from the Gulf Coast to the Ohio Valley.
While the brunt of the storm that brought torrential rains was moving
west toward Texas, Louisiana residents should remain cautious, the
governor said at a news conference.
"Even with the sunshine out today intermittently, the waters are going
to continue to rise in many areas, so this is no time to let the guard
down," Edwards said, calling the flooding unprecedented.
Obama issued the disaster declaration after speaking with Edwards, the
White House said in a statement.
The initial declaration makes federal aid available in the parishes of
East Baton Rouge, Livingston, St. Helena and Tangipahoa. Edwards said in
a statement that other parishes could be added to the list.
Emergency officials still were working on strategies to rescue an
undetermined number of people trapped by the waters.
"We're very much still in the search and rescue mode," said James
Waskcom, director of the state's Office of Homeland Security and
Emergency Preparedness.
In Livingston Parish, phone service was spotty due to the high waters
and most shelters were full. A Greyhound Bus traveling from Memphis,
Tennessee, to Baton Rouge was diverted to a shelter because of flooded
roadways.
About 5,000 people had been forced to sleep in shelters overnight around
the state, said Marketa Walters, head of Louisiana Department of
Children and Family Services.
Louisiana State Police Colonel Michael Edmonson said helicopters were
transporting food and water to those still trapped by floods.
Helicopters also were transporting some seriously ill people to areas
outside the high waters.
Some 1,700 members of the Louisiana National Guard have been deployed
for rescue efforts.
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An aircrew from Coast Guard Air Station New Orleans rescues three
people from a rooftop due to flooding in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
U.S., A in this still image from video taken on August 13, 2016.
Coast Guard Air Station New Orleans/Handout via REUTERS
Even as the state grappled with high waters, the National Weather
Service forecast heavy rain from the Gulf Coast as far north as the Ohio
Valley through Monday, with a threat of flash flooding.
A flash flood watch was in place until Monday morning for Houston,
where rains killed at least eight in late April.
At least five people had died in Louisiana from the high water.
Ronda Durbin, a spokeswoman for Tangipahoa Parish, said by telephone
that searchers on Sunday recovered the body of a man reported swept
away on Friday.
The body of a woman also was recovered from a submerged vehicle in
the parish, she said.
On Saturday, the body of a woman was recovered from the Tickfaw
River, in St. Helena Parish northeast of Baton Rouge, after a car in
which she was riding was swept away.
A 54-year-old man in Greensburg in the northern part of the state
died when his vehicle was swept off the road, state police said.
The body of a 68-year-old man was recovered on Friday near Baker
after he drowned, said William "Beau" Clark, the coroner in East
Baton Rouge Parish.
Another person is also believed missing in St. Helena Parish,
Edwards said.
(Additional reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington and Laila Kearney
and Chris Prentice in New York; Editing by Bill Trott and Richard
Chang)
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