Louisiana towns still crawling out from Ida's destruction
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[September 02, 2021]
By Devika Krishna Kumar
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - Shattered
communities across southern Louisiana were still assessing storm damage
from Ida on Thursday as floodwaters had yet to recede in many places
four days after the hurricane knocked out power to a million homes and
businesses.
The Category 4 hurricane came ashore on the barrier islands and swampy
lowlands known as the bayou, where many small towns are difficult to
reach even without roads being clogged with fallen trees, power lines
and debris that were hurled about by gusts of wind that reached 172
miles per hour (276 kph).
The crucial offshore oil hub of Port Fourchon was directly in the path
of the storm and cut off from supply boats, fuel and air ferry services,
crippling operations in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico, which supplies about
16% of U.S. oil production.
Around 600,000 people had no water and another 400,000 were advised to
boil their tap water before drinking it, Louisiana Governor John Bel
Edwards said. At least six deaths have been reported.
Ida leveled Grand Isle, a town of 740 on the edge of the Gulf of Mexico,
where officials said virtually every structure sustained damage and
about 40% were destroyed. About three feet (one meter) of sand covered
the island, rendering it uninhabitable.
"We are a broken community right now. We don't have electricity. We
don't have communication. We don't have gas or water and sewer systems
are very fragile," Jefferson Parish President Cynthia Lee Sheng told a
news conference after flying over Grand Isle and the rest of Ida's path
on Wednesday.
Wrecked neighborhoods looked like "a little pile of matchsticks," Lee
Sheng said.
U.S. Representative Steve Scalise, whose district took the brunt of the
storm and joined Lee Sheng on the flight, reported seeing major marine
vessels and dry docks picked up and moved.
President Joe Biden is scheduled to survey the destruction for himself
on Friday, when Edwards said he would present Biden with a long lists of
needs.
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Bridget Serigny, 66, holds together the broken sign of their home
address as her twin sister Rosalie points towards where they found
it in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida in Golden Meadow, Louisiana,
U.S., September 1, 2021. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
"We need all the help we can get," Edwards said.
Long lines formed outside the few places selling gasoline or
distributing emergency supplies.
Although most of Louisiana's hospitals escaped catastrophic damage,
many were running on generators, and some in the hardest hit areas
evacuated their patients to safer ground.
In Houma, the Terrebonne General Health System building was
abandoned after Ida tore its roof off and flooded the interior, but
ambulances used its parking lot as a staging area for responding to
emergency calls across Terrebonne Parish.
"We have been running constantly. All units have been
all-hands-on-deck since Monday," said Donna Newchurch, who heads the
Louisiana Ambulance Alliance.
Ida struck a state where hospitals were already crowded with
COVID-19 patients and short of nurses.
Edwards said 2,447 COVID patients were hospitalized on Wednesday,
including 446 on ventilators. The state recorded 12,380 new
infections over the previous four days, though Edwards said the real
figure was likely much higher because so many testing centers were
closed.
(Reporting by Devika Krishna Kumar in New Orleans; Writing by Daniel
Trotta; editing by Richard Pullin)
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