The Standard (St. Catharines)

Obama visits flood-damaged areas

- KEVIN FREKING

BATON ROUGE, La. — Standing amid piles of waterlogge­d debris, President Barack Obama on Tuesday promised a sustained national effort to rebuild flood-ravaged southern Louisiana “even after the TV cameras leave” on a visit aimed in part at stemming campaign-season criticism that he’s been slow to respond to the disaster.

As he toured a battered neighbourh­ood and spoke to reporters, Obama reassured residents that the federal response would be robust and he tried to buck up beleaguere­d residents of the water-soaked region, many of whom have said they feel their plight has been ignored by national officials and the media.

“This is not a one-off, this is not a photo-op issue,” the president said in a statement to reporters. “I need all Americans to stay focused on this ... I know you will rebuild again.”

Obama’s visit was a reminder of the political dangers and opportunit­ies that natural disasters can pose. The president has been criticized for waiting until after this New England vacation to tour the flooding. The timing, coming amid a heated presidenti­al campaign, drew criticism from some local officials and Republican­s political opponents, including GOP presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump.

Trump made the visit to Baton Rouge on Friday.

Obama told reporter he doesn’t “worry too much” about politics and said he saw Americans coming together to help.

The president walked past mattresses, appliances and heaps of clothing tossed out on the curb in a middle-class neighbourh­ood in East Baton Rouge Parish, where few homes were spared from latesummer storms that killed at least 13 people in the region and displaced thousands.

Going door-to-door and trailed by cameras, he offered sympathy to residents as they took a break from the cleanup to talk about the damage.

“I wish I was coming at a better time,” he told one resident, as he put his arm around her and walked into her home for a brief tour. “But I’m glad to see everybody is safe, at least.”

The White House said Obama is willing to assume criticism about “optics” as long as the federal response is up to par.

“The survivors of the flooding in Louisiana are not well served by a political discussion; they’re well served by a competent, effective, strong, co-ordinated government response,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Monday. “And the federal government has certainly done our part in the first eight to 10 days after this disaster, but there’s a long road ahead.”

Obama was met at the Baton Rouge airport by a bipartisan group of officials, including Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat, and Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser, a Republican. Republican Sens. Bill Cassidy and David Vitter also met the president on the tarmac.

Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton issued a statement Monday saying she would visit the communitie­s affected by the flooding “at a time when the presence of a political campaign will not disrupt the response, to discuss how we can and will rebuild together.”

The storm and its flooding have damaged an estimated 60,000 homes and forced thousands to seek temporary housing. More than 115,000 people have registered for federal disaster aid, with the state saying $20 million has been distribute­d to individual­s so far. At least 40 state highways remained closed.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama talks with Quincy Snowden as he tours Castle Place, a flood-damaged area of Baton Rouge, La., Tuesday. Obama is making his first visit to flood-ravaged southern Louisiana as he attempts to assure the many thousands who have...
SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama talks with Quincy Snowden as he tours Castle Place, a flood-damaged area of Baton Rouge, La., Tuesday. Obama is making his first visit to flood-ravaged southern Louisiana as he attempts to assure the many thousands who have...

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