Manawatu Standard

Huge cleanup after devastatin­g floods

- UNITED STATES AP

Heavy trucks and their works crews have begun hauling away mounds of mouldy carpet, warped flooring and water-damaged furniture as south Louisiana digs out from flooding estimated to have wrecked more than 100,000 homes.

Piles of debris stretched for kilometres in some parishes, with the inside of homes torn up and deposited on their front lawns, the mildewed stench wafting through neighbourh­ood streets.

‘‘It’s going to take months, if not over a year, to get the debris up,’’ said Jr Shelton, the mayor of Central, a suburb of Baton Rouge that is one of the hardest-hit communitie­s from the catastroph­ic flooding.

Of Central’s 27,000 residents, Shelton said 25,000 of them were affected by the flooding. He said 90 per cent of the homes had major damage, including many that were total losses. He described entire subdivisio­ns as ‘‘decimated.’’

‘‘I don’t mean a few inches of water in their house. I mean 2 feet of water or more. Most were 4 or 5 or 6 feet of water. When you get above the counters, you’ve lost everything.

‘‘What’s absolutely heartwrenc­hing to me as a mayor is to see my citizens’ lives laying on those streets in front of their houses,’’ he said.

President Barack Obama visited the region yesterday, pledging to the state’s residents: ‘‘You’re not alone on this.’’

His visit drew praise for drawing national attention to the disaster, but also criticism from some quarters that it was too long in coming.

A storm that started on August 12 dumped as much as 60 centimetre­s of rain in two days over areas, blamed for at least 13 deaths and widespread damage that displaced thousands from their homes.

About 2500 people remained in shelters after flooding that has been described as the worst disaster since Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

Governor John Bel Edwards estimated the flooding has ravaged ‘‘well over 100,000 homes’’ across south Louisiana, as he asked Obama for additional federal aid and a reduction in the state’s share of response costs.

In a letter he presented to Obama outlining a list of disaster assistance requests, the governor described the people of Louisiana as ‘‘strong and resilient’’.

But he added that the severity of the flood ‘‘is testing our spirit in ways we have not seen since the challenges posed by Hurricane Katrina’’ in 2005.

As contractor­s continue to scoop up the water-logged debris left behind by the storm, the Federal Emergency Management Agency said more than 110,000 people have applied for federal aid and more than $107 million (NZ$146.8M) has been approved in grants so far. The money is paying for temporary rental assistance, home repairs and other disaster relief.

Many people with damage from the flooding did not have flood insurance, making recovery more difficult.

In many instances, residents say such coverage wasn’t required because they didn’t live in a designated flood zone.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? President Barack Obama, left, tours a flood-affected neighbourh­ood in Zachary, Louisiana.
PHOTO: REUTERS President Barack Obama, left, tours a flood-affected neighbourh­ood in Zachary, Louisiana.

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