El Dorado News-Times

Flooded Neighborho­od:

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Photos taken by a neighbor of Elizabeth Vaughan in Houston show flooding that has occurred in her Braeswood Place neighborho­od since Hurricane Harvey pounded the southeast coast of Texas on Friday. Vaughan and her son, Benjamin, came to visit her parents in El Dorado before the hurricane.

LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP) — Twelve years to the day after Hurricane Katrina slammed into the Gulf Coast, another deadly storm forced the rescue of hundreds of people from floodwater­s in southweste­rn Louisiana and prompted New Orleans to shut down its schools and other key institutio­ns as a precaution.

Tropical Storm Harvey flooded neighborho­ods overnight with chestdeep water in the Lake Charles area, near the Texas line, although water abated in some places Tuesday as rain slackened.

In New Orleans, Mayor Mitch Landrieu urged residents to stay home Tuesday because of the threat of potential flooding. Many appeared to be heeding his call.

Meanwhile, Gov. John Bel Edwards said Louisiana is offering to shelter storm victims from Texas.

"We have offered to stand up shelters specifical­ly for individual­s who would be transporte­d out of Texas, so that they could be housed in shelters in Louisiana, particular­ly in north Louisiana, in the Shreveport area," he said at a news conference in Baton Rouge. Edwards said he expects Texas officials to decide within 48 hours whether to accept the offer.

Later, in Lake Charles, Edwards urged people to remain alert but said the state is responding well to less severe conditions in its own borders.

"You never know what Mother Nature is going to throw at us, but with the people in this room, I'm confident we can handle it," he told local and state officials.

Some New Orleans neighborho­ods flooded earlier this month during a deluge that exposed problems with the city's pump and drainage system. On Tuesday, rains flooded a few of the city's streets.

The city's public schools were closed, along with six universiti­es and a medical school. A ceremony and march in New Orleans to commemorat­e the deadly 2005 storm was postponed until Sunday.

For many others, it was largely business as usual.

"I can't afford not to open," said Jerry Roppolo, 65, owner of a popular coffee house where water often creeps over the sidewalk and up to the threshold during heavy rains.

The shop in the Carrollton neighborho­od is usually bustling but was slow Tuesday. Roppolo attributed that to the school closures. "A lot of the parents come in on the way to school, on the way from school," he said.

About 500 people were evacuated in southwest Louisiana's most populous parish overnight, as a heavy band of rain pushed waterways out of their banks, Calcasieu Parish spokesman Tom Hoefer said. He said as many as 5,000 parish residents are affected by the flooding, but not all of those people have flooded homes. Some are just cut off by flooded roads.

A lull in the heavy rains allowed water to recede Tuesday morning, enabling some who fled their homes to return, survey damage and remove possession­s.

"I wanted to get my mother's Bible out of the house and there were some things we needed — our medicine, we're both on medication­s," said David Wells, 65. "I got a feeling it's going to get worse before it gets any better."

Evacuation­s continued Tuesday in some rural areas outside Lake Charles, with authoritie­s working to empty a flood-prone subdivisio­n near the town of Iowa. Officials in Acadia Parish advised residents near the Mermentau River and Bayou Nezpique to leave.

Authoritie­s and family members have reported more than a dozen deaths from Harvey in Texas. No Harvey-related deaths were immediatel­y reported in Louisiana, according to a spokesman for Edwards.

The high water in Calcasieu Parish surprised residents of some neighborho­ods not known for flooding. The Kayouche Coulee spilled over when heavy rain hit the area after sunset, and people began calling for rescue.

Residents rode out of neighborho­ods in National Guard trucks, wildlife agents' boats, jacked-up pickups and clinging to the cab of a semi-truck. They carried belongings in suitcases, trash bags or even soggy cardboard boxes.

"We all got stuck back there," said Andrea Boutte, who rode out on the big rig. "Those boats took forever."

 ?? by Katrina's memory, Louisiana now faces Harvey: Contribute­d Photos Haunted ??
by Katrina's memory, Louisiana now faces Harvey: Contribute­d Photos Haunted

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