Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)
Zeta damage on La. island reminiscent of bomb
State has evacuees from three storms sheltering
GRAND ISLE, La. — Mark Andollina remembers stinging rain and a howling wind that peeled the roof off part of his Cajun Tide Beach Resort on Grand Isle, the Louisiana barrier island town where residents were among the first to feel the ferocity of Hurricane Zeta.
Andollina was salvaging what he could Friday morning, picking up pieces of reusable scrap wood while mulling what it will take to repair and reopen. He said residents there believe Zeta spawned at least one tornado.
“I guess that’s what did it,” he said. “Because we got the most damage on the island right here, basically in the middle of the island.”
“The middle of the island looks like a bomb was dropped,” said Dodie Vegas, who with her husband owns Bridge Side Marina on the west side of the island.
Part-time town resident Jimmy Ellis, a New Orleans area physician, said his raised camp survived, but he spent Friday morning retrieving fishing equipment and pieces of an LSU mural that washed away when water swept beneath it.
Zeta came ashore on the southeast Louisiana coast, near Cocodrie, on Wednesday evening with 110 mph winds, just shy of Category 3 strength. It hit hard on Grand Isle, a popular waterside getaway and recreational fishing destination. With a population of about 1,500,
the seaside landscape is dominated by rustic fishing camps and vacation homes on pilings high above the flood-prone ground.
Zeta lifted away roofs, snappedtelephone poles and washed away parts of a levee designed to protect the narrow island from storm surge.
Zeta’s speed and intensity caught many on the coast off guard.
Zeta’s remnants moved off the northeastern U.S. coast Thursday night. But its effects were evident Friday through a swath of the southeast. From south Louisiana to Virginia, an estimated 1.3 million homes and businesses remained without power as of midday.
Six deaths have been blamed on the storm.
Zeta was the 27th named storm of a historically busy year, with more than a month left in the Atlantic hurricane season. It set a new record as the 11th named storm to make landfall in the continental U.S. in a single season, well beyond the nine that hit in 1916. And the coronavirus pandemic has only made things more difficult for evacuees.
It’s been an especially active season in Louisiana, hit so far by two tropical storms and three hurricanes, including Laura, which devastated southwestern Louisiana in August.
“We have three sets of hurricane evacuees that are sheltering in Louisiana simultaneously,” Gov. John Bel Edwards noted during a Friday news conference.
That included 3,051 people whose homes were damaged or destroyed by Laura, 172 from Hurricane Delta, which hit weeks later in the same area, and 27 from Zeta.