Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Parts of Louisiana left soggy, dark

Crews work on power, residents face 2 storms’ worth of mess

- REBECCA SANTANA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Stacey Plaisance, Alanna Durkin Richer, Bobby Caina Calvan, Sudhin Thanawala, Sophia Tulp, Gerald Herbert, Melinda Deslatte and Seth Borenstein of The Associated Press.

LAKE CHARLES, La. — Utility crews fanned out across the battered southweste­rn part of Louisiana on Sunday to restore electricit­y in the wake of Hurricane Delta, and residents began returning home along roads lined with debris and houses missing roofs. Some were grateful that the damage was not as bad as it could have been.

Louisiana officials blamed the death of an 86-year-old man on the hurricane. The St. Martin Parish resident died in a fire that ignited after he refueled a generator in a shed, Gov. John Bel Edwards said. He said it didn’t appear that the man had let the generator cool down before refilling it.

Also, a 19-year-old tourist from Illinois drowned after getting caught in a rip current caused by the storm off Destin, Fla., authoritie­s said.

Roughly 350,000 customers in Louisiana remained without power two days after Delta blew ashore near the town of Creole with winds of 100 mph, slamming a part of the state still recovering from Hurricane Laura’s 150 mph onslaught on Aug. 27. Laura was blamed for 32 deaths, many of them caused in the storm’s aftermath by carbon monoxide poisoning from generators.

The remnants of Delta, meanwhile, dumped heavy rain on parts of Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia.

The storm also was blamed for washing out a railroad track and causing the derailment of a freight train in the Atlanta area that sparked a small fire and briefly forced some residents from their homes. Two crew members were taken to a hospital for observatio­n and later released.

Clair Hebert Marceaux lost her home in Cameron Parish in Louisiana, during Hurricane Laura and said the community was hard at work on rebuilding when Delta struck.

“We can’t lose our momentum,” she said, though she added there was “utter devastatio­n” in the area.

Marceaux, who was born and raised in Cameron Parish, is the director of the community’s busy port, which hosts fleets of shrimp and crab boats and serves as a key link in the region’s oil and gas industry.

Vessel traffic was halted until port authoritie­s and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers could take stock of the damage. Sunken boats, utility poles and other flotsam filled waterways.

“We are still in an assessment phase,” Marceaux said, “but we will be limping along as best as we can.”

Lynn Nguyen and her four children fled to Fort Walton, Fla., ahead of the storm and returned home to Abbeville, La., on a circuitous route to avoid flooded roads. Her home was spared major damage, though a fence was flattened.

“For the most part, I’m just glad I still have a job and a roof over my head,” said Nguyen, who works at a seafood market.

Earnestine and Milton Wesley had decided to ride out Delta in their Lake Charles, La., home, damaged by Laura. As the wind rustled the roof tarp above them, they grabbed it through the hole in the ceiling and held on tight. Water poured in, flooding their den.

“We fought all night long trying to keep things intact,” Milton said. “And with God’s help we made it.”

After blowing ashore, Delta moved over Lake Charles, a city where Laura damaged nearly every home and building. More than 8,000 Louisiana residents who evacuated because of Laura were still in shelters as of Sunday, Edwards said. Roughly 850 people were in shelters because of Delta.

Before Friday’s storm, the streets of Lake Charles were already lined with mountains of debris from the previous hurricane — soggy insulation, moldy mattresses, tree limbs, twisted metal siding, ruined family treasures. Lake Charles Mayor Nic Hunter estimated hundreds of already damaged homes took on water from Delta, which dumped more than 15 inches of rain on the city over two days.

Delta, the 25th named storm of an unpreceden­ted Atlantic hurricane season, was the 10th to hit the mainland U.S. this year, breaking a record set in 1916, Colorado State University researcher Phil Klotzbach said.

The floodwater­s surged up the Wesley family’s front yard, and they were terrified it would pour inside, but it stopped short of the door. It carried with it bags of trash and muck, swept up from their neighbors’ piles of debris from the previous storm.

“The water was something else last night,” Milton said. “We’ve never seen it flood so bad out here, to the point I could have swam out here last night, that’s just how deep it was.”

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