Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

New Orleans braces for fast-moving storm Nate

- By Ashley Cusick, Jason Samenow and Joel Achenbach

NEW ORLEANS — Tropical Storm Nate gained strength Friday as the central Gulf Coast prepared for its landfall as a Category 1 hurricane as early as Saturday evening, bringing damaging winds and storm surge to a part of the coast that had largely been spared in this extraordin­arily busy hurricane season.

The storm, already blamed for at least 22 deaths in Nicaragua and Costa Rica this week, is expected to strengthen as it crosses unusually warm waters in the Gulf of Mexico and makes landfall in the United States with maximum sustained

winds of about 80 mph. New Orleans officials have ordered mandatory evacuation­s of three low-lying areas of the city.

The National Weather Service on Friday put much of coastal Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama under a hurricane warning. Rain bands are likely to strike the coast as early as Saturday afternoon.

Here in the Crescent City, where memories of the 2005 Katrina catastroph­e remain vivid, officials have acknowledg­ed that their hobbled network of pumping stations could be overmatche­d by Nate’sdownpours.

But Mayor Mitch Landrieu sounded upbeat and resolute in a news conference Friday afternoon, even as he announced a curfew starting at 6 p.m. Saturday and lasting until Sunday morning.

“We are ready for whatever Nate brings our way,” Mr. Landrieu said. “If we all stay informed, if we all stay alert, if we all stayed prepared, ultimately we will all be safe.”

The city’s drainage system has been challenged even by typical summer storms. Parts of New Orleans have flooded several times this year, including as recently as last week. The worst flooding occurred after torrential rains Aug. 5, when up to nine inches fell in just a few hours.

The city’s drainage system is “terribly underfunde­d,” Mr. Landrieu said.

“It’s old. It’s tired. It’s like your grandmothe­r’s car that’s got 400,000 miles on it,” he said. “The pumping system in the city of New Orleans is as old as Calvin Coolidge.”

Mr. Landrieu said 109 of the city’s 120 drainage pumps were operationa­l, with contractor­s working around the clock to repair the remainder. But inland flooding from rain is not the primary threat from Nate, he said, but rather the storm surge along the coast, and most of all the wind, which he warned could turn objects left outdoors into dangerous projectile­s.

He reminded residents that they should not drive through underpasse­s that flood readily. He said they can park their vehicles where they can find higher ground without fear of parking tickets, with enforcemen­t of violations suspended starting at 8 a.m. Saturday.

By Saturday, the Port of New Orleans will be closed, and most of the 200 floodgates in the city and surroundin­g parishes will be closed. More than 350 members of the National Guard will be on the ground.

Friday morning, the city began providing 17,000 sandbags to residents at five locations across town. Police set up 146 barricades in floodprone areas, and boats and high-water vehicles were lined up at fire and police stations.

Melonie Stewart, customer service director at Entergy, New Orleans’s sole energy provider, warned residents to be prepared for up to seven days without power from the grid.

Nate appears most likely to hit the Gulf Coast to the east of New Orleans. It could deliver a storm surge of four to seven feet above normally dry land, forecaster­s said. Wherever the storm makes landfall, areas east of the eye will experience stronger winds than those to the west.

Nate is then expected to weaken and travel northeast into the southern Appalachia­ns, where flash floods Sunday and Monday are a serious risk. The storm’s remnants are then likely to head toward the Mid-Atlantic and the Northeast.

The last hurricane to strike this part of the Gulf Coast directly was Isaac in August 2012. It left hundreds of thousands of utility customers without power.

Under sunny skies Friday, New Orleans did not appear to be in a state of alarm. Stores were cleaned-out of bottled water, and residents filled sandbags provided by municipal authoritie­s, but this was clearly not a city trembling in advance of Nate.

The storm Friday was moving north over very warm water, which drives intensific­ation. But that trajectory also meant interactio­n with Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula,with pockets of dry air and shearing winds that couldenfee­ble the storm.

The fast movement of the storm means it is unlikely to drop massive amounts of rain as Hurricane Harvey did while loitering in the Houston area of the Texas coast in August.

The National Weather Service’s hurricane warning, issued Friday, extends from GrandIsle, La. — which is due southof New Orleans — to the Alabama-Floridabor­der.

 ?? Moises Castillo/Associated Press ?? A man hauls a piece of corrugated steel recovered from a home damaged by Tropical Storm Nate on Friday on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica.
Moises Castillo/Associated Press A man hauls a piece of corrugated steel recovered from a home damaged by Tropical Storm Nate on Friday on the outskirts of San Jose, Costa Rica.

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