Rome News-Tribune

Final blast of torrential rains unleashed by Barry

- By Kevin Mcgill and Jeff Martin

NEW ORLEANS — Tropical Depression Barry spared New Orleans and Baton Rouge from catastroph­ic flooding, but even as it weakened and moved north through Arkansas, its trailing rain bands swamped parts of Louisiana with up to 17 inches of rain and transforme­d part of the Mississipp­i Delta into “an ocean.”

As of Monday evening, with the center of the storm about 105 miles northwest of Little Rock, the National Weather Service said flash flood watches remained in effect in southeast Texas through the lower Mississipp­i Valley.

Forecaster­s said the storm A man tries to bike through the flooding from the rains of storm Barry on LA Hwy 675 in New Iberia, La., Sunday. was expected to produce up No fatalities or serious injuries to 4 inches of rain — and reported from Barry. in isolated spots as much Some of the earliest fears as 8 inches — across Arthat the storm posed didn’t kansas, western Tennessee play out: A shift in its path and Kentucky, southeast decreased the possibilit­y Missouri, and northwest of major Mississipp­i River Mississipp­i. levees being overtopped at New Orleans, where catastroph­ic levee breaches along canals devastated the city after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And the torrents of rain forecaster­s had said were possible — portending repeats of catastroph­ic Baton Rouge area flooding in 2016 — didn’t happen.

“This was a storm that obviously could have played out very, very differentl­y,” Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “We’re thankful that the worst-case scenario did not happen.”

But the storm was still a huge headache for many. Levees were overtopped along waterways in some coastal parishes. More than 90 people were rescued because of high water in at least 11 parishes, Edwards said.

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Ap-henrietta Wildsmith

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