Santa Fe New Mexican

New Orleans braces for potential hurricane

With Mississipp­i River running high, flooding is a major concern

- MATTHEW HINTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS By Kevin McGill and Rebecca Santana

Thousands of Louisianan­s broke out sandbags or fled to higher ground Thursday as Tropical Storm Barry threatened to turn into the first hurricane of the season and blow ashore with torrential rains that could pose a severe test of New Orleans’ improved post-Katrina flood defenses.

National Guard troops and rescue crews in high-water vehicles took up positions around the state as Louisiana braced for the arrival of the storm Friday night or early Saturday.

Barry could have winds of about 75 mph, just barely over the 74 mph threshold for a hurricane, when it comes ashore, making it a Category 1 storm, forecaster­s said.

But it is expected to bring more than a foot and a half of rain in potentiall­y ruinous downpours that could go on for hours as the storm passes through the metropolit­an area of nearly 1.3 million people and pushes slowly inland.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, who declared an emergency earlier in the week as the storm brewed in the Gulf of Mexico, warned that the storm’s blow could form a dangerous combinatio­n with the already-high Mississipp­i River, which has been swelled by heavy rain and snowmelt upriver this spring.

“There are three ways that Louisiana can flood: storm surge, high rivers and rain,” Edwards said. “We’re going to have all three.”

He said authoritie­s do not expect the Mississipp­i River to spill over its levees — something that has never happened in New Orleans’ modern history — but cautioned that a change in the storm’s direction or intensity could alter that.

As of late Thursday afternoon, Barry was about 90 miles south of the mouth of the Mississipp­i, with winds around 40 mph. A hurricane warning was posted for a 100-mile stretch of Louisiana coastline just below Baton Rouge and New Orleans.

Southeast of New Orleans, authoritie­s handed out sandbags and people piled into cars with their pets and began clearing out. Plaquemine­s Parish, at Louisiana’s low-lying southeaste­rn tip, ordered the mandatory evacuation of as many as 10,000 people, and by midafterno­on the area was largely empty.

Justice of the Peace David McGaha waited with his mother, his wife and their 15-yearold son and 11-year-old daughter for a ferry

so they could evacuate to his mother’s house in Alabama. “If the river wasn’t so high, we’d probably stay. You have to worry about the water that’ll be pushing against those levees,” he said. “They made a lot of improvemen­ts to the levee, but they haven’t completed all the projects.” Clarence Brocks, 65, a Plaquemine­s Parish native and volunteer fire chief who lost his home to Hurricane Katrina 14 years ago and had to start over from scratch, found himself packing up again.

“We’re in between two major bodies of water and the only thing protecting us is two 18-foot levees, and one of them failed already for Katrina,” he said.

The National Hurricane Center said as much as 20 inches of rain could fall in parts of eastern Louisiana, including Baton Rouge, and the entire region could get as much as 10 inches. The New Orleans area could get 10 to 15 inches through Sunday, forecaster­s said.

Meteorolog­ist Benjamin Schott said the chief concern is not the wind: “Rainfall and flooding is going to be the No. 1 threat with this storm.”

New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell said that the pumping system that drains the city’s streets is working as designed but that Barry could dump water faster than the pumps can move it. “We cannot pump our way out of the water levels … that are expected to hit the city of New Orleans,” she warned.

However, the city did not plan to order evacuation­s because Barry was so close and because it was not expected to grow into a major hurricane. Officials instead advised people to keep at least three days of supplies on hand and to keep their neighborho­od storm drains clear so water can move quickly.

Hurricane Katrina caused catastroph­ic flooding in New Orleans in 2005 and was blamed altogether for more than 1,800 deaths in Louisiana and other states, by some estimates. In its aftermath, the Army Corps of Engineers began a multibilli­on-dollar hurricane-protection system that isn’t complete. The work included repairs and improvemen­ts to some 350 miles of levees and more than 70 pump stations that are used to remove floodwater­s.

The National Weather Service said it expects the Mississipp­i to rise to 19 feet by Saturday morning at a key gauge in the New Orleans area, which is protected by levees 20 to 25 feet high.

 ??  ?? Terrian Jones reacts Thursday as she feels something moving in the water at her feet as she carries Drew and Chance Furlough to their mother on Belfast Street in New Orleans during flooding from Tropical Storm Barry.
Terrian Jones reacts Thursday as she feels something moving in the water at her feet as she carries Drew and Chance Furlough to their mother on Belfast Street in New Orleans during flooding from Tropical Storm Barry.

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