Starkville Daily News

In Mississipp­i, Louisiana, a struggle for water after storms

- By LEAH WILLINGHAM AND MELINDA DESLATTE

JACKSON — Residents of Mississipp­i’s capital city waited in long lines Friday for drinking water while crews in the state and neighborin­g Louisiana scrambled to repair burst pipes after a vicious cold spell disrupted water service for hundreds of thousands of people in the two states.

At a mall in Jackson, scores of cars idled in the slush for potable water. Almost the entire city of around 161,000 people was without water, and there was no clear timeline on when it would return.

Lisa Thomas, 58, said her steep driveway is a sheet of ice, so it’s hard to get her car out to pick up water. Her 67-year-old husband is on a defibrilla­tor and heart monitor and is running out of his heart medication, but she hasn’t even been able to make it to the pharmacy.

“It would be nice to have some type of answers,” she said. “People are in dire need here. We need urgent help.”

At three Louisiana hospitals operated by Ochsner-lsu Health, staff used sanitary wipes to bathe patients. Patients and staff — including about 200 staffers living temporaril­y in the hospitals — used commodes usually reserved for bedsides to go to the bathroom and bottled water to brush their teeth and wash their hands. The two hospitals in Shreveport and one in Monroe canceled clinics and elective and outpatient surgery and had water trucked in by fire department­s, the state and the National Guard to keep their boilers running for heat. Equipment sterilizat­ion sometimes was delayed because it depends partly on city water supplies.

More than 192,000 Louisiana residents — about 4% of the state’s population — were without water Friday, according to data released by the state health department.

Tens of thousands of additional residents remained under advisories that they should boil their water before use, including nearly 70,000 people in the central Louisiana city of Alexandria, according to the health department.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said the worst of the state’s water outages were in north Louisiana and in the southwest city of Lake Charles, which was hit hard by Hurricane Laura in August. He said bulk and bottled water deliveries were planned for the most affected areas, particular­ly focused on hospitals, nursing homes and dialysis centers.

In the Louisiana town of Hackberry, the hot water pipes at the home where Nicole Beard was staying after her trailer was flattened by Laura burst three days ago. Then Thursday, the main water pipe into the house cracked, cutting off the water supply completely and forcing her to turn to bottled water. She said the communitie­s that are facing water problems have not yet recovered from the hurricane.

“People are still just struggling over here,” she said.

The water woes along with power and heat outages are fallout from ice and snow storms early in the week that hammered Texas and other Southern states.

More than 150,000 people in Louisiana and Mississipp­i were still without power on Friday, according to poweroutag­e.us. Entergy Mississipp­i president and CEO Haley Fisackerly said power could be restored to a majority of customers by early next week.

Plummeting temperatur­es froze water infrastruc­ture and forced people to leave faucets dripping to prevent pipes from icing. Officials in Mississipp­i and Louisiana urged people to turn off their faucets, saying that was sapping water pressure.

Lake Charles, Louisiana Mayor Mayor Nic Hunter blamed thousands of leaking pipes on private property in part for the water pressure problems in his city. Lumumba cited Jackson’s aging water system.

“Our infrastruc­ture is not prepared to handle this,” he said Thursday.

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