Texarkana Gazette

Louisiana governor asks White House for $3B in hurricane aid

- By Melinda Deslatte

BATON ROUGE, La. — Gov. John Bel Edwards is asking President Joe Biden for $3 billion to help Louisiana with its ongoing recovery from the 2020 hurricanes, saying Tuesday that he’s filed a request with the new White House similar to the unfulfille­d ask he made of the prior administra­tion.

The Democratic governor talked of the block grant assistance he’s seeking during a trip to hard-hit Lake Charles to discuss the work to recover from Hurricanes Laura and Delta. Congressio­nal approval is needed if the state is to receive the money.

“I feel very confident that we will get it because the president has told me he understand­s what the needs are, he’s going to be helpful,” the governor said. “We have a former Louisiana congressma­n (Cedric Richmond) working in the White House right now, and every time he speaks about what the priorities are, he mentions Louisiana’s hurricane recovery efforts.”

The aid request, made in a formal letter to the White House, seeks dollars that can be spent to help rebuild people’s homes, create affordable rental housing, modernize infrastruc­ture and harden against future storm threats,

Edwards said. He’d also like some money to be available for state and local government agencies to pay their share of federal assistance costs for disaster removal, direct aid to families and other response work.

Laura ravaged southwest Louisiana, striking Aug. 27 as a Category 4 storm just south of Lake Charles. Less than two months later, Delta swept into the same area as a Category 2 storm last October. Nearly 47,000 homes were damaged by Laura across 21 parishes, most in the Lake Charles region, according to state estimates. Projection­s from disaster modeling firm Karen Clark & Co. put the combined insured U.S. losses from Laura and Delta at nearly $10 billion.

Some families with destroyed homes still are living in tents or are unable to get home. Edwards said 684 evacuees remain sheltered by the state in hotels in New Orleans and Lafayette.

Still, Lake Charles Mayor Nic Hunter struck a note of optimism Tuesday at a news briefing with the governor. He said the initial “dark and scary” worst-case scenarios of his city suffering widespread water and power outages for months didn’t happen, and people are working to rebuild their homes and their lives.

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