The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Storm-ravaged Lake Charles is without power, water

Trump visits parish picking up pieces after hurricane.

- Brett Geymann,

Days after Hurricane Laura slammed into Louisiana, hundreds of thousands of people remained without electricit­y Saturday, with the situation especially dire in Lake Charles, a city near the coastline where nearly all 80,000 residents have been without power for days and many have no running water.

President Donald Trump arrived Saturday afternoon in the troubled city, where residents were just beginning to pick up the pieces after the hurricane that made landfall Thursday as a Category 4 storm.

Trump walked along streets where downed power lines were strung along the ground and several large trees had crushed roofs. He briefly chatted with a group of men who were using chain saws to cut and remove one large tree that had fallen across a road.

“We have water in some locations, but it’s a trickle,” Mayor Nic Hunter said in a telephone interview, describing an overwhelme­d water system that has frustrated residents and public officials alike.

“We’re all hot, we’re all sweaty, we all want a shower,” Sheriff Tony Mancuso of Calcasieu Parish, which includes Lake Charles, said at a news conference Friday.

More than an inconvenie­nce, though, the electrical outages have been deadly, as several people who turned to generators to power refrigerat­ors, lights and air conditione­rs have been overcome with fumes.

At least seven people have been killed by carbon monoxide from generators, including four members

Former state lawmaker referring to the hurricane that struck the area in 2005

of a family found dead in a home in Lake Charles. A fifth member of that family was taken to a hospital. Their generator was located in a garage and the deadly gas was able to seep into the house through a garage door that was left cracked open, the mayor said.

Another man in the Calcasieu Parish died of carbon monoxide poisoning from a generator, as did an 84-yearold man and an 80-year-old woman in their home in Allen Parish, to the northeast, said health officials, who warned people never to place generators inside homes or in closed garages.

The city’s largest hospital, Lake Charles Memorial Hospital Health System, whose phone lines were down, had to evacuate all patients to other hospitals and was operating only its emergency room. The hospital said on its website that pregnant mothers should leave the area because the hospital was not providing obstetric services except in emergencie­s.

The power failure in Lake Charles could continue for weeks, the mayor said, and people have been racing to buy more gasoline to provide power to their homes.

“This is just way, way worse than Rita,” said Brett Geymann, 58, a former state lawmaker who lives in Moss Bluff, a suburb of Lake Charles, referring to the powerful hurricane that struck the area in 2005. He has been running a generator to operate his family’s refrigerat­or. “There is just destructio­n everywhere.”

In addition to the deaths tied to generators, five other people have died in Louisiana, four from falling trees and one person who drowned. In Texas,, at least three deaths have been tied to carbon monoxide poisoning from generators.

Geymann said residents were increasing­ly worried about the lack of water as they contemplat­ed not having flushable toilets or being able to wash their hands in a sink, particular­ly during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The virus is “not even an issue anymore for most people,” said Geymann, who has let about five people stay with him after their homes were destroyed.

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AL DRAGO / NEW YORK TIMES
 ?? ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of the National Guard cut up fallen trees Saturday as crews tackle the massive job of cleaning up the debris left by Hurricane Laura after it pummeled Lake Charles, Louisiana.
ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the National Guard cut up fallen trees Saturday as crews tackle the massive job of cleaning up the debris left by Hurricane Laura after it pummeled Lake Charles, Louisiana.
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