The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Barry crawls ashore, then weakens to tropical storm

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NEWORLEANS — Barry rolled into the Louisiana coast Saturday, flooding highways, forcing people to scramble to rooftops and dumping heavy rain that could test the levees and pumps that were bolstered after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.

After briefly becoming a Category 1 hurricane, the system quickly weakened to the tropical storm as it made landfall near Intracoast­al City, Louisiana, about 160 miles west of New Orleans, with its winds falling to 70 mph, the National Hurricane Center said. But officials warned that it could still cause disastrous flooding across a wide stretch of the Gulf Coast.

“This is just the beginning,” Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards said. “It’s going to be a long several days for our state.”

The Coast Guard rescued more than a dozen people from the remote Isle de Jean Charles, south of New Orleans, where water rose so high that some residents clung to rooftops.

None of the main levees on the Mississipp­i River failed or were breached, Edwards said. But video showed water overtoppin­g a levee in Plaquemine­s Parish south of New Orleans, where fingers of land extend deep into the Gulf of Mexico.

In some places, residents continued to build defenses. At the edge of the town of Jean Lafitte just outside New Orleans, volunteers helped several town employees sandbag a 600foot stretch of the twolane state highway through town. The street was already lined with oneton sandbags, and 30pound bags were being used to strengthen them.

“I’m here for my family, trying to save their stuff,” volunteer Vinnie Tortorich said. “My cousin’s house is already under.”

In Lafayette, Willie Allen and his 11yearold grandson, Gavin Coleman, shoveled sand into 20 green bags, joining a group of more than 20 other people doing the same thing during a break in the rain. Wearing a mud-streaked Tshirt and shorts, Allen loaded the bags onto the back of his pickup.

“Everybody is preparing,” he said. “Our biggest concern is the flood.”

Many businesses were also shut down or closed early in Baton Rouge, and winds were strong enough to rock large pickup trucks. White caps were visible on the Mississipp­i.

Oil and gas operators evacuated hundreds of platforms and rigs in the Gulf of Mexico. Nearly 70 percent of gulf oil production and 56 percent of gas production were turned off Saturday, according to the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmen­tal Enforcemen­t, which compiles the numbers from industry reports.

The mood was sanguine in New Orleans, where locals and tourists wandered through mostly empty streets under a light rain or stayed indoors.

“I think whatever is going to happen, is going to happen,” said Wayne Wilkinson, a New Orleans resident. “So I’m not really paying too much attention to it as I probably should be.”

More than 70,000 customers were without power Saturday morning, including nearly 67,000 in Louisiana and more than 3,000 in Mississipp­i, according to poweroutag­e.us.

During a storm update, National Hurricane Center Director Ken Graham pointed to a computer screen showing a huge, swirling mess of airborne water. “That is just an amazing amount of moisture,” he said. “That is off the chart.”

Barry was moving so slowly that heavy rain was expected to continue all weekend, with prediction­s of up to 20 inches through Sunday across a part of Louisiana that includes New Orleans and Baton Rouge. Some places might get 25 inches.

Forecasts showed the storm on a path toward Chicago that would swell the Mississipp­i River basin with water that must eventually flow south again.

For a few hours, the storm had maximum sustained winds of 75 mph, just above the 74 mph threshold to be a hurricane. Barry was expected to continue weakening and become a tropical depression on Sunday.

Downpours also lashed coastal Alabama and Mississipp­i. Parts of Dauphin Island, a barrier island in Alabama, were flooded both by rain and surging water from the gulf, said Mayor Jeff Collier. He said the island still had power early Saturday afternoon and wind damage was minimal.

Flooding closed some roads in lowlying areas of Mobile County in Alabama and heavy rains contribute­d to a number of accidents, said John Kilcullen, director of plans and operations for Mobile County Emergency Management Agency. The National Weather Service issued a flash flood warning for much of the two coastal Alabama counties.

“The rain is our primary concern,” Kilcullen said.

Double red flags at Alabama beaches in Baldwin County warned tourists that waters were closed for swimming.

Governors declared emergencie­s in Louisiana and Mississipp­i, and authoritie­s closed floodgates and raised water barriers around New Orleans. Edwards said it was the first time all floodgates were sealed in the New Orleans area since Katrina.

 ?? David J. Phillip / Associated Press ?? Jeff Holland rides his bike through waters pushed over the seawall from Lake Pontchartr­ain by winds from Tropical Storm Barry on Saturday in Mandeville, La.
David J. Phillip / Associated Press Jeff Holland rides his bike through waters pushed over the seawall from Lake Pontchartr­ain by winds from Tropical Storm Barry on Saturday in Mandeville, La.
 ?? Chris Granger / Associated Press ?? Louisiana Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser, left center, helps move a wooden barricade to block a road where water was rising in Plaquemine­s Parish, just south of New Orleans.
Chris Granger / Associated Press Louisiana Lt. Gov. Billy Nungesser, left center, helps move a wooden barricade to block a road where water was rising in Plaquemine­s Parish, just south of New Orleans.

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