Calgary Herald

FLOODING IN LOUISIANA HAS DAMAGED 40,000 HOMES, THE GOVERNOR SAID TUESDAY, WARNING THE DISASTER COULD SPREAD TO NEW AREAS OF THE STATE.

At least 40,000 homes damaged across state

- The Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, L A. • At least 40,000 homes were damaged and 10 people killed in the historic Louisiana floods, the governor said Tuesday, giving a stark assessment of the widespread disaster.

Gov. John Bel Edwards spoke at a news conference alongside FEMA administra­tor Craig Fugate, saying “well over” 20,000 people have been rescued since the flooding began Friday. His office later increased that figure to more than 30,000.

Beginning Friday, a torrent of about two feet of rain inundated the southern part of the state over a 48-hour period, and days later many homes and businesses were still underwater.

While some areas were entering recovery mode, the governor warned new places downstream could see flooding and that officials are still in search and rescue mode.

“I don’t know we have a good handle on the number of people who are missing,” the governor said.

Some residents returned to their flood-damaged homes and businesses for the first time Tuesday and found a soggy mess.

David Key used a small boat to get to his house in Prairievil­le and said it had taken on five inches of “muddy nasty bayou water.” There were fish and thousands of spiders. And mould has started to set in.

“I’m not going to lie, I cried uncontroll­ably,” he said. “But you have to push forward and make it through. Like everybody says, you still have your family.”

The extent of damage was coming into clearer view. About 40,000 people had signed up for FEMA assistance and eight more parishes were added to the federal disaster declaratio­n, bringing the total number to 12.

In Livingston Parish, one of the hardest-hit areas with about 138,000 people, an official estimated that 75 per cent of the homes were a “total loss.”

But Lori Steele, spokeswoma­n for the Livingston Parish Sheriff ’s Office, was upbeat, saying the rescues taking place now are less of a “life-saving nature” and more to help people who were running low on supplies in flooded areas. As the main roads drain, emergency crews were going to be able get hot meals, water and medical supplies to the 25 shelters in the parish.

“We’re tired but today’s a good day,” she said.

Rivers and creeks were still dangerousl­y bloated in areas south of Baton Rouge as people filled sandbags there to protect their houses, bracing for the worst. In Ascension Parish, officials said some small towns have already been inundated.

The governor said more than 8,000 people were in shelters, but the number was constantly fluctuatin­g as people arrive and leave.

The slow-moving, lowpressur­e system crawled into Texas, but the National Weather Service warned the danger of new flooding remained high due to the sheer volume of water flowing toward the Gulf of Mexico.

 ?? MELISSA LEAKE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ??
MELISSA LEAKE / AFP / GETTY IMAGES

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