Chattanooga Times Free Press

Thousands still without power

- BY REBECCA SANTANA, MELINDA DESLATTE AND JANET MCCONNAUGH­EY

NEW ORLEANS — Power should be restored to New Orleans by the middle of next week, utility officials said Friday, and sheriff’s deputies warned people returning to communitie­s outside the city to come equipped like survivalis­ts because of the lack of basic services in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida.

The storm knocked out electricit­y to more than 1 million customers in Louisiana, but almost all lights in the city should be back on by Wednesday, according to Entergy, the company that provides power to New Orleans and much of southeast Louisiana in the storm’s path.

The utility issued a statement asking for patience and acknowledg­ing the heat and misery in the storm’s wake. More than 25,000 workers from 40 states are trying to fix 14,000 damaged poles, more than 2,200 broken transforme­rs and more than 150 destroyed transmissi­on structures.

“Please know that thousands of employees and contractor­s are currently in the field working day and night to restore power. We will continue working until every community is restored.” said Rod West, a group president for utility operations.

The outlook was bleaker south and west of the city, where Ida’s fury fully struck. The sheriff’s office in Lafourche Parish cautioned returning residents about the difficult situation that awaited them — no power, no running water, little cellphone service and almost no gasoline.

“Residents can return to the parish outside of curfew times but are advised to come

prepared with all provisions necessary to self-sustain,” deputies wrote on Facebook.

The utility offered no promises for when the lights will come back on in the parishes outside New Orleans, some of which were battered for hours by winds of 100 mph or more.

President Joe Biden arrived Friday to survey the damage. He met with local officials and toured a neighborho­od in LaPlace, a community between the Mississipp­i River and Lake Pontchartr­ain that suffered catastroph­ic wind and water damage that sheared off roofs and flooded homes. The president also planned a flyover tour of other hard-hit communitie­s, including Lafitte, Grand Isle, Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish.

“I promise we’re going to have your back,” Biden said at the outset of a briefing by officials.

But some people could not wait for the power to come back, and a second evacuation was underway. New Orleans and neighborin­g Jefferson Parish continue to help people find shelters or connect with family members outside the heavily damaged areas.

C.J. Conrady was at one of those centers Friday in Marrero with his brother and their mother. She was in a wheelchair after a surgery just before Ida struck left her with incisions all the way up her back. An intravenou­s line to give her antibiotic­s fell out the day before, and there was no refrigerat­ion in their home to keep the insulin for her diabetes cold.

“We decided to tough it out and see if the power would come back on soon. It did not,” Conrady said.

Gwen Warren was waiting for a bus to Alexandria or maybe farther north to Monroe. She stayed after Hurricane Katrina in 2005 knocked out power for weeks. But at 61, Warren said the stifling September weather was just too much.

“Any place the lord blesses us to go out of this heat, where we’re able to get some food, get a hot bath and, you know, just some comfort, is fine,” Warren said.

In other developmen­ts, Louisiana health officials started an investigat­ion into the deaths of four nursing home residents who were evacuated to a warehouse ahead of the severe weather.

The residents who died were among hundreds from seven nursing homes taken to the warehouse in Independen­ce, where health officials received reports of people lying on mattresses on the floor, not being fed or changed and not being socially distanced to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, which is currently ravaging the state.

A coroner classified three of the deaths as storm-related.

When a large team of state health inspectors showed up on Tuesday to investigat­e the warehouse, the owner of the nursing homes demanded that they leave immediatel­y, Louisiana Department of Health spokespers­on Aly Neel said.

Neel identified the owner as Bob Dean. The Associated Press called several numbers connected to Dean and attorneys who have represente­d him in the past, but they did not respond.

Dean told Baton Rouge television station WAFB that the inspectors were on his property illegally.

“We only had five deaths within the six days, and normally with 850 people, you’ll have a couple a day, so we did really good with taking care of people,” Dean said.

Louisiana’s health department said Friday that two dozen nursing homes have been evacuated from parishes hard-hit by Ida.

Gov. John Bel Edwards promised a full investigat­ion and “aggressive legal action” if warranted and said none of the other nursing homes were having issues.

Biden has promised full federal support to Gulf Coast states and the Northeast, where Ida’s remnants dumped record-breaking rain and killed at least 50 people from Virginia to Connecticu­t.

At least 13 deaths were blamed on the storm in Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama, including the three nursing home residents. Several deaths in the aftermath of the storm were blamed on carbon monoxide poisoning, which can happen if generators are run improperly.

“The most dangerous part of a hurricane is after the storm,” said Entergy New Orleans CEO Deanna Rodriguez, who asked people to be careful around generators. “Here it’s sadly happening again.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM ?? Downed power lines slump over a road Friday in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida in Reserve, La.
AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM Downed power lines slump over a road Friday in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida in Reserve, La.

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