Dayton Daily News

New Orleans looks warily at more rain, possible floods

City scrambles to fix damaged drainage system equipment.

- By Janet McConnaugh­ey

NEW ORLEANS —

With debris from last weekend’s flash flood still piled up on sidewalks and their city under a state of emergency, New Orleans residents looked ahead warily on Friday to

the prospect of more rain to tax the city’s malfunctio­ning pump system.

Tammy Butler went through Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and was reliving

the stress this week. But- ler says she can’t afford to rebuild her home and life a second time.

“I am angry, and I am sick of it,” Butler said. “If people keep getting floods, I’m just going to have to leave the city.”

The city scrambled to repair fire-damaged equip- ment at a power plant and shore up its drainage sys- tem less than a week after a flash flood from torrential rain overwhelme­d the city’s pumping system and inundated many neighborho­ods.

A control panel on one of two working turbines had been fixed by Friday morning, but the system remains well below full power, Mayor Mitch Landrieu said at a morning news conference. The turbine powers some of the city’s pumps.

“We remain at risk until additional turbines are back up,” Landrieu said, adding that he hopes that will happen by the end of the month. Still, he said, “Panic is not where we need to be right now.”

He said the latest to go offline will be powered up over 24 hours. Meanwhile, Landrieu said, 26 generators have been ordered and will remain through hurricane season.

He also said a location would be set up Friday for residents to get sandbags should they want to take the extra precaution of sandbag- ging their homes.

Schools closed for the week, and the mayor urged residents to park their cars on high ground.

Gov. John Bel Edwards described his emergency declaratio­n Thursday as a precaution­ary measure.

The National Weather Service forecast a 60 per- cent chance of rain Friday, primarily during the late morning and afternoon, with a chance that heavy rainfall could lead to more flooding.

The city’s infrastruc­ture had been crumbling for years before the devastatio­n unleashed in 2005 by levee breaches in Hurricane Katrina’s aftermath. The federal government earmarked billions of dollars for repairs and upgrades after the hurricane, but the problems have persisted.

Streets are pockmarked with potholes and sinkholes. The city’s water system has been plagued by leaks from broken pipes and power outages leading to boil water advisories.

New Orleans’ municipal pumping system is supposed to move water out of the low-lying city. Having the system crippled in August, the middle of hurricane season, could not come at a worse time for New Orleans.

But officials feared that even a common thundersto­rm would test the system’s reduced capacity.

“With great prayer and a lot of hard work, hopefully we’ll be OK,” the mayor said.

Earlier this week, city offi- cials and spokespeop­le had said repeatedly that all 24 pumping stations were work- ing at full capacity.

But the system failed to keep up with a storm that dropped 9.4 inches of rain in three hours. While that was considerab­ly more than the system is designed for, even when everything is working, it turned out the system was malfunctio­ning.

City Council members were then told that pumping stations in two of the hardest-hit areas went down to half to two-thirds capacity today, news outlets reported.

“It is unacceptab­le that the public was not only uninformed, but misinforme­d as to our drainage system functional­ity during the flood,” Council Member LaToya Cantrell said in a statement.

Cedric Grant, one of the mayor’s top deputies and head of the Sewerage & Water Board, told the City Council on Tuesday that he would retire at the end of hurricane season, which lasts through November.

Public Works Director Mark Jernigan submitted his resignatio­n shortly after the council meeting, when he was asked whether his agency had done enough to clean the catch basins that feed the drainage system.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT / AP ?? Andrea Dube (right) and John Flemming fill sandbags Friday as a precaution for the potential of more flooding from rain storms in New Orleans.
GERALD HERBERT / AP Andrea Dube (right) and John Flemming fill sandbags Friday as a precaution for the potential of more flooding from rain storms in New Orleans.

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