Los Angeles Times

Louisiana expects long recovery

Governor says state doesn’t have enough hotel rooms for all displaced by storm.

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BATON ROUGE, La. — Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards on Thursday urged people sheltering in hotels in Texas to stay there if possible, saying Louisiana is having difficulty finding available hotel rooms for more evacuees after Hurricane Laura.

More than 92,000 people had registered for assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency by midday Thursday, he said at a news conference in Baton Rouge.

Nearly 12,000 people were being sheltered by the state, largely in hotels.

“We don’t think we would be able to quickly absorb another 2, 3, 4,000 people into our hotels,” the governor said.

The number of those in shelters has risen steadily as damage to homes and a lack of power or running water in large areas of the state made an increasing number of homes uninhabita­ble. More than 205,000 utility customers remained without power

Thursday, the Louisiana Public Service Commission said. Meanwhile, the state health department reported that 137,000 people faced water outages and that hundreds of thousands more needed to boil their water to make it safe for use.

Edwards said he is encouraged by the progress he’s seen in Lake Charles a week after the hurricane devastated the area. But he cautioned the recovery would be long.

Laura roared ashore as a Category 4 hurricane just south of Lake Charles near the town of Cameron, packing 150-mph winds and a storm surge up to 15 feet in some areas. State officials have called it the most powerful storm ever to hit Louisiana.

Twenty-five deaths in Louisiana and Texas have been attributed to the storm. Three more fatalities were reported Thursday by the Louisiana health department.

In Rapides Parish, a 65year-old man and a 50-yearold man died from medical conditions exacerbate­d by excessive heat after losing electricit­y.

Elsewhere, the fifth member of a family had succumbed to carbon monoxide poisoning in Calcasieu Parish.

 ?? David J. Phillip Associated Press ?? HOMES AND OTHER buildings in Cameron, La., are submerged last week after Hurricane Laura swept through the Gulf Coast. As of Thursday, the state was sheltering nearly 12,000 people, largely in hotels.
David J. Phillip Associated Press HOMES AND OTHER buildings in Cameron, La., are submerged last week after Hurricane Laura swept through the Gulf Coast. As of Thursday, the state was sheltering nearly 12,000 people, largely in hotels.

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