Santa Cruz Sentinel

New hurricane menaces Louisiana

- By Rebecca Santana and Melinda Deslatte

NEW ORLEANS >> Louisiana residents confrontin­g the menace of a new hurricane weeks after one battered their communitie­s got stark warnings Thursday to brace for winds that could turn debris into missiles and to use the remaining hours before the storm strikes to take emergency precaution­s despite their weariness.

Forecasts showed Delta had strengthen­ed back into a Category 3 hurricane as it bore down on the state carrying winds of up to 115 mph (185 kph) and the potential to deliver a storm surge of up to 11 feet (3.4 meters) when it arrives on Friday evening.

The projected path included the southwest area of Louisiana where Category 4 Hurricane Laura made landfall less than two months ago.

The mayor of Lakes Charles, where thousands of residents remain without shelter following the earlier hurricane, told residents that even if their homes survived Laura, they shouldn’t assume that would be the case with Delta.

“This is not a bad dream. It’s not a test run. These are the cards that we have been dealt,” Nic Hunter said in a Facebook video. He added,

“I know that we’ve been through a lot, and I know that we’re tired. But we have a job to do right now, and that job is to keep ourselves safe.”

At least four southwest Louisiana parishes that were hit hard by Laura in August were under mandatory evacuation­s as of midday Thursday. Parish and local government­s all along the coast issued a patchwork of mandatory or voluntary evacuation orders, most focused on low-lying areas subject to flooding or on residents with special medical needs who might suffer in prolonged power outages.

Frankie Randazzo, 47, the partner of two restaurant­s in Lake Charles, said people in the city were extremely anxious ahead of the hurricane. Randazzo watched pieces of one of his restaurant­s, Panorama Music House, fly past a meteorolog­ist’s car on a Facebook Live video during Hurricane Laura.

“There’s a lot of nervous people and a lot of stress going around,” Randazzo said.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards reached out to residents ahead of Delta’s expected arrival, saying in text messages and a 30-second robocall they should “prepare now” and have emergency plans in place. Edwards said President Donald Trump approved his request to declare a federal emergency, which frees up federal resources.

The most recent forecast for Hurricane Delta has the storm making landfall “almost precisely” where Hurricane Laura struck — a region where homes and electrical infrastruc­ture are still damaged, Edwards said in a radio interview.

“And we’ve got people who are very tired,” the governor said.

This is the sixth time this year that people in Louisiana have had to get ready for an approachin­g hurricane. Residents lamented another round of evacuation­s and hurricane preparatio­ns amid the financial impact and worry of the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

 ?? CHRIS GRANGER — THE TIMES-PICAYUNE — THE NEW ORLEANS ADVOCATE VIA AP ?? Bernie Arnould, center, gets help from Kaden Ashley and D.J. Hebert, left, all with
Pelican Companies, as they board up the windows to the front of MC Bank in Amelia, La., Wednesday in preparatio­n for Hurricane Delta.
CHRIS GRANGER — THE TIMES-PICAYUNE — THE NEW ORLEANS ADVOCATE VIA AP Bernie Arnould, center, gets help from Kaden Ashley and D.J. Hebert, left, all with Pelican Companies, as they board up the windows to the front of MC Bank in Amelia, La., Wednesday in preparatio­n for Hurricane Delta.

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