Tropical Storm Barry pelts Louisiana, millions brace for flooding

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INTRACOASTAL CITY, United States, July 14, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Authorities
warned of heavy rain and possible tornadoes throughout Saturday as major
storm Barry buffeted Louisiana, though there were few indications of
widespread flooding.

After briefly becoming the first hurricane of the Atlantic season, Barry
was downgraded to a tropical storm after making landfall — but it
nevertheless packed a serious punch as it moved inland.

All flights in and out of the airport in the state’s biggest city New
Orleans were cancelled, thousands had evacuated their homes, tens of
thousands had lost power and first responders were poised for action.

Fears that the levee system in New Orleans could be compromised had eased
after the Army Corps of Engineers voiced confidence that it would hold, but
Mayor LaToya Cantrell urged residents not to be complacent.

“We are not in any way out of the woods,” she said, adding that flash
flooding could still occur into Sunday.

Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards said the storm would intensify into
Sunday, with many areas seeing more rain overnight than they had during the
day.

“Don’t let your guard down thinking the worst is behind us,” he told a
press conference.

At 10:00 pm (0300 GMT), the storm was packing winds of 50 miles (85
kilometers) per hour, the National Hurricane Center said, and was located
southwest of the city of Alexandria, moving north-northwest at eight mph.

“Barry is still very much a dangerous storm with impacts only increasing
through Sunday,” the National Weather Service said in a tweet.

The storm was expected to chug north across inland Louisiana into Sunday,
while tornado warnings were issued for areas of New Orleans and parts of the
neighboring state of Mississippi.

Rainfall estimates had been lowered to between eight and 15 inches (20 to
38 centimeters) but an AFP journalist said rivers and canals across South
Louisiana were full.

The heavy winds had scattered tree branches across roads and knocked over
road signs, and in St. John’s Parish next to New Orleans, local television
footage showed some areas under two or more feet (60 centimeters) of water.

– Cajun Navy –

The eye of the storm made landfall at Intracoastal City, a speck of a town
with a few houses and businesses. Part of the main road was flooded Saturday
afternoon, as were some waterfront businesses, with water rising by the
minute.

News footage showed localized flooding, swollen waterways, and downed power
lines and trees across south Louisiana as rivers overtopped their levees in
several locations, including part of coastal Terrebonne Parish where
authorities had issued a mandatory evacuation notice.

The Atchafalaya River had swallowed the waterfront pedestrian promenade in
Morgan City, which was entirely without power, as about 10 members of
America’s Cajun Navy citizen rescue group assembled under a highway overpass.

“We’re just neighbors helping neighbors,” John Billiot, 39, the group’s
president, told AFP.

They have been conducting volunteer rescues since Hurricane Katrina in
2005, and were equipped with five flat-bottom rescue boats, a high-clearance,
military-style truck and 86 boats staged in the region in preparation for the
latest storm.

“We’re still waiting. Barry is playing peek-a-boo with us,” Billiot said.

For many, the storm and potential for large-scale flooding revived
unpleasant memories of deadly Hurricane Katrina.

Thousands have packed up and left their homes as floodwaters hit low-lying
areas like Plaquemines Parish, where road closures left some communities
isolated.

Others hunkered down to ride out the squall, despite mandatory evacuation
orders and the risk of dangerous storm surges.

“Category one, I’d say, is not much to worry about. A one? That’s a
thunderstorm. I’ll be back to work Monday,” William Manuel, a maintenance
worker living in Bayou Vista, not far from Morgan City, told AFP.

– Dangerous conditions –

Louisiana is facing an extraordinarily dangerous confluence of conditions,
experts say.

The level of the Mississippi River, already swollen from historic rains and
flooding upstream, was at nearly 17 feet (5.2 meters) in New Orleans — just
below flood stage.

However, Edwards said new forecasts show many rivers wouldn’t reach their
maximum height predicted before the storm hit, though flash floods remained a
threat.

US Senator Bill Cassidy said officials with the Army Corps of Engineers
told him they were “confident” that the 20-foot-high levee system protecting
New Orleans, a city of 400,000, would hold.

“There’s still going to be two to three feet between the top of the levee
and the top of the floodwaters,” Cassidy told Fox News.

In 2005, Katrina — the costliest and deadliest hurricane in recent US
history — submerged about 80 percent of New Orleans after the city’s levee
system failed, causing some 1,800 deaths and more than $150 billion in
damage.