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Louisiana has yet to recover from two hurricanes; another is on the way

2021-08-28T22:15:08.674Z


Louisiana has yet to recover from two major hurricanes in 2020. Now Ida is threatening the US Gulf Coast.


Ida would hit Louisiana as a Category 4 hurricane 0:49

(CNN) -

Last year's hurricane season devastated parts of Louisiana relentlessly.

In August 2020, Hurricane Laura made landfall in Louisiana as a Category 4, causing a "catastrophic" storm with up to 5 meters of water above ground level.

The storm killed dozens of people in the state and inflicted $ 17.5 billion in damage.

Two months later, Hurricane Zeta, Category 3, left half a million people without power and caused $ 1.25 billion in damage.

  • "Time is not on our side."

    The Gulf Coast prepares for the arrival of Hurricane Ida on Sunday, potentially a Category 4

In all, five named storms impacted Louisiana in 2020. While the state still reeling from destruction, another major hurricane is heading for the coast.

Ida is rapidly intensifying over the Gulf of Mexico, and is expected to make landfall in Louisiana as a major hurricane - Category 3 or stronger - this Sunday, the same date Hurricane Katrina made landfall 16 years ago.

Hurricanes are common on the Gulf Coast, but the damage expected from Ida may make Louisiana's already devastated infrastructure apparent.

Sabarethinam Kameshwar, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Louisiana State University, said the repeated nature of hurricanes in the Gulf has taken a significant toll on people's lives.

Many Lake Charles residents whose homes were washed away by recent disasters have spent the past few months rebuilding and living in hotels or temporary shelters, he said.

Some are still waiting for federal disaster aid to arrive.

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"As these hurricanes hit back-to-back, there are multiple impacts for the people whose homes were damaged during Laura," Kameshwar told CNN.

"Many of those houses have not yet been repaired, so for people who already have their houses damaged, they could suffer more damage and [the hurricane] will make things worse."

Roishetta Ozane, 36, a mother of six, is one of those residents.

Ozane's family has lived in trailers provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency since back-to-back hurricanes in 2020, which were followed by a crippling winter storm and severe flooding.

She used to live in subsidized housing that has yet to be rebuilt, and as a single mother, she can't afford an apartment big enough to house a family of seven.

"We are on the first anniversary of Hurricane Laura, having to flee from another storm," Ozane told CNN.

"People are very emotional because a year later, we are still looking at the area looking the same as it did when we returned last year after the evacuation was lifted."

Louisiana residents are now preparing for Hurricane Ida.

Emergency officials have urged residents to get out of the way of the storm, which features oil and gas facilities that could also pose an environmental hazard if damaged.

On Thursday, Governor John Bel Edwards declared a state of emergency, noting that the region is still recovering from the 2020 season.

"We are not recovered. Far from it," the governor said of the impacts of hurricanes Laura and Delta last year.

"We still have businesses covered since the last (hurricane). The houses have not yet been repaired and reoccupied. Or if they are damaged to the point of needing to be demolished and removed, in many cases that has not happened either."

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Retired Lt. Gen. Russell Honoré, the widely praised former commander who led relief efforts in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, said evacuation efforts have proven even more challenging during the pandemic.

Last year, Lake Charles residents were evacuated to New Orleans, but the spread of the coronavirus prevented emergency services from using the usual large evacuation sites.

Due to low vaccination rates in the South, Honoré said the storm could exacerbate the pandemic, making emergency response difficult.

"When they leave, wherever they go, they can take more covid with them, whether they go north to Louisiana or to a hotel in Tennessee, he said." It provides a container for the virus to spread outside of Louisiana, because people refuses to get the injections. "

Honoré said state and federal officials must evacuate people who live in mobile homes, like Ozane and his family, and those who live in low-lying areas as soon as Saturday.

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Heavy traffic as people flee New Orleans on August 28, 2005. The next day, Katrina made landfall as a Category 3 hurricane with winds nearing 204 kilometers per hour.

Sean Gardner / EPA / Shutterstock

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Strong winds hit the roof of the Backyard Barbeque restaurant in Kenner, Louisiana, as Katrina made landfall on August 29, 2005. Irwin Thompson / The Dallas Morning News / AP

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Arnold James was trying to stay upright when a strong gust of wind nearly knocked him down in New Orleans.

The roof of his house was destroyed, forcing him to seek refuge in the Superdome.

Dave Martin / AP

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National Guard trucks were transporting New Orleans residents to the Superdome a day after the hurricane flooded their neighborhoods.

About 25,000 people were evacuated and took refuge in the stadium.

Eric Gay / AP

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Police Officer Terrence Gray helps Lovie Mae Allen and a group of children evacuate their flooded homes in Gulfport, Mississippi.

John Bazemore / AP

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A man swims around Circle Food Store in flooded New Orleans.

Rick Wilking RTW / PN / Reuters

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The hands of Shirley Ward, 40, affected by humidity, after being rescued on Rocheblave Street in New Orleans.

Douglas R. Clifford / St. Petersburg Times / AP

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Paramedic David Mitchell examines Greg Farteberry on the roof of a destroyed house in New Orleans as Farteberry's friend Eric Charles holds his hand.

Farteberry broke his ankle during the storm and spent the night on the roof until he was rescued.

Arthur D. Lauck / The Advocate Press / AP

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A New Orleans resident carries bottled water as she walks through floodwaters, amid water laced with gasoline in the city center.

Bill Haber / AP

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A mother and her children are rescued by boat in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans.

Mario Tama / Getty Images

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Coast Guard Petty Officer Second Class Scott D. Rady carries a pregnant woman out of her flooded New Orleans home.

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Evelyn Turner cries alongside the body of her longtime partner, Xavier Bowie, after his death in New Orleans.

Turner and Bowie decided to stay in place during Hurricane Katrina when they couldn't find their way out of town.

Bowie, who had lung cancer, died when he ran out of oxygen.

He was 57 years old.

Eric Gay / AP

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Flood waters run through a levee along the Inner Harbor Canal near downtown New Orleans.

Vincent Laforet / Pool / AP

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New Orleans Police Officer Mark Wilson yells at people looting Canal Street stores.

After Katrina, many questioned whether some of the people accused of looting were just people looking for the supplies they needed to survive.

Khampa Bouaphanh / Fort Worth Star-Telegram / TNS / ABACA / Reuters

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A portion of the Mississippi Bridge connecting Ocean Springs to Biloxi was washed away by the storm.

Marc Serota / Reuters

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In this photograph provided by the White House, President George W. Bush observes the devastation of Katrina as he travels on Air Force One back to Washington, DC.

Paul Morse / Handout / White House / Getty Images

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New Orleans police and volunteers use boats to rescue residents of a flooded neighborhood on the east side of New Orleans.

Eric Gay / AP

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Cars piled up in rubble in Gulfport, Mississippi.

David J. Phillip / AP

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Boats pass through a flooded highway in New Orleans.

Marc Serota / Reuters

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The Stump family remains in their car in Biloxi, Mississippi, after Katrina destroyed their home. Jared Lazarus / Miami Herald / KRT / ABACA / Reuters

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New Orleans residents are rescued by a helicopter on August 31, 2005, two days after Katrina made landfall.

David J. Phillip / AP

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Members of the National Guard, standing in the foreground, monitor evacuees who took refuge in the New Orleans Superdome.

The beam of light came from a hole in the ceiling of the dome.

Melissa Phillip / AP

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On the left, Tam Cu, Jason Jackson and Linda Bryant search for belongings from Bryant's house, which was devastated in Biloxi, Mississippi.

Barbara Davidson / The Dallas Morning News / AP

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Jason Jennison, a US Coast Guard rescue aviation technician, carries a Katrina survivor aboard a helicopter in New Orleans.

Sam Wolfe / AP

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Residents wait to be rescued from a rooftop in New Orleans on September 1, 2005. David J. Phillip / Pool / AP

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Wind and water damage to the roof of the Superdome threatened the safety of the site, prompting authorities to conduct emergency evacuations.

Phil Coale / AP

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Members of the National Guard stand outside the Superdome while, moved, the evacuees await their next destination.

Michael Appleton / NY Daily News / Getty Images

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A dead body floats as people push a boat out of the Superdome on September 2, 2005. John Pendygraft / The St. Petersburg Times / AP

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A military helicopter delivers food and water near the Convention Center in New Orleans.

Eric Gay / AP

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Thousands of New Orleans residents gather at an evacuation area along Interstate 10 in Metairie, Louisiana.

Dave Martin / AP

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Terri Jones tries to cool Dorthy Divic, an 89-year-old man who was overheated and exhausted at the New Orleans Convention Center.

Eric Gay / AP

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This aerial photo shows a flooded neighborhood adjacent to the 12th Street levee in New Orleans.

Vincent Laforet / The New York Times / Redux

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Charlene Veillon hugs her grandson Thearon Ellis after learning that her daughter Joanna Ellis was killed during Hurricane Katrina in Waveland, Mississippi.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

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A man clings to the top of a vehicle in New Orleans before being rescued by the Coast Guard.

Robert Galbraith / Reuters

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A man watches Katrina evacuees who received food, shelter and medical care at the Houston Astrodome.

Carlos Barria / Reuters

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Eugene Green holds her baby, Eugene Jr., as they wait to be airlifted from an elevated location on a freeway in New Orleans on September 4, 2005. Mario Tama / Getty Images

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Leonard Thomas cries after a SWAT team broke into the flooded New Orleans home where he and his family lived.

Neighbors had reported occupying a home in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, but authorities left after her family proved they owned the home.

Rick Bowmer / AP

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Many Lake Charles residents, like Ozane, are still reeling from the destruction they faced during Laura and the extreme floods in May.

Due to the cascading disasters he suffered last year, he intends to evacuate his family to Houston as soon as possible.

"It's very scary," he commented.

"It brings so many feelings that we have not yet recovered and we have already lost everything. We have not received any supplemental funding to help us get further from where we were last year."

  • The Deadliest and Costliest Hurricanes in U.S. History

Scientists say the climate crisis is making tropical cyclones worse, as ocean water and warmer air temperatures provide more fuel for storms.

The recent report of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that the increase in the intensity of tropical storms in the last 40 years cannot be explained solely by natural causes, and that humans are a factor that contributes to the heating.

"We have good confidence that greenhouse warming increases the maximum wind intensity that tropical cyclones can reach," Jim Kossin, senior scientist with the Climate Service, an organization that provides climate risk modeling and analysis to governments, previously told CNN. and companies.

"This, in turn, allows the strongest hurricanes - which create the greatest risk by far - to get even stronger."

The aftermath of Hurricane Delta in Holly Beach, Louisiana, on October 11, 2020. Delta weakened into a tropical depression as it moved inland over northeastern Louisiana, drenching an area still recovering from Hurricane Laura .

Allison Wing, assistant professor of atmospheric sciences at Florida State University, said scientists have found that hurricane rains become more intense, leading to more flooding.

He also noted that "compound events", when multiple disasters occur in succession, have an increasingly significant impact.

"In addition to having hurricane after hurricane, you could have hurricane and then experience extreme flooding," Wing told CNN.

"And then you also have to worry about these things happening not just in the same place at the same time, but also within the same region or country."

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After the gulf was hit by back-to-back hurricanes and wildfires ravaged the west coast, a historic winter storm devastated Texas and parts of Louisiana.

Wing said compound events, whether in the same region or country, reduce emergency resources.

"That's something that national organizations like FEMA have to manage, how to deploy their resources on multiple threats in multiple areas," he explained.

"So this problem of compound events of all kinds of extremes is only going to become a bigger problem in the future."

Hurricanes are driven by warm ocean water.

As the planet warms, hurricanes can become more frequent and more intense.

Wing noted that it is still scientifically uncertain how the number of hurricanes will evolve over time, but it is important to prepare for the many dangers that lie ahead as the climate crisis amplifies extreme weather.

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Ozane, who now leads a disaster response group called The Vessel Project based in Lake Charles, said emergency management systems and disaster policies also need to be reworked, because the people who need the most assistance generally don't. they receive due to barriers and social inequalities.

"Southwest Louisiana will not be a climate sacrifice," he said.

"We need to make sure the federal government and everyone else hasn't forgotten about us."

This is what the effect of climate change looks like in North America 0:57

Hurricane

Source: cnnespanol

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