Home USA Tropical Storm Barry pelts Louisiana, millions brace for flooding

Tropical Storm Barry pelts Louisiana, millions brace for flooding

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Face of Nation : Major storm Barry slammed into Louisiana on Saturday, pelting the region with heavy rain and ferocious winds as millions of Americans braced for the serious flooding expected to follow.

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.

At 4:00 pm (2100 GMT), the storm was packing winds of 65 miles (100 kilometers) per hour, the National Hurricane Center said, and was located near the city of Lafayette, moving north-northwest at seven mph.

“Much of the rain associated with Tropical Storm #Barry this weekend over Louisiana and Mississippi will be lagging behind the center of the storm,” the National Weather Service said in a tweet.

Heavier rain was expected late Saturday, spreading north on Sunday, with 10 to 20 inches (25 to 50 centimeters) in the forecast.

In St. John’s Parish next to New Orleans, some areas were already under two or more feet (60 centimeters) of water, local television footage showed.

“The people of Louisiana are resilient, and while the next few days may be challenging, I am confident that we are going to get through this,” Governor John Bel Edwards said. 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.

River levels are expected to peak at just over 17 feet, according to Saturday’s forecast by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

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