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Isaac exits Louisiana, leaving behind floods, outages and people in need

Gina Gibson gives a thumbs up as she and her husband, Richard, make their way down Saracennia Road in the Helena community in Jackson County, Mississippi, on Friday, August 31, 2012, after rain from Hurricane Isaac caused flooding in the area. The two walked through chest-deep water to get from their house to dry land.

By Tina Susman and Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles Times –

NEW ORLEANS — Isaac pushed north and out of Louisiana on Friday, leaving behind swaths of misery here — flooded neighborhoods, power outages in humid heat, thousands seeking help in emergency shelters and thousands more lined up for post-storm necessities.

Officials raised the hurricane-related death toll to seven, five in Louisiana, two in Mississippi, and residents in another outlying parish were advised to evacuate because of flooding from a nearby lake.

Yet there were signs of a slow recovery as businesses began to open and clean-up continued. By Saturday officials had hoped to restore power to all but 10 percent of households in the state, down from 26 percent late Friday. And about 4,368 people stayed overnight in shelters Friday across the state, about 1,700 less than Thursday.

Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney toured flooded areas to the south of New Orleans in Jefferson Parish on Friday, and President Barack Obama is expected to arrive Monday.

While New Orleans’ newly bolstered, $10 billion levee system stood up to its first post-Katrina test, Hurricane Isaac tore into another weakness: the lack of improvements to flood control systems in outlying parishes, where hundreds of homes have been flooded and residents suffered through the worst of the storm’s impact.

Samuel George was displaced twice in the chaos: first when water swamped his Plaquemines Parish home, and Friday when his shelter shut down.

“I probably will never actually go home again,” the slightly built man in an oversized shirt and pants said as he stood outside the YMCA in Belle Chasse.

Plaquemines Parish, an area outside the federal levee zone that protected New Orleans, was the site of some of the worst flooding from Isaac that made landfall Tuesday night. George figured he could ride out this Category 1storm. But it only took a few hours for his luck to run out.

“I woke up and heard some watery noises,” he said. He reached down and felt water. “I got up and thought, ‘This is bad.’” George smelled gas, tried to open the door to escape, but it wouldn’t budge. He finally pushed it open only to see his porch floated off in the raging, rapidly rising water.

Like scores of neighbors, George climbed to his roof and waited. Eventually, someone came and loaded the trio into a boat.

On Friday, parish officials announced his YMCA shelter was closing. “They sprung it on us this morning,” said George, who opted to join fellow “refugees,” as he called them, boarding buses to another shelter in Shreveport. He planned to stay with a friend until he can return to Braithwaite and check on his trailer.

“I’m sure I can’t salvage anything,” he said.

After three to four days of virtual lockdown at home without power, thousands of lined up in their cars Friday at the Alario Center in the Jefferson Parish town of Westwego to pick up post-hurricane necessities being handed by the Louisiana National Guard. Keith White brought his wagon.

“They didn’t want to let me in — said only people in vehicles. I told ’em, ‘This is my truck,’” White said as he held onto a hand-drawn wooden cart, loaded with enough to keep him; his wife, Sharon; and their niece, Tina Penner, satisfied for another 24 hours. They received two bags of ice, one box containing 12 meals-ready-to-eat, and a plastic tarp in the event more rain falls on this sodden area.

The supplies did not contain any water — the distribution center had run out hours earlier. Still, on a day when the temperatures neared 90, and when humidity wasn’t far below that, the people streaming through in their cars — and with the occasional wagon — seemed grateful for whatever they received.

“God bless you!” one woman yelled happily as she drove off. “You’re my angel!” hollered another, waving out the window.

The distribution numbers illustrated the level of need: about 2,000 MRE boxes; 7,656 bags of ice; 400 knives and forks; more than 4,400 cases of water. The station was due to remain open until 8 p.m. Friday, assuming the supplies lasted.

In Ascension Parish, about 60 miles west of New Orleans, a voluntary evacuation was announced due to flooding from nearby Lake Maurepas that struck at least 10 homes.

The parish, home to about 120,000, saw the worst flooding in many residents’ lifetimes — worse than Katrina, floods in 1983 and 1977, according to Ascension Parish spokesman Lester Kenyon.

“This is a historical event,” Kenyon said, “So much water has remained here, the whole region, the Lake Pontchartrain basin and Lake Maurepas is filling up.”

Five pumps at a levee on the east side of the parish were “just blasting” Friday, he said, pumping 1,000 cubic feet of water per second back into Lake Maurepas. But that was causing another problem, Kenyon said: “It’s backing up toward us.”

Col. Edward R. Fleming, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers New Orleans district commander said his staff will assess the Isaac flooding in outlying parishes for future flood control projects.

Western Lake Pontchartrain water levels began to recede Friday, but was still 4 feet above normal, Gov. Bobby Jindal said at a Friday briefing.

“Even though the storm has moved out of Louisiana, we continue to see lakes and rivers with elevated levels. Some of these rivers could be at flood levels well into next week,” Jindal said.

Jindal said that his touring of storm-ravaged areas Thursday left him “in awe of the resilience and generosity of our people.”

He highlighted one man in particular, a caretaker at a nursing home in Plaquemines Parish who stayed on the job during Isaac just as he had during Hurricane Katrina. This time, just as had happened during Katrina, the man lost his home.

Jeanne Turlich fled her home in the fishing town of Venice, in Plaquemines Parish, and weathered the storm in her SUV with her two dogs. She was still there Friday. Turlich said she didn’t want to be separated from her Chihuahua, Dawlyn, or her cocker spaniel, Tiny Girl, who she walked in a parking lot late Friday.

“I’m still here, so God is with me,” she said.

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