-

 
logo
                                        Volume. 11716

500,000 U.S. homes remain without power after hurricane
PDF Print E-mail
Font Size Larger Font Smaller Font
Residents evacuate their flooded neighborhood, Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012, in LaPlace, La. (AP photo)
Residents evacuate their flooded neighborhood, Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012, in LaPlace, La. (AP photo)
Over half a million American homes and businesses across the Louisiana State remain without electricity as the full impact of Hurricane Isaac is emerging after storm clouds over the affected regions have cleared.
 
As cleanup operations got underway in New Orleans and surrounding areas across Louisiana on the U.S. coast of Gulf of Mexico on Friday, storm damage could reportedly exceed $2 billion. 
 
Local news reports have broadcast footage of abandoned neighborhoods that were swamped by feet-long flood waters, indicating that some residents may have lost most of their possessions during the first hurricane of the season to hit the U.S. in 2012.
 
Three quarters of New Orleans residents have reportedly remained in the dark since the slow-moving Isaac passed through Louisiana. 
 
Meanwhile, at least five people have been killed so far by the storm which brought over 20 inches of rain combined with violent winds, leaving entire neighborhoods under water. 
 
Prior to reaching Louisiana and other U.S. states along the Gulf of Mexico coastline, Isaac killed 24 people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic within three days. 
 
In August 2005, over 1,800 people were killed when Hurricane Katrina struck U.S. states on the Gulf’s coastline, breaking levees and causing major floods.
 
Meanwhile the remnants of Hurricane Isaac were grinding slowing northward early on Saturday with its center now deep into Missouri and the heavy rain stretching for hundreds of miles east into Illinois amid reports of tornadoes and high winds, meteorologists said.
 
Drought-stricken areas of Missouri and Illinois were easily absorbing the rain Friday and the system was expected to soak the region deep into Sunday, said Jayson Gosselin, meteorologist with the National Weather Service's St. Louis-area office, Reuters reported on Saturday.
 
“We have gotten pretty widespread light to moderate rain that has piled up,” Gosselin said. “The rain is certainly going to help our drought situation up here.”
 
Most places in the area were reporting 1 to 3 inches of rain by late on Friday and were expected to see up to 5 inches of rain through Sunday, though some might see “upwards of 5, 6, 7 inches,” Gosselin said.
 
A wide swath of central Illinois from west to east was expected to receive similar amounts of rain as the system slowly passes through the state, the weather service said.
The weather service received reports of two tornadoes in Illinois and one in Missouri on Friday that caused what looked like fairly minor damage, Gosselin said. Two possible storm tracks will probably be surveyed on Saturday, he said.
 
The rain has been fairly consistent, and due to drought conditions and low river levels there have not been any reports of flash flooding or river flooding so far in the area, he said.
 
The slow-moving tropical depression dropped up to 8.5 inches of rain in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, where there were several flash flood watches and warnings on Friday. Many more Arkansas cities reported rain totaling 5 inches or more.
 
The system was expected to gradually turn more east from the Mississippi River valley into the Ohio River valley by Saturday night, bringing heavy rain into the central Appalachians by Monday and Tuesday.
 
At least four deaths were attributed to Isaac in the Gulf Coast. Residents were cleaning up on Friday, looking for electricity to be restored slowly and energy companies were getting ready to resume operating offshore rigs.
 
Isaac was the first hurricane to strike the United States this year and hit New Orleans almost exactly seven years after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city, causing an estimated 1,800 deaths.
 
Isaac caused widespread flooding and property damage in the U.S. Gulf Coast region. More than 500,000 homes and businesses remained without electricity across Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas on Friday afternoon.
 
The system lingered over New Orleans for the better part of two days, providing a first and successful test of the city's new $14.5 billion flood-control system assembled after Katrina. Areas outside those flood protections fared worse.
 
At least one levee was overtopped southwest of New Orleans, leaving some homes under 12 feet of water. New Orleans was struck by 20 inches of rain, many other locations in Louisiana and Mississippi logged more than 10 inches of rain.
 
(Source: Agencies)

rssfeed socializeit
Socialize this
Subscribe to our RSS feed to stay in touch and receive all of TT updates right in your feed reader
Twitter Facebook Myspace Stumbleupon Digg Technorati aol blogger google reddit