Even as thousands of residents of southern Louisiana are returning to their flood-damaged homes, more danger could lie ahead as rain continues to fall and the full extent of the damage can't be known, according to state emergency response officials.
Preliminary casualty and damage reports are chilling.
As we reported previously
"We still have to go out with FEMA to get a comprehensive assessment of the damage," said Steele. "It's still early in this process."
So far, about 70,000 people have applied for federal assistance, said Steele. And that number could climb, he said, with reports of more rain in some southeastern parishes. Steele said the opening of schools could be delayed for days.
In the most heavily damaged parish, Livingston, east of Baton Rouge, about 75 percent of the homes were destroyed, according to the Associated Press. That parish is home to about 138,000 people.
Almost 15,000 homes were flooded in nearby Ascension Parish, Richard Webre, director of that parish's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, told
the Los Angeles Times
In a statement, Brad Kieserman, vice president for disaster services operations and logistics for the Red Cross, estimated the relief cost will be at least $30 million. "The current flooding in Louisiana is the worst natural disaster to strike the United States since Superstorm Sandy," said Kieserman.
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