Hurricane Isaac storm surge tops levee in Plaquemines Parish
A storm surge pounds the seawall along Lake Pontchartrain as Isaac makes landfall. (AP)
A storm surge from Hurricane
Isaac topped a levee in Plaquemines Parish south of New Orleans early
Wednesday, officials said, trapping those who chose not to evacuate.
Plaquemines Parish president
Billy Nungesser said the 18-mile, 8-foot-high levee--which is not part
of the $1.5 billion federal levee system constructed after Hurricane
Katrina--was in the process of being raised.
"The levees are topping in
several locations," Nungresser said on CNN. "We're trying to get the few
people who have stayed out. ... We've got a serious situation over
there."
Isaac made landfall at 6:45 p.m.
CDT Tuesday in Plaquemines Parish, and the slow-moving Category 1
hurricane--now centered about 50 miles southwest of New Orleans with
maximum sustained winds topping 80 mph--is expected to dump as much as
20 inches of rain in several parts of Louisiana.
"Not only did we see the worst case scenario, it got worse than that
by this storm just stalling," Nungresser said. "So the levees can only
take so much."Nungresser said there were reports of up to 12 feet of water in some homes. "This is something I've never seen before," Nungresser said. "And I rode out Katrina."
He said three parish residents,
including a woman on a roof, were saved by a private boat. Rescue
workers were waiting for conditions to improve--and skies to
lighten--before attempting other rescues.
"We're working with U.S. Coast Guard to rescue people stranded on top of levee," Nungresser said at a press conference.
The southern end of the parish was under a mandatory evacuation order, though it's not clear how many residents followed it.
"There are homes inundated and
some folks trapped by water in those homes," Guy Laigast, director of
homeland security for Plaquemines Parish, told the Weather Channel.
Meanwhile, more than 500,000 customers were left without power in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi, utility companies said. According to the Associated Press, most of the outages are in areas around New Orleans.
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