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430,000 still without power 9 days after Hurricane Ida - PBS NewsHour

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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses still didn’t have power Tuesday and more than half of the gas stations in two major cities were without fuel more than a week after Hurricane Ida slammed into Louisiana, splintering homes and toppling electric lines across the state.

There were also persistent signs of recovery, however, as the total number of people without electricity has fallen from more than a million at its peak, while hundreds of thousands of people have had their water restored. AT&T, which suffered widespread cellphone outages after the storm, reported that its wireless network now is operating normally in Louisiana.

As residents struggled to recover, state organizations, church groups and volunteers labored for a ninth day to hand out food, water and other necessary supplies to those left without resources when their homes were destroyed or left uninhabitable.

Authorities, meanwhile, continued to investigate the deaths of seven senior citizens who were evacuated from nursing homes to a warehouse in the town of Independence, while hundreds of senior citizens were being taken care of at special needs shelters in other parts of the state.

The power situation has improved greatly since Ida first hit. In the first hours after the storm, nearly 1.1 million customers were in the dark — including all of New Orleans. With the help of tens of thousands of workers from power companies in numerous states, the state’s biggest energy provider, Entergy, has been able to slowly bring electricity back, leaving only 19 percent of its customers in the region without power as of Tuesday.

For residents in the state’s four hardest-hit parishes in southeastern Louisiana, however, that number is little comfort. Fully 95 percent of those residents are still without power nine days after Ida slammed onshore with 150 mph winds (240 kph) on Aug. 29.

WATCH LIVE: Louisiana Gov. Edwards gives update on Hurricane Ida recovery efforts and COVID-19

Power probably won’t be widely restored to St. John the Baptist Parish until Sept. 17 and until Sept. 29 to Lafourche, St. Charles and Terrebonne parishes, Entergy said Monday. The parishes are home to about 300,000 people.

In St. John the Baptist, power has been restored to “a small pocket” of customers in the hard-hit town of LaPlace, Entergy Louisiana President and CEO Phillip May said in a Tuesday conference call. He didn’t say how many now have power there, but promised the number will rise as crews work their way into the community.

In contrast, nearly all power has been restored in the capital of Baton Rouge, and only 27 percent of homes and businesses are still suffering outages in New Orleans. Entergy said it expected to have the vast majority of New Orleans brought online by Wednesday. Once areas such as New Orleans have their power restored, Entergy is moving its crews into communities south and west of the city that saw more widespread damage, May said.

State Rep. Tanner Magee, the House’s second-ranking Republican who lives in the devastated city of Houma in Terrebonne Parish, said his region hasn’t received the attention that New Orleans’ less severe destruction from Ida has.

He questioned if Gov. John Bel Edwards “really understands how much devastation is in Terrebonne and Lafourche” parishes.

While water and food supplies are reaching the area, Magee noted most of the region’s hospitals are shuttered, lines to get gasoline to power up generators and vehicles involve hourslong waits and no temporary housing is available yet for first responders who have lost their own homes. Floodgates that protect the region from storm surge were damaged and haven’t been repaired if another storm heads that way, he said.

“Temporary housing now is the biggest thing,” Magee said Tuesday. “We have all these people with nowhere to go. Terrebonne Parish needs shelter for its workers so they can come back and rebuild. We haven’t even gotten any kind of response. I’m getting extremely frustrated,.”

As Entergy worked to get the lights turned on everywhere, the Louisiana Department of Health reported that the number of people without water had fallen from a peak of 850,000 to 58,000. Still, about about 850,000 people are being advised to boil their water for safety.

Fuel shortages also persisted. More than 50 percent of gas stations in New Orleans and Baton Rouge remained without gasoline Tuesday morning, according to GasBuddy.com.

Ida killed at least 13 people in Louisiana, many of them in the storm’s aftermath. Its remnants also brought historic flooding, record rains and tornados from Virginia to Massachusetts, killing at least 50 more people.

Seven nursing home residents in Louisiana died after being evacuated during Hurricane Ida to a warehouse in the town of Independence where conditions were later determined to be unhealthy and unsafe, according to state health officials who said they’ve launched an investigation into the facility.

In New Orleans, hundreds of seniors were evacuated from apartments after the electricity went out and some were trapped in wheelchairs on the top floors of their multi-story apartment complexes. The managers of some of the homes for seniors evacuated out of state without making sure the residents would be safe after the storm, New Orleans City Council member Kristin Palmer said Monday.

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430,000 still without power 9 days after Hurricane Ida - PBS NewsHour
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