From News Nation:
“‘We are doing the best we
can’: FEMA providing relief to hurricane damaged New Orleans”
Hundreds of emergency responders
were in place in Louisiana and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had power
restoration experts and generators at the ready as Hurricane Ida hit on Sunday
as one of the most powerful hurricanes to make landfall in the U.S., federal
officials said. New Orleans residents faced a massive cleanup effort and
possibly weeks without power. Whole toppled trees blocked streets, pulled down
power lines, covered yards and damaged homes. Ida was blamed for at least one
death — someone hit by a falling tree outside Baton Rouge. But with many roads
impassable and cellphone service knocked out in places, the full extent of its
fury was still coming into focus. President Joe Biden remarked in a briefing
with FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, WH advisor Cedric Richmond and other
state officials that, “We are doing the best we can” with disaster response. The
president said Monday that state officials should contact the White House if
they need additional support — even though the effort is being led by FEMA. “We’ll
get you what you need if we can,” Biden said. “The people of Louisiana and
Mississippi are resilient. But it’s in moments like these where we can
certainly see the power of government to respond to the needs of the people, if
government’s prepared and if they respond.”
The Coast Guard prepositioned
vessels for “deep water search and rescue efforts,” and Biden said federal
support would remain in the region for “as long as it takes.” Much of the
response began days before landfall and included special precautions due to the
coronavirus pandemic, the White House said. FEMA deployed more than 100 ground
ambulances and 20 air ambulances were deployed to help evacuate nursing homes
in the storm’s path. During the storm, four Louisiana hospitals were damaged
and 39 medical facilities were operating on generator power, the Federal
Emergency Management Agency said. Precautions were also being taken to prevent
the spread of COVID-19 at the large shelters the American Red Cross is opening,
including masking, rapid testing and social distancing.
The governor’s office said over
2,200 evacuees were staying in 41 shelters as of Monday morning, a number
expected to rise as people were rescued or escaped from flooded homes. Stephens
said the state will work to move people to hotels as soon as possible so that
they can keep their distance from one another. “This is a COVID nightmare,” she
said, adding: “We do anticipate that we could see some COVID spikes related to
this.” U.S. health officials Monday declared public health emergencies for
Louisiana and Mississippi, seeking to suspend government red tape that may get
in the way of providing help to people affected by Hurricane Ida. The emergency
declaration by Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra puts a pause
on certain payment rules and other requirements that could become an unwelcome
distraction for hospitals and doctors trying to provide services under
stressful conditions. Rescuers set out in hundreds of boats and helicopters to
reach people trapped by floodwaters and utility crews mobilized Monday after a
furious Hurricane Ida swamped the Louisiana coast and made a shambles of the
electrical grid in the sticky, late-summer heat.
FEMA deployed 10 Incident
Management Assistance Teams to support states — six in Louisiana, two in
Alabama and two in Mississippi — and said three more teams were on standby to
deploy if needed. More than 2,400 FEMA employees were in Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas and ready to provide additional help,
FEMA said. Environmental Protection Agency spokeswoman Jennah Durant said the
agency’s personnel are coordinating with FEMA as well as state and local
authorities in Louisiana. She said the agency had contacted the owners and
operators of the 23 highly polluted Superfund sites in the state to ensure
prestorm security preparations were being made. Biden approved an emergency
disaster declaration for Louisiana on Friday, which authorized direct federal
help for all 64 parishes, including power generation, air transportation,
wildlife management assistance and water management. The White House said Biden
also spoke with the governors of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama “to make
clear that States have the full support of the Federal government to provide
assistance as needed and to aid local emergency response efforts.” Edwards told
CBS’ “Face the Nation” on Sunday that Ida was a “major, major storm” that will
test the state in ways it hasn’t been tested before, as it happens along with
the pandemic. “It’s impossible today to say how long the power will be out. And
that begins to test your systems,” Edwards said, “whether it’s the opportunity
to deliver water to the hospitals. You can’t run a ventilator without
electricity.”
^ It seems that while Ida brough
damage and power outages and didn’t bring the devastation they said it
would - when they compared it to
Katrina. ^
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