Isaac Pelts Gulf Overflowing One Levee: Here’s What You Need to Know About the Hurricane This Morning
- Posted on August 29, 2012 at 7:29am by
Jonathon M. Seidl
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NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Hurricane Isaac knocked out power, flooded Gulf-front roads and pushed water over the top of an 18-mile section of a rural Louisiana levee before dawn Wednesday as it began a slow, wet slog across the state with a newly fortified New Orleans in its path.
Wind gusts and sheets of rain pelted the nearly empty streets of New Orleans, where people watched the incoming Isaac from behind levees that were strengthened after the much stronger Hurricane Katrina hit seven years ago to the day.
Water pushed by the large and powerful storm flooded over an 18-mile stretch of one levee in Plaquemines Parish south of New Orleans, flooding some homes in a thinly populated area. No injuries were reported.
Parish President Billy Nungesser said a portion of the roof of his home had blown off. He described wind-driven rain coming into his home as “like standing in a light socket with a fire hose turned on.”
Isaac was packing 80 mph winds, making it a Category 1 hurricane. It came ashore at 7:45 p.m. EDT Tuesday near the mouth of the Mississippi River, driving a wall of water nearly 11 feet high inland and soaking a neck of land that stretches into the Gulf of Mexico. Its next major target was New Orleans, 70 miles to the northwest, where forecasters said the city’s skyscrapers could feel gusts up to 100 mph.
Isaac‘s winds and sheets of rain were whipping through nearly empty streets in New Orleans while in neighboring Mississippi the storm pushed Gulf water over sections of the main beachfront highway that runs the length of the state’s shore.
Ryan Bernie, a spokesman for the city of New Orleans, said the storm had caused only some minor street flooding before dawn and felled trees but had left roughly 125,000 customers in the city without power.

Evan Stoudt faces strong winds while visiting the banks of Lake Pontchartrain in New Orleans on August 28, 2012 in Louisiana, where Hurrican Isaac has made landfall. The US National Hurricane Center said a 'dangerous storm surge' was occurring along the northern Gulf Coast with storm surges of up to eight feet (2.4 meters) already being reported in Louisiana, Mississippi and Florida. States of emergency have been declared in Louisiana and Mississippi, allowing authorities to coordinate disaster relief and seek emergency federal funds. Credit: AFP/Getty Images
In Mississippi, the main beachfront highway, U.S. 90, was closed in sections by storm surge flooding. At one spot in Biloxi, a foot of water covered the in-town highway for a couple of blocks and it looked like more was coming in. High tide around 9:30 a.m. was likely to bring up more water.
In largely abandoned Plaquemines Parish, storm surge was piling up against levees between the Gulf of Mexico and the Mississippi River along the boot of Louisiana. A levee on the parish’s evacuated east bank had been overtopped.
Plaquemines emergency management spokesman Caitlin Campbell said an 18-mile stretch along the thinly populated east bank was being overtopped by surge. Sheriff’s deputies were going house-to-house getting residents who’d remained after an earlier evacuation to move to higher ground. Campbell said no injuries were reported and streets were passable.
Hundreds of thousands of people were without power across the state’s southern parishes, including more than 250,000 in New Orleans and its suburbs, power provider Entergy reported.
Tens of thousands of people had been told ahead of Isaac to leave low-lying areas of Mississippi and Louisiana, including 700 patients of Louisiana nursing homes. Mississippi shut down the state’s 12 shorefront casinos.
The hurricane promised to lend even more solemnity to commemoration ceremonies Wednesday for Katrina’s 1,800 dead in Louisiana and Mississippi, including the tolling of the bells at St. Louis Cathedral overlooking New Orleans’ Jackson Square.
As Isaac neared the city, there was little fear or panic.
“Isaac is the son of Abraham,” said Margaret Thomas, who was trapped for a week in her home in New Orleans‘ Broadmoor neighborhood by Katrina’s floodwaters, yet chose to stay put this time. “It’s a special name. That means God will protect us.”
Still, the storm drew intense scrutiny because of its timing — coinciding with Katrina and the first major speeches of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., already delayed and tempered by the storm.
Gulf Coast officials warned of the dangers of the powerful storm but decided not to call for mass evacuations like those that preceded Katrina, which packed 135 mph winds in 2005.
“We don’t expect a Katrina-like event, but remember there are things about a Category 1 storm that can kill you,” New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said, urging people to use common sense and to stay off any streets that may flood.
Tracy Smith, 26, a New Orleans resident who decided that she and her family would be safer at La Quinta hotel near the quarter than at home, ducked outside shortly after midnight to gauge the storm’s severity. Farrell yelled over to her to watch out for a restaurant sign that had become partially detached from a building and threatened to fly off.
Smith, a former deputy sheriff, was trapped for several days with about 100 inmates in a New Orleans jail during Hurricane Katrina, up to her waist in floodwaters. She is still haunted by the experience.
“That’s why I was panicked for this storm,” she said.
Isaac promises to test a New Orleans levee system bolstered by $14 billion in federal repairs and improvements after the catastrophic failures during Hurricane Katrina. But in a city that has already weathered Hurricane Gustav in 2008, many had faith.
“I feel safe,” said Pamela Young, who was riding out the storm in the Lower 9th Ward with her dog Princess in a new, two-story home built to replace the one destroyed by Katrina.
“If the wind isn’t too rough, I can stay right here,” she said, tapping on her wooden living room coffee table. “If the water comes up, I can go upstairs.”
Isaac posed political challenges with echoes of those that followed Katrina, a reminder of how the storm seven years ago became a symbol of government ignorance and ineptitude.
President Barack Obama sought to demonstrate his ability to guide the nation through a natural disaster and Republicans reassured residents they were prepared Tuesday as they formally nominated the former Massachusetts governor as the Republican Party’s presidential candidate.
It was unclear what further effects the storm might have on the festivities in Tampa, where, after a day of delays, Ann Romney gave a sweeping speech aimed at showcasing her husband’s personal side, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie issued a broad indictment of Democrats as “disciples of yesterday’s politics“ who ”whistle a happy tune” while taking the country off a fiscal cliff.
There was already simmering political fallout from the storm. Louisiana’s Republican Gov. Bobby Jindal, who canceled his trip to the convention in Tampa, said the Obama administration’s disaster declaration fell short of the federal help he had requested. Jindal said he wanted a promise from the federal government to be reimbursed for storm preparation costs.
“We learned from past experiences, you can’t just wait. You’ve got to push the federal bureaucracy,” Jindal said.
FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said such requests would be addressed after the storm.
Obama promised that Americans will help each other recover, “no matter what this storm brings.”
“When disaster strikes, we’re not Democrats or Republicans first, we are Americans first,” Obama said at a campaign rally at Iowa State University. “We’re one family. We help our neighbors in need.”
Along the Gulf coast east of New Orleans, veterans of past hurricanes made sure to take precautions.
Bonnie Chortler, 54, of Waveland, Miss., lost her home during Hurricane Katrina. After hearing forecasts that Isaac could get stronger and stall, she decided to evacuate to her father’s home in Red Level, Ala.
“A slow storm can cause a lot more havoc, a lot more long-term power outage, `cause it can knock down just virtually everything if it just hovers forever,” she said.
Those concerns were reinforced by local officials, who imposed curfews in three Mississippi counties.
“This storm is big and it‘s tightening up and it sat out there for 12 hours south of us and it’s pushing that wave action in and there’s nowhere for that water to go until it dissipates,” said Harrison County Emergency Operations Director Rupert Lacy.
All along U.S. 90, families stood at the edge of the waves to gawk. The Mississippi Sound, protected by barrier islands, is often as still as a lake, but Isaac began stirring breakers before dawn, as it pumped a storm tide toward the coast. Police struggled to clear public piers where water was lapping at the boards, and resorted to bullhorns to try to get sightseers to leave the beach.
In Theodore, Ala., 148 people had taken refuge Tuesday in an emergency shelter set up at the town’s high school.
Charlotte McCrary, 41, spent the night along with her husband Bryan and their two sons, 3-year-old Tristan and 1-year-old Gabriel. She spent a year living in a FEMA trailer after Hurricane Katrina, which destroyed her home, and said she still hasn’t gotten back to the same place where she was seven years ago.
“I think what it is,” Bryan McCrary said, “is it brings back a lot of bad memories.”
—
Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Cain Burdeau in New Orleans; Kevin McGill in Houma, La.; Holbrook Mohr in Waveland and Pass Christian, Miss.; Jeff Amy in Biloxi and Gulfport, Miss.; Jay Reeves in Gulf Shores, Ala.; Jessica Gresko in Codon, Ala.; and Curt Anderson at the National Hurricane Center in Miami.




















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flatbroke
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 2:30pmMy guess is that katrina was a deep cleaning , and now Isaac is a deep cleaning of New Orleans, and will help with the drought in the middle of the country too, God is in Control folks.
Report Post »see.pee.aye
Posted on August 30, 2012 at 10:19pmA waste of perfectly good oxygen: exhibit A.
Report Post »usafpatriot
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 2:15pmI’m tired of the MSM exaggerating storms to push there global warming agenda. There are hurricanes every year in the Gulf of Mexico and there will continue to be hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico. The words that the reporters are using to describe the storms are over the top; fierce, devastating, intense, etc….this was catorized as a tropical storm until late yesterday then was upgraded to a Category 1 when it made landfall. Since 2009 the MSM has been hoping for a big one, so the fruad in chief can go and walk on the beach with his sleeves rolled up and annouce some new entitlement for the people of New Orleans.
I live in the desert southwest and the MSM has been really making a big deal about the sand storms lately. Guess what, we have been having sand storms forever, and yes they are called sand storms not “haboo’s”. Since when did we start using Arabic terms to describe something that have been going on in the desert southwest forever.
Report Post »bankerpapaw
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 11:55amObama is too busy campaigning to give a flying flip about New Orleans.
Report Post »amazingphotos
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 11:30amSUMMERY OF ISAAC NEWS
Bad news – Increased gasoline and oil prices
Good news – Cancellation of Southern Decadence (homosexual Mardi Gras)
Not news – People stupid enough to live below sea level getting what they deserve
Report Post »jwpowers41
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 11:21amdon‘t build homes below sea level don’t take my tax dollars to do it
Report Post »amazingphotos
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 11:45amNOT ONE CENT of taxpayer money should have been spent to support those fools after Katrina.
Report Post »flatbroke
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 2:35pmI suppose when there are earthquakes in California, and New York, and huricannes in the northeast, and droughts in the midwest and fires in the southwest, there should not be any Fed money to pay for that either, we cant all live in the same perfect place where y’all live.
Report Post »amazingphotos
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 3:29pmNo Federal (stolen from taxpaying citizens) money should be spent in ANY of those places. That is NOT among the enumerated powers granted to the federal government in the Constitution. If the federal government could be shrunk back to what it should and was intended to be, the citizens would be better able to support charities. Most private charities are good stewards of their money and would not support the stupidity of building and rebuilding below sea level.
Report Post »npmathis
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 10:28amI am in New Orleans. There are *no* levee breaches. One local levee ( not a federal levee ) in lower Plaquemines has been compromised, and there is flooding outside the levee system (not a surprise). Don’t believe the msm…they are clueless…ant not just when it comes to weather! Listen to WWL talk radio 870AM on Internet for best info.
Report Post »dennisS
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:49amDidn’t obama promise that when he was elected the seas would quit rising and recede? Another broken promise from the god of the left!
Report Post »Calm Voice of Reason
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 10:35amThat is not a promise that Obama has made.
Report Post »dennisS
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 11:40amOh no?
Report Post »http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0tuAJkbUWU
Gimme Shelter
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:29amIn an effort to get my local weather for the day, I put the weather channel on just to change the station due to Abrams and Al totally embarrassing themselves!! Enough with the DRAMA!!
Report Post »Gonzo
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:28amHow long until Obama repels from Marine One on to a rooftop in Plaquemines Parish…just because he cares so deeply for the people?
Report Post »dtraylor
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:17amSo help me understand why as an American tax payer do I have to keep paying for someone’s stupidity for living in an area that is below sea level. This isnt just New Orleans but any area next to water that is prone to storms and flooding. Also I live in an area where we experienced 90 mile an hour winds created damage and people were without power for several weeks but I do not recall nearly the whining we always hear from people on the coasts who are ignorant enough to live in areas that are known for flooding and severe storms. Just as anyone they have the right and capability to move
Report Post »Tigress1
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 9:40amI agree. If this city floods after spending 14 BILLION dollars of taxpayer money on renovations, then they should ban future rebuilding. If the city can’t withstand a Category 1 hurricane, then it’s time to give up. We can’t afford them anymore. Build elsewhere. There’s plenty of land in this country.
Report Post »jopa68
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 12:12pmDo not lump all people that live in coastal areas into that group. There is a great quality of life for 99% of the time, and there is a large population of people that rebuild each time on their own and keep on going. It is the people that are totally dependent on the goverment 100% of the time that cause most of the costs/problems. I live about 30 miles from the coast in TX, and IKE did a number on our area. I spent a week cleaning up debris, cutting up limbs, and got no government assistance other than 6 bags of ice. When the insurance company cut us a check for our damages, it was about 4000. That barely made a dent. But, I have been in this area for 44 years, and we have had 2 storms in my lifetime that caused that kind of damage. I guess everyone should leave California because of the fires and earthquakes. I guess everyone should leave OK and Kansas and Alabama because of the tornadoes. We are not all freeloaders, and we work together to help rebuild down here, so do not go casting a net and saying everyone that lives on the coast are stupid.
Report Post »kcares
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:03amHow anyone could still be a Democrat is scary. They want people hurt so they can blame Rep. They believe in killing unborn babies, and they do nothing about black crime. The daily killings in Chicago never get reported. In Nashville in 2010 we had a worse flood than Katrina, but it wasn’t televised, and noone cried “HELP”. We all pitched in and helped each other. I am so sick of the hyprocracy of the left. They make movies causing our young people think we no longer need morals or respect for their parents.
Report Post »Chromo200
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 7:48amI am so disappointed that Obama did not go to NO and strech his arms to calm the storm. Will he visit NO to help the victims. That unsymptheic Bush was unconcerned about the Ktrina victims while the Great One is … NOT.
Report Post »karen162
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 7:47amMy daughter, son-in-law and grandson live in Kenner, LA. I just talked to her. She said they lost electricity a few hours ago, but thus far no flooding issues where she lives. She didn‘t know about the levee’s breaching until I told her.
Report Post »Snowleopard {gallery of cat folks}
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 7:46amOkay, now only one levy has topped out. So now we will see the MSM, Chris Matthews and the Obama administration declare:
The storm is Bush’s fault.
Report Post »The storm should have wiped out the GOP in Tampa.
The storm and flooding was restrained due to the god-king of the Democratic Pantheon Obama.
4xeverything
Posted on August 29, 2012 at 8:44amSounds like something Samuel L. Jackson would say.
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