LAKE CHARLES, Louisiana鈥 Southwest Louisiana balanced on a knife鈥檚 edge early Tuesday as Tropical Storm Harvey threatened to inundate the region with potentially disastrous flooding.
Damage was nothing compared to the toll in Texas, and had been light through sunset Monday. But a heavy band of rainfall Monday night proved too much for some Lake Charles neighborhoods, pushing water into houses that local residents said they鈥檇 never seen flood.
Lake Charles Fire Department Division Chief Lennie LaFleur said rescuers evacuated hundreds of people from one neighborhood, sometimes through chest-deep water. In addition to National Guard trucks and wildlife agents鈥 boats, residents came out in jacked-up trucks and clinging to the cab of a semi-truck cab. They carried belongings in suitcases, trash bags or even soggy cardboard boxes.
鈥淲e all got stuck back there,鈥 said Andrea Boutte, who rode out on the big rig. 鈥淭hose boats took forever.鈥
Rescuers focused at first on people with medical problems or who were frail, but eventually offered to take everyone who wanted out. Most people went to homes of friends and relatives. Christopher Booker was waiting to pick up his pregnant daughter, who began calling Booker when water rose above the bottom of her car.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been talking for probably like the last two-and-a-half or three hours,鈥 Booker said.
The flooding caught neighbors by surprise because the subdivision of one-story homes is not known for flooding. The waterway that drained the area, though, spilled out of its banks.
鈥淚鈥檝e seen some floods, I鈥檝e seen water come up, but nothing like this,鈥 LaFleur said.
Officials fear additional precipitation.
鈥淲e just can鈥檛 take any more,鈥 Calcasieu Parish Sheriff Tony Mancuso said, urging residents to leave flood-prone homes Monday. 鈥淎nything we get is going to be crucial at this point.鈥
Floodwaters crept over roads toward homes in Brenda Bradley鈥檚 neighborhood in Moss Bluff, a suburb of Lake Charles, the region鈥檚 largest city. The 72-year-old woman and her husband Jimmie had stacked sandbags at their doors as water lapped at the steps of their back porch.
鈥淲e鈥檝e got to try to save what we can,鈥 said Bradley, whose home flooded with several inches (centimeters) of water in 2006. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in our 70s and there鈥檚 no way we can lift all (our) furniture up.鈥
Much of the region got a break Monday afternoon after an earlier dousing, with a few hints of sunshine. Water drained out of streets into ditches and low areas. But manhole covers in downtown Lake Charles were bubbling, and officials remained worried that storm surge and high tides could slow drainage across the flat plain of southwestern Louisiana.
鈥淪torm surge is going to be a factor,鈥 said Andy Patrick, meteorologist in charge of the National Weather Service office in Lake Charles. 鈥淭he water is going to be there and it鈥檚 going to be hard to drain out.鈥
Although Louisiana doesn鈥檛 appear to be facing a threat on par with Harvey鈥檚 catastrophic toll in Texas, images of flood devastation in Houston revived painful memories for survivors of Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall in the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29, 2005.
鈥淚t really evoked a lot of emotions and heartbreak for the people who are going through that now in Houston,鈥 Ray Gratia said as he collected sandbags for his New Orleans home, which flooded from the massive hurricane that left much of the city underwater for weeks.
Rhonda Wylie loaded sandbags into her car with help of firefighters Monday as rain bands neared New Orleans. Wylie鈥檚 home flooded earlier this month during a deluge that exposed problems with the city鈥檚 pump and drainage system. New Orleans was on the outskirts of Harvey鈥檚 rain bands Monday, but residents were on edge because the pumping system still wasn鈥檛 working at full capacity.
鈥淚 just felt like I needed to take all precautions this time,鈥 she said as homeowners picked up sandbags from local fire stations.
New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said a recently repaired pump failed Monday during Harvey鈥檚 heavy rains. Landrieu added that most pumps were working, and the city is continuing with efforts to improve the pumping system.
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards told reporters Monday that he expects the threat to rise as outer rain bands sweep into Louisiana, adding, 鈥淭his is going to play out over several days.鈥
President Donald Trump, moving to expedite federal disaster assistance, issued a federal emergency declaration Monday for five parishes in southwest Louisiana. Major Aaron Duplechin said the Louisiana Army National Guard had deployed 19 trucks and four boats to Calcasieu Parish, in addition to helping evacuate the Coushatta Indian Reservation near Kinder.
Donald Jones, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office that covers southwest Louisiana said the area could get 25 to 38 centimeters (10 to 15 inches) more rain through Wednesday.
In southeast Louisiana, meteorologist Christopher Bannan said 7 to 15 centimeters (3 to 6 inches) are possible through Tuesday, with 12-25 centimeters (5 to 10 inches) through Thursday.