Extremely Heavy Rains Flood New Orleans*
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Residents in areas only now recovering from Hurriance
Katrina were warned not to drive through flooded streets for fear of
creating wakes that could send water into homes and buildings.
More rain was in the forecast Tuesday, prompting residents of the
flood-prone city to brace for the possibility of more street flooding
that on Monday disrupted businesses and stalled traffic.
After more than 8 inches of rain Monday fell on parts of New Orleans,
Mayor Ray Nagin shut City Hall early and schools across the city closed.
Waist-high water in parts of eastern New Orleans soaked businesses, some
of which had recently reopened after being damaged by 2005's Hurricane
Katrina.
All the city's drainage pumps were working properly but were unable to
keep up with the intense rainfall, emergency preparedness officials
said. They urged motorists to stay off the streets.
In some areas, more than two inches of rain fell in an hour, while the
city's pumps can handle only a maximum 1 inch in the first hour of a
rainfall and 1/2 inch every hour thereafter, said Robert Jackson, a
spokesman for the New Orleans Sewerage and Water Board.
"We just have to continue to work with our neighbors until we can
develop a greater pump capacity," said Col. Terry Ebbert, director of
Homeland Security for the City of New Orleans.
Making problems worse in New Orleans were catch basins clogged with
debris from gutted or renovated homes. Jackson urged residents to clean
out the basins to help in draining standing water from streets.
Meanwhile, officials closed a gate on the Harvey Canal in suburban
Jefferson Parish where the waters threatened to top the walls. It was
one of several in the area placed under new safety guidelines after
Katrina's waters breached two New Orleans canals, causing catastrophic
flooding.
The corps has worked to strengthen the canal, about five miles from
downtown New Orleans, but engineers worried that water being driven into
it might lead to flooding. The area around the canal includes homes and
businesses.
Unlike the canal walls that broke during Katrina, the walls on the
Harvey Canal are not considered at threat of being breached by rising
waters, said Chris Accardo, the corps' operations chief.
"The gates were closed to minimize seepage and overtopping," he said.
Moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, ahead of a strong cold front, sparked
the swift and strong rainfall that blanketed the area. Bob Wagner, a
forecaster with the Slidell office of the National Weather Service, said
the rain should slowly diminish Tuesday and bring with it cooler
temperatures.
Despite the flooding potential, the rain also offered relief to parts of
Louisiana that have been abnormally dry. Until Monday's drenching,
rainfall for New Orleans was about 11 inches below normal for the year.
The scattered showers and thunderstorms also came as a blessing to other
drought-stricken areas of the Southeast on Monday. Still, climatologists
say it will take more than a few scattered storms to pull the region out
of a record drought.
Almost one-third of the Southeast is covered by an "exceptional" drought
— the worst drought category.
On the Net:
* U.S. Drought Monitor: http://www.drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html