New Orleans: With strength because almost all New Orleans next week, Mayor Latoya Cantrell strongly encouraged residents who were evacuated because of the Ida storm to start returning home.
But outside the city, the prospect of recovery emerged BLEAKER, without a timeline about the recovery of power and home and business in ragged.
Six days after the Ida storm made the land, the hard parts of Louisiana were still struggling to restore normal flavor.
Even around New Orleans, lack of power for most residents made harsh summer stretches to bear and added to misery after Ida.
Louisiana authorities were looking for Friday for a man they said shot another man to death after they both waited in a long line to fill the gas station in the suburbs of New Orleans.
Cantrell said the city would offer transportation starting Saturday to every resident who wanted to leave the city and go to a public shelter.
Already started moving several residents from senior houses.
At the Renaissance Place Home Home Friday, dozens of residents marched to get a minibus equipped with a wheelchair lift after city officials said they determined the conditions at the facility were not safe and evacuated.
Reggie Brown, 68, is among those who are waiting to join fellow residents on the bus.
He said residents, many wheelchairs, had been stuck in facilities since Ida.
The elevator stopped working three days ago and rubbish piled inside, he said.
The population was taken to the state-run shelter, said the Mayor’s office.
“I took the last bus,” Brown said.
“I can be bodied.” Message telephone for companies that manage the Renaissance site, HSI Management Inc., not immediately returned.
But Cantrell also encouraged the population to return to the city when their strength returned, said they could help help with taking neighbors and families that were still in darkness.
Only a small number of city residents who have the power back on Friday even though almost all electricity must return on Wednesday, according to Entergy, a company that gives power to New Orleans and most of Southeast Louisiana on the storm.
“We said, you can go home,” Cantrell told a press conference.
The prospect did not promise the south and west of the city, where Ida’s anger was completely beaten.
The Sheriff’s office in the Lafourche parish warned residents back about the difficult situation waiting for them – no power, no water flowing, small cellphone service and almost no gasoline.
Entergy offers an appointment when the lights will return to the parish outside New Orleans, some of them are hit for hours with a wind of 100 mph (160 kph) or more.
President Joe Biden arrived Friday to survey damage in several places, toured the environment in Laplace, a community between the Mississippi River and Lake Pontcharrain who suffered strong winds and damage to water flowing from the roof and flooded the house.
“I promise to have your back,” said Biden at the beginning of the direction by the official.
The President has also promised full federal support to the northeast, where the remains of Ida remove the rain-breaking rain and killing at least 50 people from Virginia to Connecticut.
At least 14 deaths were blamed on the storm in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, including three nursing home residents who were evacuated along with other senior hundreds of warehouses in Louisiana in front of the storm.
State health officials have launched an investigation of the deaths and the fourth in the warehouse facility in the Tangipahoa parish, where they said his condition became unhealthy and unsafe.
The Ministry of Health on Friday reported additional death – a 59-year-old man who was poisoned by carbon monoxide from a generator believed to run inside his house.
Some deaths after the storm have been blamed for carbon monoxide poisoning, which can occur if the generator runs incorrectly.
More than 800,000 houses and businesses remain without Friday night crossing Southeast Louisiana, according to the Public Service Commission.
It was around 36% of all utility customers throughout the state, but dropped from the peak of around 1.1 million after the storm arrived on Sunday with a wind over 150 mph (230 kph).
Ida is tied to the most strongest storm of the fifth one who has ever attacked us land
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