LAT: Rescuers Wade Into Coastal Havoc
As officials survey the damage, focus turns to restoring power and water services, as well as saving stranded residents and livestock.
By Ann M. Simmons, Scott Gold and Nicole Gaouette, Times Staff Writers
ABBEVILLE, La. — Louisiana parish officials, soldiers and emergency crews began taking on nature's anarchy Monday, working to rescue stranded residents and lost livestock, clear debris and return rudimentary order to a coast still under the sway of Hurricane Rita's floodwaters.
High water edged back toward the Gulf of Mexico in some communities, driven by shifting winds and natural drainage. But much of Louisiana's coastline lay under seawater, stalling the repair work facing rural governments days after the hurricane blitzed north near the Texas-Louisiana state line.
After an aerial tour, Sen. Mary L. Landrieu (D-La.) said that as many as 100,000 homes had been damaged beyond repair. Landrieu said rebuilding southwest Louisiana would take "the better part of a decade."
Across the flooded Sabine River, which runs between the two states, East Texas oil communities were drying but beset with their own spiraling problems. The region's power grid is decimated, perhaps for a month. City officials pleaded for portable generators while evacuated residents began returning, ignoring appeals to stay away.
The region's fragile plight was underscored Monday when five members of an extended family died in Beaumont, Texas, overcome by carbon monoxide fumes from a gasoline generator while they slept in their apartment. The dead, discovered Monday morning, included a 7-year-old girl, a 9-year-old boy and a 12-year-old girl, all siblings, said Police Officer Crystal Holmes....
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