Hurricane Laura made landfall in southwestern Louisiana (near Cameron) as one of the most powerful storms to ever hit the United States. Wind speech clocked in around 150 mph when it hit at 1 am CT. The National Hurricane Center says the eyewall of Laura pushed inland across southwestern Louisiana bring pounding rain, catastrophic storm surge, and flash flooding. A storm chaser in Downtown Lake Charles, Jeff Piotrowski, reports that many tall buildings have blown-out windows, many roofs flew off and some of the buildings may be total losses. There are now four confirmed deaths as a result of the storm. The AP reports:
Gov. John Bel Edwards said he’s received report of the first fatality from Hurricane Laura in Louisiana, a 14-year-old girl who died when a tree fell on her home in Leesburg.
The governors of Louisiana and Texas say search and rescue teams are still looking, but they’ve found no reports so far of widespread fatalities.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is crediting the evacuations of thousands of people for preventing deaths in Texas. Edwards says they are only beginning to assess the damage.
https://twitter.com/KATVToddYak/status/1299009655641911297
https://twitter.com/TWCAlexWallace/status/1299020560668688385
Power is out for more than 600,000 people.
Watch this squall from #Laura knock out the power in Alexandria…..338k customers out statewide.
Peak gust so far 85 MPH.
We're live along with @JenCarfagno in Shreveport on @AMHQ #HurricaneLaura pic.twitter.com/bV5yc1JFwS— Mike Seidel (@mikeseidel) August 27, 2020
Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards is also warning residents about a fire that is causing concern:
There is a chemical fire in the Westlake/Moss Bluff/Sulphur area. Residents are advised to shelter in place until further notice and close your doors and windows. Follow the directions of local officials
Huge chemical fire just off I-10 in Lake Charles,LA pic.twitter.com/xQ1qcmPZYz
— RadarOmega (@RadarOmega) August 27, 2020
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