11:30 LRN Newscast

Today brings bad memories for a lot of people in Louisiana. Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, Hurricane Isaac in 2012, and Hurricane Ida last year. St John Parish was among the hardest hit by Ida. Parish President Jacklyn Hotard finally got back into her home 45 days ago. She says the recovery from Ida has been slowed by supply chain issues and insurance red tape.
Cut 3 (:13) “…extremely difficult”
Lafourche parish president Archie Chaisson says about 25-hundred households in Lafourche still live in temporary housing. But Chaisson says areas that looked like a war zone in Ida’s aftermath, are starting to look more normal again.
Cut 8 (10) “…recreation activities.”

Four people drowned in Beauregard Parish over the weekend. Sheriff Mark Herford says they received a call Friday evening that four people were in distress and unaccounted for in the Sabine River. He says a group was swimming and the recent rains brought on a strong current.
Cut 6 (12) “…their lives.”
Herford identified the adult victims as Troy McCollough, Kelly Bailey and Austin Scott.

New research conducted by LSU determines that if it was not for climate change, up to 50-percent of residences in Houston’s Harris County would not have been flooded by Hurricane Harvey in 2017. Lead author and LSU Sociology Professor Kevin Smiley says the climate change-fueled flooding hit low-income Hispanic neighborhoods the hardest…
cut 11 (09) “….Latino residents”
Smiley says part of the reason why low-income neighborhoods flooded has to do with the historical development of Houston along its waterways and surrounding petrochemical corridor.