Little has been said about St. Bernard Parish and many people are troubled. An estimated 40,000 homes were flooded. It's devastation throughout the parish and it could not be expressed better than the following urgent plea.
Polly Boudreaux, clerk of the St. Bernard Parish Council, issued an urgent plea Thursday morning for help for the devastated parish.Emergency help is needed as soon as possible in St. Bernard Parish.
Boudreaux, breaking into tears during a telephone interview with WAFB-TV in Baton Rouge, said the parish is wiped out.
"We're just been absolutely devastated," she said.
Much of the parish remained underwater, she said, and efforts to get news out have been unsuccessful. And many residents still needed to be rescued.
"St. Bernard has been rescuing St. Bernard for days," she said.
She said little outside assistance has been able to reach the parish.
"We are not seeing it. We need help," she said, her voice cracking.
Boudreaux said shelters set up at Chalmette High and St. Bernard High School for people not able to evacuate Katrina, were underwater and heavily damaged. She said those staying at Chalmette High, over 1,000 people, had been evacuated to an area at the St. Bernard Port.
Food and water is having to be rationed, she said.
She was not clear on where those at St. Bernard High had been moved.
She said parish government officials are holed up at Chalmette Refinery. The parish government building is underwater.
She said parish officials have made pleas for help from the outside.
"It never came," she said. "We just never saw it."
"Everybody is in need. Everybody has just been wiped out."
[Update 9/02/05, 0400 EDT]
Michelle Malkin has posted a compilation of information sources on hurricane damage in communities outside New Orleans. The MSM are largely ignoring the damage and misery Katrina brought to Louisiana outside of New Orleans. Go visit.
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