Louisiana
RED FLAG WARNING issued for southeast Louisiana, southwest Mississippi
A chilly entrance will push by the realm tonight with cooler and drier air to observe. Hurricane Ian is not going to carry important impacts to the native space apart from elevated winds and enormous swells—particularly on offshore waters.
The mix of low relative humidity close to 25 % and winds between 15 and 20 mph with greater gusts will produce a excessive hearth hazard throughout the realm. Any fires that develop will probably unfold quickly. Outside burning just isn’t suggested.
The Nationwide Climate Service has issued a RED FLAG WARNING because of essential hearth situations for the whole WBRZ Climate Forecast Space (besides St. Mary Parish) from 10am to 7pm Tuesday. This consists of the parishes of: Pointe Coupee, West Feliciana, East Feliciana, St. Helena, Iberville, West Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Assumption, St. James, Tangipahoa, Livingston, Ascension and the counties of Wilkinson, Amite, and Pike. A Purple Flag Warning implies that essential hearth climate situations are both occurring now, or will shortly. A mix of robust winds, low relative humidity, and heat temperatures can all contribute to unstable hearth conduct.
Many areas within the area have gone greater than two weeks since measurable rain and dry situations will proceed in the course of this week. With elevated winds because of Hurricane Ian close by within the Jap Gulf of Mexico, favorable hearth situations might persist by a lot of the week.
Subsequent 24 Hours: As a chilly entrance settles southward into the Gulf of Mexico tonight, temperatures will reply by falling beneath common for the primary time in about 10 days. Lows will settle close to 60 levels. Dry air and plentiful sunshine are anticipated on Tuesday. Highs might be close to 84 levels. Together with low humidity, north breezes of 5-15mph will end in favorable hearth situations.
Up Subsequent: The prolonged forecast is wanting quite nice. The rest of the workweek will characteristic clear skies, highs within the low to mid 80s and lows within the higher 50s. If there’s one damaging, the realm has turned quite crispy after a spell of sizzling, dry climate over the past two weeks. Winds out of the north and northeast at 5-15mph coupled with dew level temperatures within the 40s and relative humidity beneath 25% will carry an elevated danger for wildfires. Burning just isn’t suggested. Winds will ease over the weekend as temperatures progressively average with highs within the higher 80s and lows within the low to mid 60s. Nonetheless, no rain likelihood is at the moment marketed by the early subsequent week. CLICK HERE on your detailed 7-Day Forecast.
The Tropics: Hurricane Ian is quickly intensifying with deteriorating situations anticipated in Cuba anticipated Monday night time. As of 4pm Monday, Ian had most sustained winds of 100mph and was shifting northwest at 13mph. The storm is predicted to develop into a serious hurricane on Tuesday because it strikes into the southeastern Gulf of Mexico and strategy the west coast of Florida on Wednesday. Resulting from an anticipated slowing ahead velocity, lengthy lasting and harmful storm surge is feasible all alongside the west coast of Florida, most notably in Tampa Bay. As well as, torrential rain and powerful winds might batter the state for a number of days. Ian is predicted to develop into a remnant low over the Southeast U.S. this weekend.
Bathe and thunderstorm exercise has modified little in group at present related to an space of low strain positioned a number of hundred miles west of the Cabo Verde Islands. Regardless of the proximity of close by dry air, upper-level winds seem typically conducive for extra improvement, and there’s a seventy % likelihood {that a} tropical despair varieties in the course of the subsequent couple of days because the system meanders over the central tropical Atlantic. By the top of this week, upper-level winds are forecast to develop into much less favorable for improvement because the system begins to maneuver slowly north-northwestward.
The Clarification: A chilly entrance will proceed marching south and into the Gulf of Mexico by Tuesday morning. Thermometers will transfer beneath common Tuesday morning and keep beneath common relative to their daypart for almost per week. Dew level temperatures will path off into the 40s and 50s for a number of days on the opposite facet of the entrance. In the meantime, winds will enhance as a result of strain gradient between Hurricane Ian to our southeast and a floor excessive to our northeast. The breezy situations coupled with the low relative humidity will carry an increase in hearth climate situations by Thursday. Generally, winds might be round 10mph, however some greater gusts are doable, particularly nearer to the coast and I-55. By the weekend, the strain gradient will weaken and permit winds to slacken as Ian strikes inland and loses depth. Temperatures will progressively average.
The Storm Station is right here for you, on each platform. Your climate updates could be discovered on Information 2, wbrz.com, and the WBRZ WX App in your Apple or Android system. Observe WBRZ Climate on Fb and Twitter for much more climate updates if you are on the go.

Louisiana
Quin Hillyer: When Louisianans need help, One Door should open

Louisiana
Chevron ordered to pay more than $740 million to restore Louisiana coast in landmark trial – WTOP News

POINTE À LA HACHE, La. (AP) — Oil company Chevron must pay at least $740 million to restore damage it…
POINTE À LA HACHE, La. (AP) — Oil company Chevron must pay at least $740 million to restore damage it caused to southeast Louisiana’s coastal wetlands, a jury ruled on Friday following a landmark trial more than a decade in the making.
The case was the first of dozens of pending lawsuits to reach trial in Louisiana against the world’s leading oil companies for their role in accelerating land loss along the state’s rapidly disappearing coast. The verdict – which Chevron says it will appeal – could set a precedent leaving other oil and gas firms on the hook for billions of dollars in damages tied to land loss and environmental degradation.
What did Chevron do wrong?
Jurors found that energy giant Texaco, acquired by Chevron in 2001, had for decades violated Louisiana regulations governing coastal resources by failing to restore wetlands impacted by dredging canals, drilling wells and billions of gallons of wastewater dumped into the marsh.
The jury awarded $575 million to compensate for land loss, $161 million to compensate for contamination and $8.6 million for abandoned equipment — a total of $744.6 million. Including interest from when the lawsuit was filed in 2013, the amount earmarked for restoration exceeds $1.1 billion, according to attorneys for Talbot, Carmouche & Marcello, the firm behind the lawsuit.
The parish had asked for $2.6 billion in damages.
“No company is big enough to ignore the law, no company is big enough to walk away scot-free,” the plaintiff’s lead attorney John Carmouche told jurors during closing arguments.
A 1978 Louisiana coastal management law mandated that sites used by oil companies “be cleared, revegetated, detoxified, and otherwise restored as near as practicable to their original condition” after operations ended. Older operations sites that continued to be used were not exempt and companies were expected to apply for proper permits.
But the oil company did not obtain proper permits and failed to clean up its mess, leading to contamination from wastewater stored unsafely or dumped directly into the marsh, the lawsuit said.
The company also failed to follow known best practices for decades since it began operating in the area in the 1940s, expert witnesses for the plaintiff’s testified. The company “chose profits over the marsh” and allowed the environmental degradation caused by its operations to fester and spread, Carmouche said.
Chevron’s lead trial attorney Mike Phillips said in a statement following the verdict that “Chevron is not the cause of the land loss occurring” in Plaquemines Parish and that the law does not apply to “conduct that occurred decades before the law was enacted.”
Phillips called the ruling “unjust” and said there were “numerous legal errors.”
How are oil companies contributing to Louisiana’s land loss?
The lawsuit against Chevron was filed in 2013 by Plaquemines Parish, a rural district in Louisiana straddling the final leg of the Mississippi River heading into the Gulf of Mexico, also referred to as the Gulf of America as declared by President Donald Trump.
Louisiana’s coastal parishes have lost more than 2,000 square miles (5,180 square kilometers) of land over the past century, according to the U.S. Geological Survey, which has also identified oil and gas infrastructure as a significant cause. The state could lose another 3,000 square miles (7,770 square kilometers) in the coming decades, its coastal protection agency has warned.
Thousands of miles of canals cut through the wetlands by oil companies weakens them and exacerbates the impacts of sea level rise. Industrial wastewater from oil production degrades the surrounding soil and vegetation. The torn up wetlands leave South Louisiana – home to some of the nation’s biggest ports and key energy sector infrastructure — more vulnerable to flooding and destruction from extreme weather events like hurricanes.
Chevron’s lead attorney, Mike Phillips, said the company had operated lawfully and blamed land loss in Louisiana on other factors, namely the extensive levee system that blocks the Mississippi River from depositing land regenerating sediment — a widely acknowledged cause of coastal erosion.
The way to solve the land loss problem is “not suing oil companies, it’s reconnecting the Mississippi River with the delta,” Phillips said during closing arguments.
Yet the lawsuit held the company responsible for exacerbating and accelerating land loss in Louisiana, rather than being its sole cause.
Chevron also challenged the costly wetlands restoration project proposed by the parish, which involved removing large amounts of contaminated soil and filling in the swaths fragmented wetlands eroded over the past century. The company said the plan was impractical and designed to inflate the damages rather than lead to real world implementation.
Attorney Jimmy Faircloth, Jr., who represented the state of Louisiana, which has backed Plaquemines and other local governments in their lawsuits against oil companies, told jurors from the parish that Chevron was telling them their community was not worth preserving.
“Our communities are built on coast, our families raised on coast, our children go to school on coast,” Faircloth said. “The state of Louisiana will not surrender the coast, it’s for the good of the state that the coast be maintained.”
What does this mean for future litigation against oil companies?
Carmouche, a well-connected attorney, and his firm have been responsible for bringing many of the lawsuits against oil companies in the state.
Louisiana’s economy has long been heavily dependent on the oil and gas industry and the industry holds significant political power. Even so, Louisiana’s staunchly pro-industry Gov. Jeff Landry has supported the lawsuits, including bringing the state on board during his tenure as Attorney General.
Oil companies have fought tooth and nail to quash the litigation, including unsuccessfully lobbying Louisiana’s Legislature to pass a law to invalidate the claims. Chevron and other firms also repeatedly tried to move the lawsuits into federal court where they believed they would find a more sympathetic audience.
But the heavy price Chevron is set to pay could hasten other firms to seek settlements in the dozens of other lawsuits across Louisiana. Plaquemines alone has 20 other cases pending against oil companies.
The state is running out of money to support its ambitious coastal restoration plans, which have been fueled by soon-expiring settlement funds from the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, and supporters of the litigation say payouts could provide a much-needed injection of funds.
Attorneys for the parish said they hope that big payout will prompt more oil companies to come to the table and engage in coastal restoration.
“We continue to fight to restore the coast,” said Don Carmouche, an attorney with the firm representing the parish and other local governments which have filed suit. “All the parishes want is for the companies to come together for reasonable restoration of the coast.”
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Louisiana
ICE agents arrest 73-year-old grandfather in Louisiana who has lived in US for 45 years

Forty-five years ago, Jose Francisco Garcia Rodriguez fled Cuba on a ship provided by the United States for people seeking refuge from the Cuban government.
While on his way to work on Monday, the 73-year-old grandfather was picked up by immigration enforcement agents near his Lafayette home. He sits today in an ICE processing center in Pine Prairie, a village in rural Evangeline Parish.
One of Rodriguez’s stepsons posted Monday on Facebook that his father had been taken by ICE agents at a Circle K at the corner of Johnston Street and Guilbeau Road. The family has been quiet since that time.
On Thursday evening, though, Rodriguez’s stepdaughter Christian Cooper Riggs, of Lafayette, posted a video on social media telling the story of her father’s life and asking for help.
Rodriguez arrived in the U.S. with just the clothes on his back, Riggs said, with no education and not speaking English. He struggled and made mistakes, paid for them, and for the next 43 years lived a good life, raising a family and working hard labor for 40-60 hours a week, paying taxes and paying into Social Security, which he never used.
Three weeks ago, Rodriguez told Riggs he was afraid ICE would pick him up and deport him. Because of his earlier troubles, Rodriguez wasn’t able to become an official citizen, despite 10 years of trying, she said.
He was told by officials and lawyers three years ago, Riggs said, that it would be better to stop trying, to lay low and continue to work.
“I understand that we have an immigration problem. I do,” Riggs said. “I understand that our country cannot harbor every single person that crosses its borders. I understand that there are really bad people that we have to find.”
But starting with a 73-year-old grandfather who has a heart condition and who is the primary caretaker of his wife with dementia is not the solution, she said.
“It is a problem that has to be fixed with a surgeon’s blade. Not a machete.”
Riggs asked the public to contact their elected officials to ask for their help in freeing Rodriguez. And she asked for prayers.
ICE agents have reportedly been seen elsewhere in Lafayette this week.
Tiffany De Leon Steward of Lafayette said she saw a man in an SUV with Federal Enforcement written on it sitting in her Oakbourne neighborhood Monday watching Hispanic workers as they put a new roof on a house.
Others reported on social media that they’ve seen ICE agents in shopping centers and a store specializing in Hispanic food.
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