Louisiana
With the power out and roads closed, northern Louisiana continues to struggle after winter storm
Tens of thousands remained without power Tuesday in north and central Louisiana as residents braced for more below-freezing temperatures, even as south Louisiana was mostly spared from the worst of the week’s severe winter weather.
Over the weekend, a winter storm that has ravaged much of the country blanketed the upper half of the state with snow and ice, snapping trees and bringing down power lines.
By Tuesday morning, the death toll related to the storm had climbed to at least six, state officials reported. The Louisiana Department of Health confirmed that three people died of hypothermia, with two other suspected hypothermia deaths.
One man died of carbon monoxide poisoning and another died in a fatal wreck related to icy conditions, the agency said. A woman also died after her oxygen concentrator failed during a power outage, according to the agency.
Meanwhile, road conditions prevented some residents from evacuating their homes and shut down parts of the northern parishes.
Drivers were stranded for as many as 20 hours on Interstate 20, according to social media reports, as stuck 18-wheelers near Arcadia and Ruston brought traffic to a standstill. Louisiana State Police troopers conducted supply drops, welfare checks and ATV evacuations in the area.
As of late afternoon Tuesday, over 90,000 customers still lacked power, according to poweroutage.us.
An accumulation of a wintry mix from the recent storm highlights a sandbar in the Red River on Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, seen from Shreveport, La.
Gov. Jeff Landy toured East and West Carroll parishes by air on Tuesday, when he also met with leaders in Ouachita and Richland parishes to discuss the effects of the storm. Landry has said he is contacting the White House in hopes of getting federal aid.
East Carroll shuts down
The storm’s impact was especially pronounced in East Carroll Parish, which lost power almost entirely.
“It’s been catastrophic,” Sheriff Wydette Williams said. “We’ve had storms before, but the way the power lines and trees snapped like toothpicks, I’ve never saw this before.”
The hospital, prisons, a grocery store and other public spaces were relying on backup generators, Williams said.
It was unclear when power would be restored.
“We have received word from Entergy that they have run into far more problems than anticipated,” the sheriff’s office posted on Facebook. “They are in the parish on the ground working diligently, but they cannot commit to a definitive time and date when electrical services will be restored.”
Residents in East Carroll also lost water service, and some struggled to keep medical devices running amid the outage, according to a release from Delta Interfaith, a coalition of congregations and community organizations in the Louisiana Delta. Blocked roads prevented some residents from evacuating, the release said.
Before the storm, Prudence Grissom bought a propane heater for her East Carroll home. “They advertise that it’s safe indoors,” she said. But just to be sure, the 70-year-old placed it in a doorway, leading to a hallway. Over the course of the weekend, Grissom found herself sleeping for six-hour stretches, struggling to wake up.
Children sled on a wintry mix Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, in Shreveport, La.
A friend called, and on Sunday, when Grissom failed to pick up, alerted the sheriff’s office. A deputy knocked loud enough that Grissom awoke.
“At that point, I said, ‘OK, it has to be this heater,’” she said. “I haven’t been using it since.”
Instead, Grissom donned three sweaters, two pairs of pants and several sets of socks. She lit candles. She watched from her window as ice-coated tree branches snapped and fell.
Grissom moved to East Carroll a decade ago to care for her mother. She is from New Orleans, where after Hurricane Katrina, she lived without power for weeks.
“You put one step in front of another,” she said. “You do the best you can.”
Upcoming temperatures
The Baton Rouge, Lafayette and New Orleans areas were expected to see lows in the upper 20s and lower 30s Tuesday and Wednesday nights, according to the National Weather Service, which forecast that temperatures would stay in the low 40s Thursday night.
Meanwhile, temperatures near Shreveport, Monroe and Alexandria would be in the 20s Tuesday and Wednesday nights, and hover just above freezing on Thursday night, the agency predicted.
The state is expected to see temperatures drop again over the weekend, when nighttime temperatures could dip into the teens near Monroe, Alexandria, Baton Rouge and Lafayette.
Officials have urged residents to follow safety instructions when using devices like space heaters and generators, and to avoid driving in north and central Louisiana.
The state has opened dozens of warming centers that are available to the public. Residents looking for more information on how to stay safe during the storm can visit getagameplan.org.
Louisiana
Meta’s Louisiana Data Center to Surpass $250 Billion Price Tag
Louisiana
DeRidder man found dead in Sabine River
NEWTON COUNTY, Texas. (KPLC) – A DeRidder man reported missing was found dead in the Sabine River Sunday morning, according to the Newton County Sheriff’s Office.
Newton County Sheriff Colton Havard said Jordan Jamal Allen was located around 7:50 a.m. on July 12 with help from Texas Parks and Wildlife game wardens, the Beauregard Parish Sheriff’s Office, and 409 Search and Rescue.
Authorities say the body was recovered not far from where Allen went under Friday night near the U.S. 190 bridge east of Bon Wier at the Texas-Louisiana state line.
The sheriff said that Allen and a woman were said to be wading across the river Friday when the current began pulling the woman.
The sheriff said Allen tried to help her, but went under around 8:45 p.m. and wasn’t seen again. He said the woman made it back to land safely.
We will have more in this story as it develops.
Copyright 2026 KPLC. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
Check out the Outdoors calendar for fishing events
MONDAY
RED STICK FLY FISHERS PROGRAM: 7 p.m., Bluebonnet Regional Library, 9200 Bluebonnet Blvd., Baton Rouge. Open to the public. Email Brian Roberts: roberts.brian84@gmail.com. Website: rsff.org
WEDNESDAY
FLIES & FLIGHTS: 7-9 p.m, Rally Cap Brewing, 11212 Pennywood Ave., Baton Rouge. Casual fly tying. Open to public. Email Chris Williams: thefatfingeredflytyer@gmail.com
THURSDAY
ACADIANA FLY RODDERS PROGRAM: 6 p.m., Pack and Paddle, 601 E. Pinhook, Lafayette. Open to public. Email Darin Lee: at cbrsandcdc@gmail.com. Website: acadianaflyrodders.org
FRIENDS OF NRA/SOUTHWEST LA BANQUET: 6 p.m., Riverside Bar & Grill, 3748 Louisiana 3059, Lake Charles. Call Brack Cole 337-912-1620. Email: jbcoleair@yahoo.com
ONGOING
STATEWIDE TOURNAMENT & ANGLERS RODEO/S.T.A.R.: Through Sept. 7, Coastal Conservation Association’s summer-long fishing event. Tagged redfish, coastal/offshore species categories & youth division. CCA membership required. Website: ccalouisiana.com/star
LOTTERY HUNTS
DOVE/TEAL: July 27 application deadline for dove hunt on Elbow Slough Wildlife Management Area and teal hunt on White Lake Wetlands Conservation Area. Website applications only on Wildlife & Fisheries/Louisiana Outdoors License, Permits and Tags webpage. Fee $8.50. Details: dove hunt, David Hayden at dhayden@wlf.la.gov; teal hunt, Lance Ardoin at lardoin@wlf.la.gov
AROUND THE CORNER
JULY 21 — LAFAYETTE KAYAK FISHING CLUB MEETING: 6 p.m., Pack and Paddle, 601 E. Pinhook, Lafayette. Call 337-232-5854. Website: lafayettekayakfishing.com
JULY 21-22 — GULF COUNCIL SHRIMP COMMITTEE MEETING: Gulf Council office, 4107 W. Spruce St., Tampa, Florida. In conjunction with Scientific and Statistical committees. Website: gulfcouncil.org
JULY 23 — ACADIANA BUGS & BREWS: 6 p.m., Pack and Paddle, 601 E. Pinhook, Lafayette. Casual fly tying and local beers provided. Open to the public. Email Darin Lee: cbrsandcdc@gmail.com. Website: packpaddle.com
JULY 23-25 — International Grand Isle Tarpon Rodeo, Grand Isle Marina & Otto Candies Pavilion, Grand Isle. Website: tarponrodeo.org
JULY 24-25—BASSMASTER JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP: Kentucky Lake, Paris, Tennessee. Website: bassmaster.com
JULY 26 — SOUTH LOUISIANA HIGHPOWER CLUB MATCH: 8:30 a.m., Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Range, St. Landry Road, Gonzales. NRA XTC & F-Class match rifle or service rifle, 200-yard/50-rounds match course. Fee $15 members, $20 nonmembers, $5 juniors. $25 annual club (first match free) and Civilian Marksmanship Program membership (allows purchases from CMP). Call Mike Burke, 337-380-8120. Email: SouthLAHighPower@hotmail.com
FISHING/SHRIMPING
SHRIMP: Spring inshore season closed except for Breton/Chandeleur sounds; all outside waters open.
OPEN RECREATIONAL SEASONS: Private recreational red snapper; gray triggerfish; flounder; lane, blackfin, queen and silk snappers and wenchmen among other snapper species; all groupers except closed for goliath and Nassau groupers in state/federal waters.
CLOSED SEASONS: Greater amberjack; bluefin tuna; gag, goliath and Nassau groupers in state/federal waters. Commercial greater amberjack season closed.
LDWF UPDATES
Closed: Roads on Pomme de Terre, Richard Yancey & Bogue Chitto WMAs (flooding)
Drawdowns: Saline Lake (Natchitoches/Winn parishes through Oct. 5); Iatt Lake (Grant Parish through Oct. 5).
-
San Francisco, CA8 minutes agoA Leak of San Francisco Police Drone Footage Exposes the New Reality of Urban Surveillance
-
Dallas, TX14 minutes agoViral East Dallas coffee shop fears major sales drop amid six-week road closure
-
Miami, FL20 minutes ago3 hurt in fire on Lincoln Road that started underground
-
Boston, MA26 minutes agoRideshare driver charged in Logan airport passenger assault to appear in court
-
Denver, CO32 minutes agoDenver area events for July 13
-
Seattle, WA38 minutes agoWhat could the Seattle Seahawks look like under new owners?
-
San Diego, CA44 minutes agoSports Night: Padres End 1st Half on Good Note, Midseason Grades, Manny Heats Up
-
Milwaukee, WI50 minutes agoPost From Community: Laughing Liberally Milwaukee | Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service