Texas diverting eastbound traffic off I-10 because of flooding

Residents in the French Settlement, Louisiana area are parking their vehicles along the main highways and using boats to go in and out to salvage whatever they can from their homes.

Texas authorities have diverted hundreds of vehicles off eastbound Interstate 10 in anticipation of closing the highway because of flooding near the state line with Louisiana, the emergency management office in Orange County, Texas, said Tuesday.

The road closure would be the latest problem created by floods that have struck the Deep South. In Louisiana, rain and high water have damaged about 6,143 homes over the last few days, the state emergency preparedness office said Monday night.

Authorities issued conflicting reports Tuesday about I-10.

The Louisiana Governor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness tweeted earlier Tuesday that the interstate had already been shut down. A few hours later the agency sent an update saying I-10 would be closed later Tuesday.

Around noon Tuesday, Mike Steele from the Louisiana governor’s office said: “There are no closures in the state of Louisiana of Interstate 10, either westbound or eastbound at this point. The issues are on the Texas side of the interstate.”

The emergency management office in Orange County, Texas, told CNN: “We are currently diverting traffic off Interstate 10 to prepare for the eventual and likely shutdown of the interstate. Hundreds of cars are being diverted off the interstate.”

The interstate runs through Orange County, and CNN affiliate KTRK-TV reported that a mandatory evacuation was in effect for that area.

The Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development said portions of Interstate 59 in south Louisiana and south Mississippi may also have to close because of rising water.

Since Wednesday, the Louisiana National Guard has reported 4,255 rescues and the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries has reported 700, the emergency preparedness office said.

More than 200 people stayed Monday night at 14 Red Cross and community-run shelters in Louisiana, the Red Cross said.

“We need the public’s support now,” said Kay W. Wilkins, chief executive of the Red Cross in Louisiana. “Entire families have lost their homes and everything they own to these floodwaters.”

President Barack Obama declared on Sunday that a “major disaster” had struck the state. The initial federal declaration was for Bossier, Claiborne, Grant, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland and Webster parishes, according to the emergency preparedness office.

Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards on Tuesday requested other parishes be declared disaster areas, according to the state homeland security Facebook page.

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