Claiborne and Warren counties stand ready for Delta’s arrival

Published 4:08 pm Thursday, October 8, 2020

Area emergency management officials are continuing their preparations in advance of Hurricane Delta’s arrival on the Louisiana Gulf coast Friday.

Delta is expected to make landfall about 7 p.m. Friday near Lake Charles, La., which was heavily damaged by Hurricane Laura in August. Hurricane warnings have been issued from High Island, Texas, to Morgan City, La.

Tropical storm warnings have been issued for an area east of the mouth of the Pearl River to Bay St. Louis, and as far north in western Mississippi as Claiborne County.

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According to the 7 p.m. Thursday advisory on Delta, the storm is forecast to make landfall just east of Lake Charles and then move northeast through central Louisiana and western Mississippi. Tropical storm-force winds are forecast to reach the Vicksburg area around 8 p.m. Friday. Delta is forecast to continue across northern Mississippi before reaching Tennessee as a tropical depression.

Delta is expected to be west of Vicksburg as a tropical storm about 7 a.m. Saturday. According to the National Hurricane Center, Warren and Claiborne counties have a 60 to 70 percent chance of getting tropical-storm-force winds of from 39 to 74 mph.

“Because we’ve been advised we’re under a tropical storm warning, we’re in the process of starting to prepare,” Claiborne County Emergency Management Director Marvin Ratliff said. “If something happens, we’ll be ready.”

He said the county should have a shelter open Friday in Hermanville on Mississippi 18, adding, “We have sandbags available for those who need them.”

Warren County Emergency Management Director John Elfer said residents can expect 3.5 to 8 inches of rain from Delta, which he said is a fast-moving storm.

“It’s not a slow storm where you get that 10 or 15 inches over time,” he said. “They’ve (the National Weather Service) also put us at an elevated risk for high wind — 35 to 45 (mph) at least. Hopefully, by 1 o’clock Saturday afternoon, we’ll still have rain but we won’t have the tropical force winds if I had to guess.

“I’m anticipating trees, limbs, power lines down; that wouldn’t surprise me at all,” Elfer said. “We’ve had all that rain earlier this year. We’ve got some compromised trees, some compromised roadbed issues.”

Elfer said the county’s engineer and road department will be out checking roads. He said emergency management officials will be at the emergency operations center through the night on Friday and into Saturday.

“We’ve got our high water rescue vehicle ready to go, we’ve got our UTV vehicle ready to go, our fire apparatus is ready to go,” Elfer said. He said the Warren County Sheriff’s Office and the Vicksburg Police Department will have sufficient personnel ready. “Everybody’s on the same page.”

Warren County Sheriff Martin Pace said that all days off have been canceled and that all of the department’s personnel are on standby to respond if needed. He also said all of the department’s vehicles have been fueled up and are ready.

While emergency management officials make their final preparations, city and county public works officials and road crews are readying their equipment to respond to storm-related problems.

W.L. Sanders, traffic supervisor for the city of Vicksburg, said preparations for Delta were underway at his department.

“I’ve got a guy making extra signal heads right now at the shop,” he said. “He’s making the extra signal heads in case any get knocked down we’ll have some spares. We’re going to be gassing up all of the vehicles and chainsaws, making sure the saws are ready to go.”

Sanders said street closure barricades are ready to go and loaded on a trailer.

“We’re on call 24/7, but usually when the storm comes up I’ll wind up hitting the road and I’ll be out in it and then I can call my guys out depending on what happens,” he said. “Hopefully, it won’t be as bad as they think, but we have to be ready just in case.”

Warren County Road Manager Jamie Cain said his crews will be paying close attention to the county’s flood-prone areas.

“We’ve got a foreman on call 24/7 and we’ve got our equipment placed in different areas of the county where we can get to it and we have the crews that will be needed on standby,” Cain said. “We’re waiting to see what happens.”

Vicksburg Public Works Director Garnet Van Norman said the city’s crews are ready for the storm.

“We’re waiting on it,” he said. “We’ll wait and see what happens.”

About John Surratt

John Surratt is a graduate of Louisiana State University with a degree in general studies. He has worked as an editor, reporter and photographer for newspapers in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. He has been a member of The Vicksburg Post staff since 2011 and covers city government. He and his wife attend St. Paul Catholic Church and he is a member of the Port City Kiwanis Club.

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