Mandatory evacuations outside New Orleans as Isaac nears hurricane strength

New Orleans may see six to 12 inches of rain, and is gearing up to be one of the worse blows to hit the city since Katrina. Weather Channel meteorologist Jim Cantore reports.

Updated at 2 a.m. ET: Unprotected, low-lying areas outside New Orleans were evacuated Monday as Tropical Storm Isaac grew closer to becoming a hurricane that could make landfall in or near Louisiana almost seven years to the day after Hurricane Katrina struck.

"All preparations to protect life and property should be completed tonight," said Ed Rappaport of the National Hurricane Center in his 8 p.m. ET Monday update. He emphasized that water from rain and storm surge would be the biggest threat -- 6 to 18 inches of rain are expected.

Isaac's wind speed increased to 70 mph, just 4 mph short of a hurricane, the National Hurricane Center said in a late afternoon update. It also forecast Isaac would reach Category 2 status with 100 mph winds late Tuesday night. That's a stronger Isaac than was forecast earlier Monday. 

By 2 a.m. ET Tuesday, the center of the storm was 145 miles southeast of the mouth of the Mississippi River with maximum sustained winds still at 70mph, the National Hurricane Center said. Isaac was predicted to slow down upon landfall, which forecasters say could be the ultimate test of $14 billion upgrade to its levees and pumps.


In areas near New Orleans, mandatory evacuations were ordered Monday morning for "our low-lying areas — those outside the hurricane protection system — such as Lafitte, Crown Point, Barataria and Grand Isle," Jefferson Parish President John Young told TODAY. 

Plaquemines Parish, which stretches 60 miles out into the Gulf, also issued a mandatory evacuation order for its 7,000 residents on its east bank starting at noon Monday.

"We’re telling them to get out," Parish President Bill Nungesser told MSNBC. "We’re going to get hit first and we’re going to take the worst beating of this storm. So people are heading up the highway now."

"In our parish there’s one road in and one road out," he added, "and it’s steady traffic flowing out the parish as we speak."

Isaac is expected to be the first major test of a $14 billion makeover of the system that failed the city so disastrously in 2005. NBC's Lester Holt reports.

Parts of Lafourche, St. Charles, St. John parishes saw mandatory evacuations as well.

The governors of Alabama, Louisiana and Mississippi declared states of emergency as a hurricane warning went into effect for a 300-mile swath that extended into Florida. The warning area was later narrowed to between Morgan City, La., and the Alabama-Florida border.  President Barack Obama approved Louisiana's request for federal disaster declaration, Governor Bobby Jindal said. The approval makes federal funds available for disaster recovery activities like clearing debris, Reuters reported.

"Tonight is when the conditions will start to go downhill" ahead of landfall by Tuesday night, National Hurricane Center Director Rick Knabb said in a morning update.

Isaac will probably move slowly inland, possibly dumping as much as 18 inches of rain in places, Knabb said.

"That's going to be the big problem," NBC meteorologist Al Roker said on TODAY. "We're talking about potentially 24 hours of hurricane force winds and heavy rain."

"Storm surge is going to be a big, big problem," he added. "Six to twelve feet above normal as you get to New Orleans. Panama City is about four to seven feet."

Related: Follow Isaac's path with our storm tracker

The hurricane warning area includes New Orleans, which was devastated when Hurricane Katrina swept over the city on August 29, 2005, killing more than 1,800 people and causing billions of dollars of damage along the coast. A hurricane hasn't hit the Gulf Coast since Ike in 2008.

New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said at a briefing Monday that schools and City Hall had closed and that the city's defense network of levees and pumps was ready.

NBC's Lester Holt reports from New Orleans, La., where residents and visitors are prepping for Tropical Storm Isaac  as it threatens to strengthen into a hurricane before landfall.

"All pumps are operational," he said. "We are well prepared to go." 

Landrieu earlier noted the irony of Isaac's arrival. "The timing, as fate would have it, on the anniversary of Katrina has everybody in a state of alertness, but that is a good thing," he said.

If Isaac makes landfall a bit west of New Orleans, that puts the city in the northeast quadrant of the storm, Roker noted, "and that's the worst place" for storm impact.

With tropical storm force winds that extend 205 miles from its center, Isaac is an unusually wide storm. 

"Impacts will be far to the east and to the west of where it comes ashore," Craig Fugate, head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, told TODAY.

TODAY's Savannah Guthrie talks to Jefferson Parish president John Young about possible impact of Tropical Storm Isaac on Louisiana, how residents should prepare and when voluntary evacuations will become mandatory.

Related: Reshuffled Republican convention to proceed on Tuesday

Robert Latham, the director of Mississippi's emergency management agency, urged residents to prepare for the storm's possible arrival.

"This is important to remember, this is a huge storm," he said. "I don't have to tell you what a storm like that can do."

Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley ordered mandatory evacuations beginning on Monday for residents in low-lying areas along the coast.

Oil companies earlier evacuated workers and cut production at Gulf offshore rigs.

Weather.com reported that areas as far west as extreme southeast Texas should continue to monitor Isaac's progress in case a farther west track materializes.

Alan Diaz / AP

Tropical Storm Isaac rakes the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba as begins to bear down on Florida, where Tampa will be hosting the Republican National Convention.

Some Gulf residents started stocking up on supplies and securing their homes. In New Orleans, long lines formed at some gas stations and in Gulfport, Miss., people crowded supermarkets to buy bottled water and canned food.

On Sunday, the storm lashed the Florida Keys and Miami area with wind and rain. Monday morning, some 80,000 south Florida homes and businesses were without electricity due to downed trees that fell on power lines.

The hurricane warning area includes "quite a few oil rigs," said National Hurricane Center meteorologist Jessica Schauer, but perhaps not the heart of the U.S. offshore oil patch, which produces about 23 percent of U.S. oil output and 7 percent of its natural gas. 

Once ashore, the storm could wreak havoc on low-lying fuel refineries along the Gulf Coast that account for about 40 percent of U.S. refining capacity.

That could send gasoline prices spiking just ahead of the Labor Day holiday, analysts told Reuters. "It's going right in the heart of refinery row," Phil Flynn, an analyst with Price Futures Group in Chicago, said Sunday.

From weather.com: Live updates and analysis

Isaac's westward track meant the worst of its weather missed Tampa, where the Republican National Convention was to open its four-day meeting on Monday — but official events were delayed until Tuesday because of the storm.

Tampa and much of Florida's west coast and panhandle saw bands of heavy rain on Tuesday morning.

"There's an isolated tornado threat in central Florida up through the northeastern Gulf area," Knabb said. "Just because the center is out in the Gulf don't think that in Florida there aren't some hazards."

Several Republican governors from Gulf states have altered their plans for the GOP convention. Alabama's Gov. Bentley and Louisiana's Gov. Jindal canceled their trips to Tampa. Florida Gov. Rick Scott gave up a chance to speak. 

NBC's Chuck Todd reports from Tampa, Fla., where delays at the Republican National Convention due to Tropical Storm Isaac are set to disrupt the lead-up to Mitt Romney's acceptance of the Republican nomination for president.

U.S. grain elevators on the Gulf coast were shut and barges carrying grain and other goods on the lower Mississippi River were halted in preparation for the storm. Archer Daniels Midland closed four elevators in New Orleans, while Cargill said elevators in Westwego and Reserve, Louisiana, will be closed.

"We have activated our hurricane readiness plan and are taking precautions to ensure the safety of our employees and their families, as well as the security of our assets in the New Orleans area," ADM spokeswoman Jackie Anderson said.

The Mississippi River is a major channel for the movement of grain produced in the Midwest farm belt to export terminals at the Gulf of Mexico for shipment across the world.

"The safety of our employees is the top priority," Cargill told Reuters.

In south Florida, winds from Isaac forced cancellations of hundreds of flights in and out of Miami, Fort Lauderdale and other south Florida airports on Sunday.

Isaac is also affecting cruises around Florida and the Caribbean, according to Cruise Critic, a website that covers the industry. Cruise lines have kept ships at sea, altered itineraries and delayed departures of upcoming sailings, Cruise Critic reported. 

Related: South hopes for drought relief from Isaac

Isaac moved into the Gulf of Mexico after spending several days sweeping across the Caribbean.

In Haiti, Isaac added to the misery of more than 350,000 survivors of the 2010 earthquake still living in flimsy resettlement camps as water gushed into tents and corrugated plastic shacks were ripped apart by the wind.

Authorities in the impoverished nation said the storm had killed eight people, including three children.

In the Dominican Republic, officials said three people were missing, and confirmed the death of the mayor of a town near Santo Domingo, who was swept away as he tried to save another person from a flooded river.

No deaths or injuries were reported in Cuba, which got off lightly when the storm crossed its eastern flank instead of raking up the length of the island as originally predicted.

Weather.com, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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What ever happened to gas being less than $3.00 a gallon by fall just in time for the next selection.

    Reply#237 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 12:49 AM EDT

    That lady in the picture is carrying a butt load of welfare, DES, and Section 8 paperwork! Probably the first thing she decided to save even before the pets.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#238 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 12:52 AM EDT

    I assume that everyone has read what super-intellect Samuel L Jackson has said on twitter. He wishes that Tampa would have been hit because of the Republican National Convention going on there. This guy is another cocaine-fueled hollywood idiot spouting his holier-than-thou attitude and forgetting that lives can be lost in this storm. This guy is an idiot. This was his tweet: "Unfair @!$%#: GOP spared by Issac ! NOLA prolly @!$%#ed Again! Not understanding God's plan!" Here is something special about him:

      Reply#239 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 12:59 AM EDT

      He spells his cursewords correctly but rarely anything else.

        Reply#240 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 12:59 AM EDT

        So here we are again...People just refuse to leave. So...you choose to stay after you have been told to get out. Don't call for help after that...don't expect people to risk their lives to save you cause you were too stubborn to leave. If the storm wasn't that bad...who cares...your alive...Here we have Katrina victims 7 years later,saying the state OWES them a home...if you cant get off your ass and find a job in almost 7 years...then you get what you give...NOTHING.

        The world owes you nothing...you get what you give.Get some pride and help yourself. Sorry if truth hurts.

        • 2 votes
        Reply#241 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:28 AM EDT

        America needs a first hand reminder of how inept republicans like Bush and Romney are at helping after a natural disaster strikes.

        • 1 vote
        #241.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:39 AM EDT

        Most people who have homes their have been paying for flood insurance for years. Just like homes along the Gulf and the Atlantic. What do people do when their homes get wiped out they rebuild.

          #241.2 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:42 AM EDT

          What do you mean help yourself? These lazy a@#es are 4th or 5th generation welfare collectors that are too stupid to work. Maybe we could send them to chicago, so they could get involved with all the welfare shootings there.

          • 1 vote
          #241.3 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 4:00 AM EDT
          Reply

          This is great... During the GOP convention, everyone in America will not only get to see republicans partying and having a great time in Tampa's adult night clubs... America will also get a first hand reminder of how the party of stupid handles natural disasters. America will see the Obama administration come to the rescue with overwhelming supplies and resources while at the same time the news outlets will have no choice but compare this to how the GOP handled a hurricane hitting the exact same place while they were in power.

          • 1 vote
          Reply#242 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:38 AM EDT

          And he's got three months to do it. And it only took him two years to get health care reform passed.

            #242.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:54 AM EDT

            Yep, Obama did what no other president could do, and it only took two years.

            • 1 vote
            #242.2 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:56 AM EDT

            Tell me what that zebra has done that is so great or even good.

            • 1 vote
            #242.3 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 3:50 AM EDT

            The only thing Obama did his first two years in Office was Health Care Reform. Basically this was the transfer of Medicare and Medicaid from Blue Cross - Blue Shield a insurance company to Humana another insurance company. This is far from being universal, single payer health care. And then bailing out the banks, mortgage companies and wall street. And the continuation of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and he tried to start another war with Iran.

              #242.4 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 8:03 AM EDT
              Reply

              I can't wait to see how Obama handles a natural disaster hitting New Orleans and comparing it to how Bush handled (and how Romney would handle) the same disaster.

                Reply#243 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:43 AM EDT

                "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job" -- George W Bush --

                "Outsource that job to China" -- Mitt Romney --

                • 1 vote
                #243.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 3:14 AM EDT

                obammy will screw it up like he has the whole country.

                • 1 vote
                #243.2 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 3:53 AM EDT
                Reply

                The Party of Stupid is in a total panic knowing that a hurricane will hit New Orleans during the republican national convention. America will get to see the Obama administration come to the rescue and save the day, while at the same time America is going to see the GOP more worried about parties and hookers while a natural disaster hits. And then America will get to be fully reminded how republicans like Bush and Romney are completely inept at handling natural disasters.

                • 2 votes
                Reply#244 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 1:47 AM EDT

                The Party of Stupid

                Uh, you got the wrong party labeled on this one. Back up and re group.

                  #244.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:29 AM EDT
                  Reply

                  The secondary storm surge of Bentley and Jindal crying for money could be devastating!

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#246 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 3:11 AM EDT

                  This is Gods punishement to the people of LA- if they had gotten rid of Bobby Jindal they would have been spared

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#247 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 3:46 AM EDT

                  I hope these people will leave this time! It was stupid that the U. S. Government didn't declare the area uninhabitable the first time and move New Orleans 200 Thousand mile inland and use the rest of the land as public wildlife sanctuary. I know many were hurt and homeless but come on ,we have to realize that this isn't safe.

                  If you want security the go ahead and use common sense. Move the city so that the next generation doesn't suffer like thew previous one. We love you and want nothing but the best. Please heed the warnings!

                  • 2 votes
                  Reply#248 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 4:31 AM EDT

                  I think they will this time even though the mayor has a cocky attitude about the flood gates that were installed recently.When he's sitting there laughing about it,I hope in sake of him that they get hit bad and then lets watch him laugh about that.As for the people who survived KATRINA,they would be better off moving away from there and not going back.

                  • 1 vote
                  #248.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:28 AM EDT
                  Reply

                  I am wondering if they ever TESTED the flood control gates ever since they were put in after Hurricane KATRINA ? Nothing against New Orleans but I got a gut feeling that they won't work/do there job ( now like I said "GUT FEELING",I could be wrong about it ).

                  • 1 vote
                  Reply#249 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:21 AM EDT

                  Would those be the floodgates built by sub-sub contractors caught stuffing old newspaper in the concrete? I hope that horrible Government agency FEMA and the evil Feds aren't tasked with picking up the tab for those freedom loving anti-gov patriots.

                    #249.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:35 AM EDT
                    Reply
                    james39865Deleted

                    By Pat Robertsons thinking this is Gods way of punishing the corrupt clowns pretending to be Christians. Didn't he say Katrina was Gods punishment of New Orleans for, well, being humans?

                      Reply#251 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:30 AM EDT

                      God isn't responsible for disasters. People are!!!!

                        #251.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:18 AM EDT
                        Reply

                        I always have wondered why they call them mandatory evacuations when there are always those who refuse to evacuate and then expect others to risk their lives to come rescue them and then throw a fit when they are not rescued within minutes of whatever disaster that prompted the evacuation order.

                        • 1 vote
                        Reply#252 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:36 AM EDT

                        that is humans for you .all so to al that say this is GB warming . she is not Evan a cat 1 yet. what is hap-ping here is the natural cyc of the earth . been doing it for thousands of years it will keep doing it long after were all gone form us humans being stopid and inventing something that will wipe us all out

                          #252.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:57 AM EDT

                          How do you know this has been the normal weather pattern for thousands of years? Where are all the records as proof? The earth is being ruined more and more every day. Weather experts have already predicted that in the next few years, CAT 3 hurricanes will be more frequent.

                            #252.2 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:21 AM EDT
                            Reply

                            All the people evacuating New Orleans. Should go to the Republican convention.

                            • 1 vote
                            Reply#253 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:58 AM EDT

                            The crooks will stay back to rob the city blind, my guest.

                              Reply#254 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:01 AM EDT

                              Why don't they do like our ancestors did a hundred and fifty years ago and move the city to higher ground. Several early settlements moved to higher ground, see Williamsburg, Va. People were getting Malaria from mosquito bites in the low lying river area. Move it out and use the land for industrial and shipping purposes.

                                Reply#255 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:07 AM EDT

                                unfortunately, people are just to stubborn and ignorant to do such a thing, even though it would be a very wise thing to do.

                                  #255.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:14 AM EDT
                                  Reply

                                  Do you think that this time the people of New Orleans will listen to the warning and leave the city? Or will they stay behind again, and end up trapped on their roofs, waiting for the military to rescue them?

                                  It is just stupid to be living anywhere near the ocean, especially an area prone to devastating storms. People know those areas are dangerous, yet they presume to live there anyway. The oceans are the most powerful force on the planet. Do people really think they can outsmart nature? What a laugh that is.

                                    Reply#256 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:13 AM EDT

                                    This coverage of a little hurricane is nauseating.. good lord people its a frickin cat one.. a bit of wind and we have non stop media.. I cant imagine what would happen if we got a real storm.. good grief!

                                      Reply#257 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 6:27 AM EDT

                                      I guess it depends on weather your house is below sea level or not.

                                        #257.1 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 8:17 AM EDT
                                        Reply

                                        Tropical storms become hurricanes when they reach 74 mph sustained winds. Why 74? GOD=7_4, whereas, G is the 7th letter, a circle can be 15 or zerO and D=4. 7/4=July 4th or 7 April 30 AD: Good(7__4) Friday when J10+E5+S19+U21+S19=74 the king(74) of the Judeans(74) - the Jewish(74) Messiah(74) - was on the C3+R18+O15+S19+S19=74. Assigning a number(74) to a letter is called Simple(6,74) English(7,74) Gematria(8,74) where words with similar sums have a connect(74) between(74) them. Y'shua(74)/Joshua(74)/IESVS(74) was born on 17/4/748 AUC (April 17, 6 BC).

                                        Earth has 7 continen

                                          Reply#258 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 8:46 AM EDT

                                          Does anyone else think the blacks and Native Americans should trade places? I mean the Natives should be the ones that should be crying oppression and racism and the blacks should have been put on reservations, it would have worked out better that way for everyone.

                                            Reply#259 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 10:27 AM EDT

                                            Whatever you idiots do, make sure you follow the same procedures as you did with Katrina - disarm the public, order evacuation when there is nowhere to go. Bring in a bunch of toxic trailers for people to live in, let the cops use the general public for target practice, whipping boys, etc. Whatever you do, don't get the pumps working, and don't beef up the seawalls. Imprison thousands of people in the Superdome, then let them die of starvation and disease. Then we'll know our gooberment is in charge.

                                              Reply#260 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 10:45 AM EDT

                                              What is the problem? Obama said he would lower the seal level. People can't evacuate until they sack Walmart - its a ritual.

                                              • 1 vote
                                              Reply#261 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 10:47 AM EDT

                                              You people are IDIOTS! Mayor Nagin stayed in NOLA during Katrina- while the LA Gov. looked down from higher ground and said...OOh, that looks Bad! "Idiot Bush" had birthday cake in TX w/ Mc Cain, while my family swam up to their attics to save their own lives!!! Then they wouldn't allow other countries(Cuba,etc.) who offered to give aide to people that Our own country wouldn't..... and now 7 years later the storm is aiming for the RNC convention...Dear God, take Fl...(and Tx) we won't miss them!

                                                Reply#262 - Tue Aug 28, 2012 7:11 PM EDT
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