The powerful storm has sustained winds of 150 mph and is expected to make landfall in Louisiana today. The expected storm surge ‘is unsurvivable’
That’s just 7 mph from making Ida a Category 5 storm. It was 60 miles south of the mouth of the Mississippi River, NHC forecasters said in a 7 a.m. ET update, as the storm continued its march toward Louisiana and the Gulf Coast at 15 mph.
The hurricane has quickly increased in intensity since striking Cuba on Friday, threatening to be an “extremely dangerous major hurricane” when it makes its projected landfall along the Louisiana coast Sunday afternoon — on the 16th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Ida gained 35 mph in sustained wind speed in just six hours, the NHC said.
“Ida is poised to strengthen further and based on recent satellite images it appears that strengthening is imminent,” the NHC said earlier.
Outer bands from the storm are already making their way onshore across the Gulf Coast, impacting southeastern Louisiana, including New Orleans. An elevated weather station at Pilot’s Station East near Southwest Pass, Louisiana, recently reported a wind gust up to 107 mph, the NHC said.
A hurricane warning remains in effect from Intracoastal City, Louisiana, to the mouth of the Pearl River and includes Lake Pontchartrain, Lake Maurepas and New Orleans.
A tornado watch is in effect until 8 p.m. ET for parts of Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi, according to the Storm Prediction Center. Quick-moving, brief tornadoes will be possible throughout Sunday.
There is also a danger of life-threatening storm surge inundation Sunday in areas along the coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
If Ida makes landfall in Louisiana as forecast, it would be the fourth hurricane to slam the state since last August and Louisiana’s third major hurricane landfall in that time span.
“August 29 is an important date in history here,” Collin Arnold, director of the New Orleans Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, told CNN Saturday. “A lot of people remember what happened 16 years ago. It’s time to hunker down tonight and be where you need to be.”
Schools and casinos closed, flights canceled
Officials throughout the state have implored people to evacuate, with some issuing mandatory orders to do so.
Arnold urged people to stock up on enough food and water for at least three days.
“We say the first 72 (hours) is on you,” Arnold added. “The first three days of this will be difficult for responders to get to you.”
The storm surge, coupled with winds as strong as 150 mph, could leave some parts of southeast Louisiana “uninhabitable for weeks or months,” according to a hurricane statement from the National Weather Service in New Orleans.
The NWS warned of “structural damage to buildings, with many washing away” as well as winds that could bring “widespread power and communication outages.” Flooding rains could cause “numerous road and bridge closures with some weakened or washed out” along with “some structures becoming uninhabitable or washed away.”
Rainfall accumulation during the storm may total 8 to 16 inches from southeast Louisiana to southern Mississippi through Monday, with isolated amounts of 20 inches possible, the NHC said.
In Mississippi, at least 15 school districts and universities will be closed Monday, with the majority of schools announcing plans to resume classes on Tuesday, pending the weather forecast.
Additionally, a dozen casinos along Mississippi’s Gulf Coast have shuttered ahead of the hurricane’s projected landfall. Most casinos closed either Saturday afternoon or by Saturday night and announced plans to reopen Tuesday.
Region prepares as landfall approaches
New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell on Saturday said that if people plan to voluntarily evacuate — which she recommends — it was time to go.
“Time is not on our side. It’s just rapidly growing, it’s intensifying,” the mayor said. “If you’re voluntarily evacuating our city, now is the time to leave — you need to do so immediately, if you’re planning to ride it out again make sure that you’re able to hunker down.”
Cantrell on Friday evening announced that the National Weather Service and Gov. John Bel Edwards said there was no time for the city to issue a mandatory evacuation for areas inside the levee system.
Jefferson Parish Sheriff Joseph Lopinto said Friday that once the storm starts, people need to stay off the roads to protect first responders.
As the storm approached, mandatory evacuations were ordered for parts of at least seven Louisiana parishes as well as the towns of Grande Isle and Port Fourchon. Voluntary evacuations were issued in six parishes.
Jefferson Parish President Cynthia Lee Sheng urged on Saturday for residents in low-lying areas to evacuate before Hurricane Ida hits, as the expected storm surge is “unsurvivable.”
“I want to reiterate the storm surge that we are expecting is unsurvivable,” she said, adding that the storm is expected to linger over the area. “We need you to leave immediately.”
“I would ask our residents, if you do not need to go to the hospital this weekend, if you do not have a life-threatening emergency, please do not go,” Avegno said. “This is not the time to go to the hospital for a routine thing that could wait until later.”
CNN’s Monica Garrett, Gene Norman, Chris Boyette, Paul P. Murphy, Melissa Alonso, Hollie Silverman, Amanda Watts, Haley Brink, Artemis Moshtaghian, Liam Reilly, Ray Sanchez and Alaa Elassar contributed to this report.