--Lou
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CharleySurvivor wrote:OMG, I'm speechless!
I hope nobody had decided to ride it.
Cameron empty but for a few holdouts
September 24, 2005
By Yancey Roy
Gannett News Service
and Brett Martel
The Associated Press
Nearly all of low-lying, marsh-filled Cameron Parish evacuated before Hurricane Rita made landfall, which it is expected to do early this morning.
Except for three 40-something-year-old men who, at last check, still were still in a mobile home in the town of Cameron near the Gulf of Mexico, officials said late Friday.
“The military went to their house. The sheriff’s office went to their house. OEP went to their house,’’ said Sheriff Theos Duhon, referring to Office of Emergency Preparations. “We talked to them for two days. They said they were not going to go out.’’
That flies in face of 99.9 percent of the 9,500 or so folks in this parish. Ever since Hurricane Audrey roared through in 1957, killing about 500 people, residents generally bolt as soon as there is a hurricane warning.
“Their parents went through Audrey,’’ Duhon said incredulously.
At 5 p.m. Friday, on the way to Lake Charles, sherriff’s deputies placed road blocks at the Cameron line more than 20 miles north of the holdouts.
“If they stayed where they stayed,’’ Duhon said, “well, we’ll find them when we get back.’’


Ixolib wrote:I'm thinking that most of the structures right on the beach (well, "shoreline" since there are really no "beaches" in LA.) were used as vacation or fishing get-a-ways, and I'd imagine that others were permanent homes for some of the residents.





Derek Ortt wrote:if that photo is legit, shows how destructive Rita was able maybe that Audrey was not as intense as believed, since it did not do that to Cameron

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