Biden visits families in neighborhoods devastated by Hurricane Ida and ties recovery to his $3.5T reconciliation budget after landing in Louisiana with cheat sheets in his pockets
President Joe Biden offered hugs and reassurances on Friday when he toured LaPlace, Louisiana, walking among downed trees, debris and power lines as he saw first hand the damage from Hurricane Ida.
Biden offered comfort and snapped selfies as he walked among the wreckage.
'I know you're hurting,' he said after meeting with families and visiting with a group that gathered on the corner of a street blocked off by security.
He stood in front of a one story home where a huge tree toppled on top of the roof, crushing the family mini van.
The street featured rows of houses with blue tarps on their roofs. Several huge trees were uprooted. Some had mattresses in their yards - after interior flooding that can ruin belongings.
Days after Hurricane Ida walloped the Louisiana coast and followed a path of destruction through the state, Biden came here to meet with local officials, tour the damage and take in aerial views as he flew over the area.
During his tour, Biden, wearing a face mask and baseball cap, became comforter-in-chief.
He placed a reassuring on the arm of one woman and even leaned on a bent stop sign during a neighborhood conversation, where he vowed to help residents rebuild, arguing his 'Build Back Better' agenda and his $3.5 trillion budget plan would help make it possible.
In a speech to residents, Biden rattled off the list of things the federal government was doing, including bringing in more generators to help those with power, opening up the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, and working with cell phone companies to get service restored.
'We're working around the clock, with the governor and the elected officials here until we can meet every need you all,' he said.
President Joe Biden tours a neighborhood affected by Hurricane Ida in LaPlace, La., giving a hug to a child
President Biden walked around a Louisiana neighborhood devastated by Hurricane Ida; joined by Governor John Bel Edwards and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell
President Joe Biden rests his hand on a stop sign as he stopped to talk with residents
President Biden walks beside a massive, fallen tree as he toured hurricane damage
Biden takes a selfie with residents during his tour
Biden became comforter in chief, offering reassuring words that help was coming
Biden also blasted insurance companies for denying living assistance coverage for those who didn't fall under the mandatory evacuation order.
'Insurance companies are saying no, no, no, we won't pay you what we owe. Well we're putting as much pressure as we can,' the president said.
'No one fled this killer storm because they were looking for a vacation or a road trip,' he noted.
He argued even though evacuation orders were voluntary, people felt safer leaving.
'So, folks, they left their home because ... they felt that they had to flee the risk of death. There's nothing voluntary about that. And so I'm calling on private insurance companies - don't hide behind the fine print and technicality; pay what you owe your customers; cover temporary housing costs,' he said.
Later, Biden took an aerial tour of some of the hardest hit areas. He circled coastal communities in southeast Louisiana that bore the initial brunt of the storm, flying over Grand Isle, where Ida’s ferocious winds swept away homes and roofs.
In LaFourch Parish, he met with local leaders, joined again by Scalise. As the sun went down and temperatures finally dipped below the 80s, Biden met privately with officials in a building made of corrugated metal near Golden Meadow, one of Ida’s landfall locations.
As he flew over marshy areas already giving way to erosion and a rising Gulf, Biden, aboard Marine One, was trailed by press and aides flying aboard Ospreys.
Governor John Bel Edwards and FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell joined Biden on his neighborhood tour. Earlier the two joined the president for a briefing at one of the coordination centers, which Biden arrived at after driving through rows electric poles toppled by the storm.
Dozens of white line crews could be seen lining the road as his motorcade passed. Biden once again praised crews from 24 states he said had come to aid the relief effort. One lineman in a green safety jacket gave a one-finger salute to the motorcade as it passed, as DailyMail.com observed traveling with the president.
Biden saluted those crews in his brief remarks while pool cameras rolled, noting that people responded from across the country to help.
'You're not going to put up the same system … Build it better,' he said, talking about burying power lines even if it costs more to defray future costs.
'I just want you all focused on that as you take a look,' he said, with House Republican Whip Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.) in the room. Not a single Republican backed his sweeping 'reconciliation' bill when Democratic leaders brought it up, while his infrastructure bill drew some Republican support in the Senate.
His pitch came hours after Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) published a searing op-ed called for a 'strategic pause' for the reconciliation bill – a posture that could imperil it.
'Take a look and see if what we're suggesting makes the most sense to you. Not whether it's not the money or not or too much. Does it make sense? Does it make sense?' Biden said.
Downed power lines are visible behind President Biden as he takes his tour
The neighborhood was fully of debris after Hurricane Ida came through
Biden chats with a group of residents
President Biden talks with residents impacted by Hurricane Ida
The neighborhood Biden toured was filled with down trees and debris
President Joe Biden toured stunning hurricane devastation in LaPlace, Louisiana, getting a briefing at St. John Parish Emergency Operations Center
He pointed to the Feds' $15 billion in levees after Hurricane Katrina, with a system that appears to have held and kept New Orleans mostly dry.
'That was a lot of money. Think how much money it saved?' Biden said.
He said his daughter Ashley, who went to Tulane, told him: 'What are you spending time talking to the governor of New York? Why are you not in Louisiana?'
New York also got slammed by the hurricane, and some locals fear they could lose the nation's attention.
Biden talked up $500 FEMA checks. Sometimes it's just what you need that moment that can make a difference,' he said.
President Joe Biden speaks with New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell (L) and Jefferson Parish President Cynthia Lee Sheng upon his arrival in New Orleans
Biden acknowledged he was pitching his program in the fallout of the storm. 'I realize I'm selling as I'm talking to you now,' he said. But he said his infrastructure proposal would provide good paying jobs.
His press aide, Karine Jean-Pierre, wouldn't provide specifics when asked if Biden had met with Manchin, who in a searing op-ed called for a 'strategic pause' for the reconciliation bill. Manchin has considerable leverage in the 50-50 Senate, and could stall the reconciliation package or use his sway to try to slash its bottom line.
On his stop, Biden visited some of the hardest hit areas south of LaFourche, Louisiana where the Category 4 Hurricane made landfall and ripped through structures and devastated entire communities.
His trip comes after Hurricane Ida pummeled Louisiana, before making its way through a swath of the country to cause massive flooding in the Northeast, causing further mayhem and killing dozens. The severe flooding stunned residents of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York off guard – and could draw national attention away from hard hit coastal areas that took the initial brunt of the storm.
The trip will give Biden the opportunity to address the federal response and meet with local leaders – just days after he defended the chaotic evacuation from Afghanistan.
President Biden saw downed trees in the Cambridge neighborhood of LaPlace, La.
Biden addressed Louisiana residents in front of a large downed tree
President Biden, arriving in New Orleans, will take an aerial tour of some of the hardest hit communities, including Laffite, Grand Isle, Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish
Dozens of white line crews could be seen lining the road as Biden's motorcade passed and one lineman in a green safety jacket gave a one-finger salute to the motorcade as it passed
A van sits in a ditch in the aftermath of Hurricane Ida
Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards, left, and White House senior adviser Cedric Richmond, right, joined President Joe Biden in the briefing
Homes destroyed in the wake of Hurricane Ida are shown September 2, 2021 in Grand Isle, Louisiana. Ida made landfall August 29 as a Category 4 storm near Grand Isle, southwest of New Orleans, causing widespread power outages, flooding and massive damage
He also took an aerial tour of some of the hardest hit communities, including Laffite, Grand Isle, Port Fourchon and Lafourche Parish.
Biden told the nation Thursday he had been monitoring the devastation caused by Hurricane Ida 'closely,' after the Category 4 Hurricane slammed into the Louisiana coast, bringing death and destruction on the way as it made its way up through Pennsylvania and New York.
'While the catastrophic flooding wasn't as severe as it was during Hurricane Katrina 16 years ago, Ida was so powerful that it caused the Mississippi River literally to change direction -- the flow -- change the flow temporarily,' Biden noted.
He said the 'good news' is that the $15 billion levee system put in place around New Orleans after catastrophic failures during Hurricane Katrina appears to have held.
'It held. It was strong. It worked,' he said. 'But too many people and too many areas are still unprotected and saw a storm surge and flooding that was devastating,' Biden said.
A search and rescue team drives through standing water while checking homes destroyed in the wake of Hurricane Ida on September 2, 2021 in Grand Isle, Louisiana. Ida made landfall August 29 as a Category 4 storm near Grand Isle, southwest of New Orleans, causing widespread power outages, flooding and massive damage
He pointed to 170 mile and hour winds he said were still unconfirmed by FEMA 'causing unimaginable damage, with debris and downed powerlines making roads impassable and slowing response efforts to save folks and property.'
Floods let to a series of deaths in the northeast as waters raged in Philadelphia and even Biden's hometown of Wilmington.
Homes destroyed in the wake of Hurricane Ida are shown September 2, 2021 in Grand Isle, Louisiana. Ida made landfall August 29 as a Category 4 storm near Grand Isle, southwest of New Orleans, causing widespread power outages, flooding and massive damage
Michael DiSimone, CEO of the Link Restaurant Group prepares meat to be barbecued to give to people for free as power continues to be out in most of the city after hurricane Ida ripped through the state in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., September 1, 2021
An official in Jefferson Parish says a transmission tower that provides power for New Orleans and the east bank of the parish has collapsed into the river near Bridge City. According to the parish's Emergency Management Director, cables strung across the Mississippi River
Biden ran into difficulties when he flew to Surfside Florida to view damage there earlier this summer after the tragic Champlain Towers South collapse. There was a shift on the rubble while Biden was at a hotel several blocks away, and the president visited a memorial wall rather than the disaster site itself.
During that visit, Biden met with local leaders including Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, his counterpart in a coronavirus feud.
'We're not going anywhere. Tell me what you need,' he told the assembled leaders, including DeSantis, who praised federal efforts.
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