Like Texas, the terrain is prone to flooding, and for residents there, the worst is yet
to come.
Congressman Clay Higgins represents Louisiana's 3rd District, which covers much of the state's
southwest coast.
He's a former law enforcement officer and now serves on the House Science Committee.
I spoke with him by phone a short time ago.
Congressman Higgins, thanks for being with us.
I know you were very worried about your district in advance of Harvey, and the concern was
that there be a direct blow on that second approach to landfall.
It appears you dodged that bullet.
Give us a sense, though, of what the consequences of Harvey were in your district.
REP.
CLAY HIGGINS (R), Louisiana: Well, the storm sort of hit exactly at the state border, which
my district, of course, includes the parishes in Louisiana that border Texas in the southern
portion of the state.
So, so many of our citizens from Louisiana and from the district that I represent were
part of that rescue, civilian rescue effort that is commonly referred to as the Cajun
navy, which essentially is just thousands and thousands of civilians with boats and
four-wheel drive trucks that load up their vehicles with water and food and temporary
shelter, and they just roll out to areas, neighborhoods that have been flooded.
And they begin rescuing people from second-floor, you know, apartments or from rooftops or out
of attics.
A very common mistake is for someone, as their house begins to flood, they go up to the second
story, or they crawl into the attic.
And then they have no way out.
So we have to use chain saws to cut through the roof in order to get sometimes whole families
out of an attic on to a boat and then to high ground.
And then from there, they have to be picked up by buses and brought to a shelter, a temporary
shelter, until they can get put somewhere more permanent, until they can return to their
homes and begin the recovery process.
I have been through many storms, brother, and I have never seen this much water, never,
not in Katrina and not in any of the storms that have hit Louisiana.
I'm 56 years old.
I have never seen this much water dumped at one time.
MILES O'BRIEN: Tell us a little bit about how many shelters you have in your district,
how many people have come from the hard-hit areas and are being sheltered there.
REP.
CLAY HIGGINS: We have two major shelters set up in Calcasieu Parish in the Lake Charles
area, with hundreds and hundreds of displaced Americans out of Texas that have been brought
into those shelters.
So it's quite an endeavor.
There are so many entities working with this response and recovery and rescue efforts,
that it can be quite difficult to coordinate all those entities, especially when you include
civilians working in massive quantities just out of the goodness of their heart, out of
their own pocket.
They don't get a dime back, you understand.
And you have large government responses.
It can be quite complicated.
MILES O'BRIEN: Congressman Clay Higgins, Republican of Louisiana, thank you for your time.
REP.
CLAY HIGGINS: And thank you, sir.
And God bless you for shedding light on this and for your kindness during this interview.
I thank you for your journalistic integrity, sir.
MILES O'BRIEN: The record-breaking nature of Harvey has renewed the conversation about
the link between climate change and extreme weather events.
Congressman Higgins is a vocal climate change skeptic.
I asked him if the events of the last week have at all changed his mind.
You can listen to that exchange on our Web site, PBS.org/NewsHour.
PBS NewsHour full episode, August 31, 2017 Why wouldn’t US shoot down N. Korean missiles? What it’s like to go home after Hurricane Harvey and realize you’ve lost everything Passerby Hooks Rope On National Guard Truck, Onlookers Shocked By What’s On The Other End WATCH: Louisiana Rep. Clay Higgins on his skepticism about human-caused climate change PBS NewsHour full episode Aug. 31, 2017 Hardball with Chris Matthews 8/31/17 | MSNBC News Today August 31, 2017 Hurricane Harvey leaves Houston with Texas-sized problems Are we on the brink of a jobless future? News Wrap: State Department orders closure of Russian diplomatic sites