When Hurricane Delta struck the Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk on Oct. 9, it caused damage to buildings already under repair from Hurricane Laura on Aug. 27.
Hurricane Delta brought this pine tree down on Corvias housing off Magnolia Drive on Fort Polk in the evening hours of Oct. 9.
Hurricane Delta damaged ongoing repairs to Corvias housing on Fort Polk on Oct. 9.
This covering on the 1st Battalion, 509th Infantry Regiment (Airborne) footprint was destoyed by Hurricane Delta Oct. 9.
Roofs damaged by Hurricane Laura are battered by Hurricane Delta at Fort Polk on Oct. 9.
A power pole was knocked down on Corps Road by a falling tree during Hurricane Delta on Oct. 9.
Fencing was blown over on military housing units at Fort Polk on Oct. 9.
FORT POLK, La. — On Aug. 27, Hurricane Laura made landfall on the southwestern Louisiana Gulf Coast near Cameron as a Category 4 storm, and plowed northward, following U.S. Highway 171, crossing the Joint Readiness Training Center and Fort Polk, before continuing it’s trek to Shreveport and beyond.
At Fort Polk, the storm was still a Category 3 hurricane and left the area without power for weeks, causing destruction to homes, businesses, timber and anything else in its path.
By the end of September, aerial views of Laura’s path still revealed a sea of blue, as tarps seemingly covered most homes, including many on Fort Polk.
Then the unthinkable happened — another hurricane, this one with the name Delta — struck the Louisiana Gulf Coast Oct. 9 and sped north, brushing the eastern edge of Fort Polk with its eyewall, adding to Laura’s destruction and creating some of its own.
That the installation was able to recover from not one but two hurricanes in a span of less than 45 days is a testament to the forward thinking of JRTC and Fort Polk leadership and the tireless efforts of everyone from privates cleaning up debris to commanders accounting for people and property and taking care of those who needed it most.
While the damage left behind by Delta was not as widespread as Laura, it was nonetheless taxing to the already strained installation work force and services. Additional trees and power lines were blown down, power lost and buildings damaged, including some that were being repaired after sustaining damage from Laura.
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