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NEWS | Sept. 14, 2020

Louisiana National Guard responds to hurricane, COVID-19

By Sgt. 1st Class Denis B. Ricou Louisiana National Guard

NEW ORLEANS – The past two weeks, the nation has remembered both the 15-year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina and the 19-year anniversary of the horrific 9/11 attacks, all while the state of Louisiana responds to two emergencies. The men and women of the Louisiana National Guard, many of whom were influenced by both tragic events, have worked tirelessly since March in COVID-19 operations and then response and recovery missions following Hurricane Laura.

While there are 11,000 members of the Louisiana Army and Air National Guard, roughly 90% were born on or after 1980. Additionally, over 80% of the LANG is a reserve force, meaning they typically wear the uniform and train one weekend a month while going to school or working outside the military full-time.

Deployments, both home and overseas, interrupt that usual routine. Currently, more than 4,900 members of the Guard are supporting both emergency operations.

"These Generation Y and Z Guardsmen may have not been labeled as 'the greatest generation.' However, they are truly the greatest of their generation," said Chief Warrant Officer 5 Kevin Dares, the command chief warrant officer for the LANG. "The younger generations I know make up the majority of my workplace. They are hardworking, driven, initiative-taking leaders that have proven to me, day in and day out, that they are a cut above."

The LANG is supporting 19 distribution sites and has distributed 5.9 million liters of water, 4.3 million military rations, 945,000 bags of ice and 181,000 tarps to people affected by Hurricane Laura. LANG engineers have assessed 2,366 miles, cleared debris off 1,692 miles of road and cleared 169 structures.

"Everywhere that I have gone, the folks on the ground … have been nothing but grateful and thankful for the work of our National Guard," said Gov. John Bel Edwards. "We have the best National Guard in the United States of America. They're the best at preparing for and responding to a disaster."

While supporting COVID-19 response operations, the LANG is assisting 19 medical test sites and has tested over 213,165 people. While assisting at food banks, Guard members have packaged over 13 million pounds of food.

Warrant Officer Kayla Meadors, a 28-year-old helicopter pilot from Denham Springs with the 1-244th Assault Helicopter Battalion, is one of the newest pilots in the LANG and responded most recently to Hurricane Laura during the emergency operations.

"The attacks on 9/11 were definitely a contributing factor to my joining the military. I was in fourth grade, and I had never seen adults so distraught and broken over something so far away from Denham Springs. They were totally helpless," said Meadors. "Four years later, I was starting the eighth grade when Hurricane Katrina decimated the Mississippi coast … over 1,800 Americans lost their lives, thousands were uprooted and millions were affected. Once again an outside force, this time a natural disaster, left all the adults in my life totally helpless. The Louisiana National Guard was activated to rescue, support, provide and sacrifice for the people when no one else knew what to do.

"To this day I think the National Guard fills a role in our communities that no other organization has the ability to fill on such a large scale," said Meadors. "I like to be part of the fighting force representing our nation worldwide, and I like to be one of the helping hands when people close to home need assistance."

While working 10-hour days at a distribution site for people affected by Laura in Lake Charles, Pvt. 1st Class Corey Carter, 21, of New Orleans, with the 1-141st Field Artillery Battalion, recalled the day in 2005 he thought he would die.

"During Hurricane Katrina, I was 6 years old. My mother and I got stuck in our house when it flooded and neither of us could swim. I remember my mother hugging me and telling me that she loved me, and I honestly didn't think we were going to make it," said Carter. "And then 30 minutes later we heard a helicopter above the roof and the Louisiana National Guard rescued us. We were helo'd out.

"Every time a kid now waves at me in uniform, it brings me back to that time … seeing Army soldiers helping us out. It feels good inside because I know I am helping out the community," said Carter.

"I have witnessed these young people take on the toughest international and domestic problems while working in some of the most demanding environmental and stressful conditions, and do it with a positive attitude," said Dares.

 

 

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