NEW ORLEANS — Two days after Hurricane Francine knocked out power for nearly half a million people in Louisiana, Alexandra Canary was still waiting for the electricity in her area to come back online.
As her fridge continued to thaw out, the New Orleans resident began to clean out condiments at risk of spoiling. One of her small dogs watched from the couch, panting. Without air conditioning the home heated up quick, as the heat index reached 93 degrees Fahrenheit (33.9 degrees Celsius) on Friday.
''It's been tough trying to sleep, or even live,'' Canary, who is in her 70s said. ''Somedays it is actually cooler outside than being in the house.''
Frustration mounted across New Orleans, as crews for the city's electrical provider, Entergy, worked to restore power.
''Every single storm, every one, no matter how big or how small, the same thing happens,'' said Rudy Cerone, 71, referring to the power outages. ''Entergy just doesn't seem to take the necessary preparatory actions to harden this system to provide the power that we're paying through the nose for.''
An Entergy New Orleans spokesperson said the city had restored power to more than 40,000 customers since Thursday and that many more would regain electricity by the end of the day Friday. Around 6,500 Entergy customers in the city lacked power as of Friday afternoon, part of about 95,000 customers in Louisiana still without electricity, according to the tracking site poweroutage.us.
The spokesperson also said the information used to update outage numbers comes from crews in the field.
''These steps take time, and our teams are committed to providing customers with the latest restoration information as it is available,'' the spokesperson said in an emailed statement.