served as a shelter for hundreds of displaced flood victims.|upright=1.2 With an estimated 146,000 homes damaged in the flooding thousands of Louisianans were forced into shelters, with more than 11,000 in state-operated shelters. This prompted an estimated 1,500
American Red Cross volunteers to travel to Louisiana. Other groups such as
Louisiana State University, the
Catholic Charities Archdiocese of New Orleans, the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the
Celebration Church, Grace Church of Central, and the
Church of Scientology also sent aid. There were media reports of one man who cooked of
brisket for displaced people. More than 109,398 individuals and households registered for FEMA assistance, and FEMA approved $132 million for assistance. Singer Beyoncé, along with sister Solange and Kelly Rowland, held an event that raised more $4 million for those affected by the floods in Baton Rouge. In addition, singer
Taylor Swift donated $1 million to Louisiana's relief fund.
Lady Gaga donated an unspecified amount of money. On August 13, the
International Charter on Space and Major Disasters was activated by the
USGS, allowing for the humanitarian redeployment of satellite assets by the international community.
AT&T donated $100,000 to be split between the
Baton Rouge Area Foundation and
DonorsChoose.org for flood relief.
Randy Jackson and
Harry Connick Jr. were scheduled to host a
benefit concert at the
Baton Rouge River Center Theatre on September 5, featuring over a dozen artists, and all proceeds went to the American Red Cross Louisiana Flood Relief fund. On the "
Ellen" show Friday, September 9, host
Ellen DeGeneres announced that she and
Britney Spears would each donate $125,000 to help victims of the Louisiana Flood of 2016. Both celebrities are from Louisiana. Spears gave $125,000 to the Louisiana Red Cross to buy a new emergency response vehicle. DeGeneres received a letter from Betsey Baldwin, a P.E. teacher at Galvez Middle School in Ascension parish, which was inundated with two feet of water. The school has 620 students, who after the floods have been forced to study at another, nearby school. "I thought of one person that would help me, and it was you," Baldwin said. The company Shutterfly, at the request of DeGeneres, donated $125,000 to help Galvez Middle School recover.
Impact on school system During the peak of the floods, around 265,000 children have been out of school, nearly 30% of the school-aged population in the state of Louisiana. There were reports that 6 schools were heavily flooded in
East Baton Rouge Parish with another 15 in
Livingston Parish. Livingston Parish's Superintendent, Rick Wentzel, believes that their school system is in a similar position to the
Northshore following
Hurricane Katrina in 2005, and he held a meeting with the school district to discuss possible options. Livingston Parish conducted a teacher survey August 23–24, and a parent survey August 25 to assess how those are affected, and on Friday, August 26, 2016, Wentzel announced that Livingston Parish Public Schools will be resuming class on September 12, 2016. Wentzel, who was affected by the flooding himself, said he was "very pleased" that all schools will be resuming together. The late restart date is because LPPS received the most extensive damage with eight of the 15 flooded schools having "extensive damage." Wentzel said that each school will have a welcome back event for parents and students before returning on September 12, 27 school days following the August 4 start date. Wentzel said that the restart will have some unfortunate "side effects" as some schools will be temporarily platooned. The platooned schools were
Denham Springs High School at
Live Oak High School,
Denham Springs Freshman High at Live Oak Middle School, Southside Junior High at Juban Parc High School, and Springfield High School at Springfield Middle School. All host schools were in session from 6:30 am until 11:40 am and all platooned schools were in session from 12:25 pm until 5:37 pm. The two elementary schools were in class alongside their relocated school. Denham Springs Elementary was split among Eastside Elementary (Grades: PreK, K, 1, 2) and Freshwater Elementary (Grades: 3, 4, 5) while Southside Elementary was split among Lewis Vincent Elementary (Grades: PreK, K, 1) and Juban Parc Elementary (Grades: 2, 3, 4, 5). This announcement also came with Superintendent Wentzel saying ALL students will receive free lunch until September 30. Following a school board meeting on Thursday, September 9, Assistant Superintendent Stephen Parill announced the "known and confident updates" for the 2016 Academic Calendar. Only four changes were made to the calendar that include: changing Thursday, September 15 from a half-day to a whole day, removing the parish fair holiday on Friday, October 7 (the fair was cancelled due to the flooding), removing a parent-teacher conference day on Thursday, October 20, and making Wednesday, November 16 a whole day instead of a half-day. The board also voted to add class time to the day. Parill said they are still waiting on their appeal to Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) waiving the required minutes of class, and any further changes will be made after BESE's ruling. For the entire state, superintendent
John White said that at least 22 schools had heavy damage and will need time to recover. There were also many school closures due to flooding in the Lafayette area as well. Many teachers' homes flooded, with 4,000 staff members' homes in
Baker sustaining damage and another 2,000 in East Baton Rouge Parish. East Baton Rouge Parish schools announced they won't open back up until September 6, 25 days after school was originally canceled for the floods on August 12, the third day of school. Transportation was a challenge for many districts across the state, as many kids were displaced from their homes and many school buses were damaged from flood water. The prison experienced flooding ranging from to . LCIW, the only state-operated prison to receive flooding during the incident, temporarily closed. the prisoners were still housed in other prisons.
Elayn Hunt Correctional Center, next to LCIW, was not evacuated.
Economic impact abandoned on
Interstate 12 during the 2016 Louisiana floods|upright=1.3 Damages were anticipated to reach $10–15 billion, with this storm likely ranking as the seventh most expensive of natural disasters in the US since 1978. Because of the large number of homeowners without
flood insurance that were affected, the federal government is providing disaster aid through the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Homeowners with damage from the floods in those parishes are eligible for up to $33,000 in federal disaster aid and so far around 102,000 people have applied for help. For
business continuity and
community rebuilding, private
mobile flood recovery centers have also been made available, including a 10-piece
modular building complex used in Baton Rouge by FEMA as a
portable school for children of displaced families who moved north from
New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. ==References==