Almost 800 rescued in St. John the Baptist Parish after Hurricane Ida
At least three people have died as a result of the storm.
Ida is barreling through Louisiana after making landfall in the state as a powerful Category 4 hurricane on Sunday afternoon.
It was one of the strongest hurricanes on record -- by both wind speed and pressure -- to roar ashore in Louisiana.
Ida, now a tropical storm, is hitting on the 16-year anniversary of Katrina, a Category 3 hurricane that ravaged the Gulf Coast. Hurricane Katrina unleashed a series of events, taking the lives of more than 1,800 people and leaving more than $100 billion worth of damage in its wake.
Latest headlines:
More than 223,000 customers without power in Louisiana as Hurricane Ida moves through the state, according to poweroutage.us.
-ABC News' Will McDuffie
Eye of storm bringing extremely dangerous conditions to southeast Louisiana
Hurricane Ida is holding on to maximum sustained winds of 150 mph more than an hour after it made landfall near Port Fourchon, Louisiana.
As Ida’s eye continues to move ashore, it is bringing powerful, damaging winds, torrential rain and dangerous storm surge to the southeast Louisiana coast.
The center of the storm is currently about 55 miles south-southwest of New Orleans and is moving northwest at 13 mph.
Ida will continue to move across southeastern Louisiana through Sunday afternoon, bringing major weather impacts to a widespread region.
Relentless heavy rain could trigger potentially significant flash flooding, while high wind gusts, dangerous storm surge and possible tornados also threaten the area.
Tornados are also possible in parts of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and the Florida panhandle.
Storm surge concerns will be greatest Sunday afternoon and evening as the storm moves further inland. The surge could reach 8 to 12 feet in some spots along the coast of Louisiana and Mississippi.
An extreme wind warning remains in effect for the region, including in Grand Isle, Louisiana, which is currently reporting intense wind gusts.
Deteriorating conditions with heavy rounds of rain and possible flash flooding are expected in New Orleans over the next few hours.
The system will begin to weaken over the next few hours but will still bring dangerous hurricane conditions over a widespread area. A large swath of the Louisiana and Mississippi areas can see 10 to 20 inches.
The heavy rain and flash flooding threats will eventually reach the
Tennessee Valley Monday into Tuesday.
-ABC News’ Dan Peck
Louisiana officials urge residents to stay inside: 'There’s nobody coming right now'
Residents who did not evacuate storm-affected regions of Louisiana are being instructed to shelter in place, as conditions are now too perilous for first responders to save them.
"There’s nobody coming right now," said New Orleans Director of Homeland Security Collin Arnold Amayor during a press conference Sunday afternoon. "You need to stay inside."
People have even been instructed to avoid going to hospitals, which are hunkering down amid the life-threatening winds and heavy rain.
"Please do not try to access a health care or hospital facility right now," said Jennifer Avegno, director of the New Orleans Health Department. "Our hospitals are hunkering down. They are caring for the patients who are within their walls…We will be there for you when the storm passes."
-ABC News’ Joshua Hoyos and Will McDuffie
Ida marks 2 years in a row of record-breaking hurricanes in Louisiana
There have now been two years in a row of record-breaking hurricanes making landfall in Louisiana.
Hurricane Laura in 2020 and Hurricane Ida today were both packed with 150 mph winds.
The previous hurricane to contain winds at such speeds in Louisiana was the Last Island Hurricane in 1856.
When it comes to pressure, Ida is the second-strongest storm on record to hit Louisiana, beating out only Hurricane Katrina.
-ABC News’ Melissa Griffin