A week after Helene hit, thousands still without water struggle to find enough

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By MICHAEL PHILLIS, JEFF AMY and BRITTANY PETERSON

ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP) — Nearly a week after Hurricane Helene brought devastation to western North Carolina, a shiny stainless steel tanker truck in downtown Asheville attracted residents carrying 5-gallon containers, milk jugs and buckets to fill with what has become a desperately scare resource — drinking water.

Flooding tore through the city’s water system, destroying so much infrastructure that officials said repairs could take weeks. To make do, Anna Ramsey arrived Wednesday with her two children, who each left carrying plastic bags filled with 2 gallons (7.6 liters) of water.

“We have no water. We have no power. But I think it’s also been humbling,” Ramsey said.

Helene’s path through the Southeast left a trail of power outages so large the darkness was visible from space. Tens of trillions of gallons of rain fell and more than 200 people were killed, making Helene the deadliest hurricane to hit the mainland U.S. since Katrina in 2005. Hundreds of people are still unaccounted for, and search crews must trudge through knee-deep debris to learn whether residents are safe.

It also damaged water utilities so severely and over such a wide inland area that one federal official said the toll “could be considered unprecedented.” As of Thursday, about 136,000 people in the Southeast were served by a nonoperational water provider and more than 1.8 million were living under a boil water advisory, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.

Western North Carolina was especially hard hit. Officials are facing a difficult rebuilding task made harder by the steep, narrow valleys of the Blue Ridge Mountains that during a more typical October would attract throngs of fall tourists.

“The challenges of the geography are just fewer roads, fewer access points, fewer areas of flat ground to stage resources” said Brian Smith, acting deputy division director for the EPA’s water division in the Southeast.

After days without water, people long for more than just a sponge bath.

“I would love a shower,” said Sue Riles in Asheville. “Running water would be incredible.”

The raging floodwaters of Helene destroyed crucial parts of Asheville’s water system, scouring out the pipes that convey water from a reservoir in the mountains above town that is the largest of three water supplies for the system. To reach a second reservoir that was knocked offline, a road had to be rebuilt.

Boosted output from the third source restored water flow in some southern Asheville neighborhoods Friday, but without full repairs schools may not be able to resume in-person classes, hospitals may not restore normal operations, and the city’s hotels and restaurants may not fully reopen.

Even water that’s unfit to drink is scarce. Drew Reisinger, the elected Buncombe County register of deeds, worries about people in apartments who can’t easily haul a bucket of water from a creek to flush their toilet. Officials are advising people to collect nondrinkable water for household needs from a local swimming pool.

“One thing no one is talking about is the amount of poop that exists in every toilet in Asheville,” he said. “We’re dealing with a public health emergency.”

It’s a situation that becomes more dangerous the longer it lasts. Even in communities fortunate enough to have running water, hundreds of providers have issued boil water notices indicating the water could be contaminated. But boiling water for cooking and drinking is time consuming and small mistakes can cause stomach illness, according to Natalie Exum, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“Every day that goes by, you could be exposed to a pathogen,” Exum said. “These basic services that we take for granted in our everyday lives actually do do a lot to prevent illness.”

Travis Edwards’ faucet worked immediately after the storm. He filled as many containers as he could for himself and his child, but it didn’t take long for the flow to weaken, then stop. They rationed water, switching to hand sanitizer and barely putting any on toothbrushes.

“(We) didn’t realize how dehydrated we were getting,” he said.

Federal officials have shipped millions of gallons of water to areas where people also might not be able to make phone calls or switch on the lights.

Power has been restored to about 62% of homes and businesses and 8,000 crews are out working to restore power in the hardest hit parts of North Carolina, federal officials said Thursday. In 10 counties, about half of the cell sites are still down.

The first step for some utilities is simply figuring out how bad the damage is, a job that might require EPA expertise in extreme cases. Ruptured water pipes are a huge problem. They often run beneath roads, many of which were crumpled and twisted by floodwaters.

“Pretty much anytime you see a major road damaged, there’s a very good chance that there’s a pipe in there that’s also gotten damaged,” said Mark White, drinking water global practice leader at the engineering firm CDM Smith.

Generally, repairs start at the treatment plant and move outward, with fixes in nearby big pipes done first, according to the EPA.

“Over time, you’ll gradually get water to more and more people,” White said.

Many people are still missing people, and water repair employees don’t typically work around search and rescue operations. It takes a toll, according to Kevin Morley, manager of federal relations with the American Water Works Association.

“There’s emotional support that is really important for all the people involved. You’re seeing people’s lives just wiped out,” he said.

Even private well owners aren’t immune. Pumps on private wells may have lost power and overtopping floodwaters can contaminate them.

There’s often a “blind faith” assumption that drinking water won’t fail. In this case, the technology was insufficient, according to Craig Colten. Before retiring to Asheville, he was a professor in Louisiana focused on resilience to extreme weather. He hopes Helene will prompt politicians to spend more to ensure infrastructure withstands destructive storms.

And climate change will only make the problem more severe, said Erik Olson, a health and food expert at the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council.

“I think states and the federal government really need to step back and start looking at how we’re going to prepare for these extreme weather events that are going to be occurring and recurring every single year,” he said.

Edwards has developed a system to save water. He’ll soap dirty dishes and rinse them with a trickle of water with bleach, which is caught and transferred to a bucket — useable for the toilet.

Power and some cell service have returned for him. And water distribution sites have guaranteed some measure of normalcy: Edwards feels like he can start going out to see friends again.

“To not feel guilty about using more than a cup of water to, like, wash yourself … I’m really, really grateful,” he said.

Phillis reported from St. Louis. Associated Press writer Rebecca Santana contributed from Washington.

The Associated Press receives support from the Walton Family Foundation for coverage of water and environmental policy. The AP is solely responsible for all content. For all of AP’s environmental coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/climate-and-environment

I hated ‘Joker.’ I liked ‘Joker: Folie à Deux.’ So sue me

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The average sequel to a huge commercial success doesn’t try much of anything. Director Todd Phillips knows this. He is, after all, the director of all three “Hangover” movies.

Surprise! “Joker: Folie à Deux” is a lot of things, but a pro forma sequel it is not. This genuinely nervy jukebox musical (?) (!), very nearly a rebuke of the 2019 billion-dollar smash starring Joaquin Phoenix, feels like its own thing, considerably less derivative and more fully realized than the first one. And it’s sure to outright alienate millions who dug the earlier film’s grinding intensity and morally queasy vigilante spirit.

That one threw several New York-as-hellhole movies, from “Death Wish” to “Taxi Driver” to “The King of Comedy,” into a trash compactor and out came the “Joker” script, made screenworthy by Phoenix, giving his all. It arrived three years into a U.S. presidential administration full of daily reminders of what celebrity worship can lead to. The time was right for a truly nasty foray into Gotham, and into the head-space of pathological party clown and aspiring comedian Arthur Fleck, whose perpetual victimization could only lead to carnage.

“Joker: Folie à Deux” makes Fleck pay the piper. It’s a comeuppance with musical numbers. Returning screenwriters Scott Silver and director Phillips begin with Fleck behind bars at Arkham State Hospital, struggling with his warring personality disorder, the tormented abuse survivor Fleck in one corner, and Fleck’s now-notorious alter ego, Joker, in the other.

Fleck’s lawyer (Catherine Keener) is working up an insanity defense for his upcoming murder trial, to be prosecuted by DA Harvey Dent (Harry Lawtey). Life in Arkham is no life at all, and Phoenix appears to have undergone even more severe weight loss in the name of his craft this time, all the better to suggest a broken, undernourished soul. Then, one day, Fleck spies Lee Quinzel, Arkham’s newest resident played with dark relish by Lady Gaga. She’s first seen leading a music therapy class. She fixes him with a gaze that says: I’m a huge fan of your work. It’s love at first sight, and a spiritual marriage of two crazy kids whose mutual ambitions of greatness are, to quote Rodgers and Hammerstein, bustin’ out all over.

Bustin’ out of Arkham, at least temporarily, Fleck and Quinzel paint the town, wreak some havoc and imagine themselves as a musical duo for the ages. In the stylistic vein of the film version of “Chicago,” the “Joker” sequel frames its production numbers as sung-through and sometimes danced-through interior monologues — sometimes realistic, sometimes fantastic, often a little of both. Gaga is excellent throughout, and this time Phoenix isn’t the whole show. Gaga’s original songs fold naturally into the film’s stream of standards, ranging from Jacques Brel (“If You Go Away”) to Rodgers and Hart (“Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered”) to, inevitably, “The Joker” (“The Roar of the Greasepaint — the Smell of the Crowd”). Quinzel imagines herself a Gotham Judy Garland; at one point, this pair of born entertainers become Sonny and Cher knockoffs, hosting their own variety hour.

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The storyline is spare to the point of invisibility this time, reportedly revised with input, musical and otherwise, from Gaga and Phoenix as production commenced. In the later courtroom sequences, in Gotham’s trial of the century, Fleck represents himself, apparently channeling Foghorn Leghorn; in Arkham, the inmates are always watching cartoons, with particular emphasis on that skunky predator Pepé Le Pew.

Daringly, the sequel forces Fleck to reckon with all he has wrought, and the rabid nature of his acolytes. Quinzel sees these bloodthirsty fans as crossover potential for her own aspirations to domestic terrorism with style. With the film’s canny reliance on the Great American Songbook, and the clever way composer Hildur Guðnadóttir interpolates themes such as the Carpenters standard “Close to You” into the background music, “Joker: Folie à Deux” is the arresting duets album Gaga never got to do with Tony Bennett.

So who’s up for a strange, disarming musical? As much as I hated the first one, this one works for me. Phillips’ second go at this malignant universe hews more closely in concept to Dennis Potter’s “Pennies From Heaven” than the classic Old Hollywood MGM titles either shown (at one point, our lovebirds watch the Fred Astaire/Cyd Charisse gem “The Band Wagon”) or musically referenced. There’s not much narrative propulsion this time, no steady build to Fleck’s righteous, Travis Bickle-y revenge. What we get is more interesting, and confrontational: A schism of a man, Lady Macbeth-ed by a heat-seeking, fame-hungry songstress devil, forced to face the music and the fallout of his own criminal celebrity.

The title “Joker: Folie a Deux” sounds like a joke, though it refers to a clinical psychiatric definition of shared psychological delusion, or “double madness.” By the time Zazie Beetz (Sophie, Fleck’s romantic obsession) and Leigh Gill (Gary, Fleck’s only friend) testify in court, it’s clear Phillips and company aren’t kidding. They probably know their movie’s not just simply not for everyone, but it’s not even for most of the first film’s champions. Given the frightening degree to which the 2019 “Joker” saga gave audiences what they wanted, can a morning-after mea culpa find any takers in 2024?

“Joker: Folie à Deux” — 3 stars (out of 4)

MPA rating: R (for some strong violence, language throughout, some sexuality, and brief full nudity)

Running time: 2:18

How to watch: Premieres in theaters Oct. 3

Phillips is a Tribune critic.

Meet Mike Parson, the man in charge of getting the Vikings to London

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The mad dash started on Thursday at roughly 1:15 p.m. That’s when Vikings players started to file into the locker room at TCO Performance Center and the clock started to tick.

Though the players had a few hours to themselves before the transatlantic flight to London, Mike Parson and his team didn’t have the luxury of time. They had about an hour after practice ended to get the truck full of equipment loaded and on its way to the airport.

No pressure.

“It’s organized chaos,” said Parson, the director of equipment services, who took over for the legendary Dennis Ryan last year. “There’s a method to the madness.”

The scene inside the locker room at TCO Performance Center proved that point.

An equipment bag awaited each player at his locker while Parson walked around with a clipboard in hand making sure everything went according to plan. After packing his helmet, shoulder pads, cleats and whatever else he felt he needed, each player was instructed to leave the equipment bag unzipped so it could be checked.

Occasionally, an item would be missing, and Parson would take it upon himself to make sure it got packed.

“It’s a lot of double-checking and triple-checking,” Parson said. “I’d much rather be able to close my eyes on that plane knowing that we double-checked and triple-checked.”

As soon as an equipment bag was given the OK by Parson or a member of his team, he zipped it up, checked the player’s number off his list, then started the process again with the next bag to check.

After about 45 minutes, most of the players had filed out of the locker room at TCO Performance Center, while Parson and his team of Adam Groene, Terrell Barnes, Kyle DeLaura and Blake Schroeder had gotten most of the equipment bags loaded onto the truck and ready to be driven to the airport.

In total, the Vikings took about 20,000 pounds of stuff with them to London, along with 10 pallets worth of stuff sent via cargo ship back around the Fourth of July. That initial shipment that traversed the Atlantic Ocean arrived a couple of weeks ago and included everything from various toiletries to nutritional items to athletic training supplies.

“This is exciting for us because it’s not routine,” Parson said. “This is kind of where we get to show our talents.”

The ultimate goal for Parson is making sure the Vikings feel as comfortable as possible when they play the New York Jets on Sunday at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in London. Nothing about the this week is normal for the players and coaches, so Parson has been working tirelessly with his team to make sure everything goes off without a hitch.

“There’s so much stuff that goes into it and not once have they ever complained,” right tackle Brian O’Neill said. “We wouldn’t be able to do any of this without them.”

The stress that comes with the position has never bothered Parson. He got his start in the NFL as an equipment intern with the New Orleans Saints a couple of decades ago and found himself drawn to the impact he could make while working behind the scenes.

After making a good impression and staying in touch with his former bosses, Parson ended up returning to the Saints when Hurricane Katrina forced them to evacuate to San Antonio, Texas. Eventually, Parson parlayed that experience into an opportunity with the Houston Texans, where he worked his way up to director of equipment services before being hired by the Vikings last year.

Though it wasn’t easy to follow in the footsteps of Ryan, who served in the role for the Vikings for nearly 50 years, Parson knew it as important not to come in and try to reinvent the wheel. He spent a lot of time observing last year as he figured out the likes and dislikes of everybody within the organization.

Vikings director of equipment services Mike Parson has been integral in getting the team ready to play in London. He and his crew have been working tirelessly in preparation for the international game between the Vikings and the New York Jets.

“No major changes even now,” Parson said. “Just putting my stamp on it a little bit.”

His attention to detail hasn’t gone unnoticed by the players.

“I saw what Denis was able to do in his time,” defensive tackle Harrison Phillips said. “It’s hard to think that anybody could follow in those shoes, and Mike has done an amazing job.”

No doubt the trip to London has been the biggest challenge for Parson during his short tenure with the Vikings.

The planning started nearly 10 months ago when the NFL announced that the Vikings would be playing across the pond. After taking a site visit to get a lay of the land, Parson returned with a bunch of ideas in his head. He got together with his team and slowly started brainstorming everything they were going to need.

Usually, for each game on the schedule, Parson keeps a file folder to make sure everything is in order. He has a full binder for the trip to London because there are so many moving parts.

“I’m happy it’s finally here,” he said. “Instead of worrying about London in the background while everything else is going on, we can kind of put the plan into action.”

In that same breath, Parson once again heaped praise on Groene, Barnes, DeLaura and Schroeder for all the work they do. He made it clear that he wouldn’t be able to do any of his job without his team working alongside him.

“We enjoy doing our little part to help the Vikings win a game,” Parsons said. “We consider it a privilege to be able to do what we do.”

On that note, there was a cool moment in the locker room at U.S. Bank Stadium a couple of weeks ago, when head coach Kevin O’Connell gave Parson a game ball after the Vikings beat the Texans. Instantly, edge rusher Jonathan Greenard mobbed Parson, celebrating a man who rarely gets the spotlight.

“He treats everything personal,” Greenard said. “He wants to make sure we’re 100 percent comfortable and ready to go whenever we’re out there. I appreciate him more than he knows, and I probably need to tell him more. He’s an unsung hero.”

As soon as the Vikings boarded the plane on Thursday, with everything packed neatly underneath, Parson knew he could take a breath.

“The plane is my sanctuary,” Parson said. “Nobody can call my name and ask me for anything because I can’t tell the pilot to stop the flight.”

After getting some sleep on the plane, Parson woke up in London, made his way to customs to get everything released, then got back to work.

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Vikings vs. Jets: What to know ahead of Week 5 matchup

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What to know when the Vikings travel to London to play the New York Jets on Sunday morning:

Vikings vs. Jets
When: 8:30 a.m. Sunday
Where: Tottenham Hotspur Stadium
TV: NFL Network and KARE 11
Radio: KFAN
Line: Vikings -2.5
Over/Under: 40.5

Keys for the Vikings

— The fact that the Vikings lead the NFL with 17.0 sacks is something they should lean into this weekend. Let’s just say future Hall of Fame quarterback Aaron Rodgers can’t move like he did in his prime. There are going to be opportunities to make Rodgers uncomfortable in the pocket. If defensive coordinator Brian Flores can dial up the pressure, the Vikings are likely going to be in good position to walk away with a win.

— It’s going to be on superstar receiver Justin Jefferson to make life easier for veteran quarterback Sam Darnold. That could be easier said than done with Jefferson likely set to face a healthy dose of cornerback Sauce Gardner and cornerback D.J. Reed. Together, Gardner and Reed are among the best players in the league at their position. Luckily for the Vikings, Jefferson is arguably he best player in the league at his position.

Keys for the Jets

— If the Jets are going to have any chance to win this game, they need to establish the ground attack with star running back Breece Hall. Though the Vikings have had success stopping the run this season, Hall has an elite skill set that could be hard to contain for 60 minutes. If Hall is able to gash the defense for big gains, it will open everything else up for Rodgers and the offense.

— There might be some chances for the Jets to take advantage of Darnold’s aggressiveness pushing the ball downfield. It’s on the defense to capitalize in those situations and force turnovers. That’s an area of the game that could tip the scale in favor of the Jets.

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