Millions in line of punishing rain from Tropical Storm Barry

Judy Daigle, owner of "The Chili House and More," right, helps Michael Fuselier fill a sandbag at one of several locations in Morgan City, La., Friday, July 12, 2019. Daigle's restaurant is across a parking lot from where the city provided sand for sandbagging. "I just had to lend a hand to these folks," said Daigle. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
Map shows the accumulated precipitation forecast and rive gauge levels for the area affected by severe weather in Louisiana.
Brothers Brantley, 7, left, Brody, 8, and Bryce O'Hara, 11, play in the waves on Lakeshore Drive With their grandfather Rick O'Hara in New Orleans, La., Friday, July 12, 2019, as water moves in from Lake Pontchartrain from the storm surge from Tropical Storm Barry in the Gulf of Mexico. The area is behind a levee that protects the rest of the city. (AP Photo/Matthew Hinton)

NEW ORLEANS — People boarded up buildings, stocked up on water and braced for torrents of rain and punishing wind from a strengthening Tropical Storm Barry that threatened millions as it churned a path ashore Friday and tested efforts to guard against flooding since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans 14 years ago.