Montreal Gazette

‘NOT OUT OF THE WOODS YET’

Houston forecast offers little hope

- ALEX HANNFORD in Houston ROB CRILLY DAVID MILLWARD

There is not much Houston’s residents can do now other than hope it gets no worse. But even in that, they are likely to be disappoint­ed.

Elaine Moore and her husband Mo sat in the garage of their single-storey home in northeast Houston Monday with their two pit bulls, looking out on the street and the flooded underpass beyond. An abandoned car, almost entirely submerged, told its own story. Its passenger door, wide open beneath the water line, suggested a hurried escape.

She said this was the worst she had seen in a city she knows well.

“I’ve lived in Houston all my life,” she said. “My daughter lives on the east side and she’s been flooded out and taken to a shelter. We’ve been OK here so far, but we don’t have a plan. We’re just hoping it doesn’t get any worse.”

She said her neighbours, too, planned to stay put.

Further down the road, residentia­l streets were completely cut off by flood waters.

Toward downtown, a Fiesta supermarke­t was open and a line of people snaked around the corner, queuing to get in. The rainbow of umbrellas — one a Texas flag — were a striking splash of colour in an otherwise desolate scene.

Cars were driving the wrong way up the hard shoulder of I-69, one of the many arteries into Houston, the first signs that down the road the sheriff’s office installed a roadblock.

After the slightest break in the weather overnight, the rain started again and by mid-morning was coming down in torrents once more.

The death toll rose to eight Monday, including six people in and around Houston.

But more rain is forecast and officials issued dire warnings of worse to come.

The National Weather Service forecasted that flooding would not peak until Wednesday or Thursday.

“While the hurricane force winds have diminished, I want to stress that we are not out of the woods yet,” Elaine Duke, acting head of the Department of Homeland Security, said at a news conference. “Harvey is still a dangerous and historic storm.”

Hurricane Harvey barrelled onto shore on Friday night with winds of more than 210 km/h. Since then it has slowed to a tropical storm, dumping record amounts of rain along the Gulf Shore of Texas.

Some places have already been hit by 76 cm of rain, with another 50 cm possible. The result was that America’s fourth largest city was criss-crossed by grey-green rivers where its streets used to stand.

In a rescue effort that resembled the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, helicopter­s buzzed across the city plucking stranded motorists to safety while airboats patrolled submerged neighbourh­oods.

Police said they had rescued more than 2,000 people from cars and homes by Monday afternoon. And the city was gearing up to accommodat­e 30,000 refugees in shelters. More than 2,600 had already arrived at the George Brown Convention Center.

Sylvester Turner, the city’s mayor, said he expected that number to increase “exponentia­lly” even as the Red Cross said it had run out of beds.

On Monday, the state’s governor announced he had activated the entire Texas National Guard as part of the life-saving effort, bringing the total of deployed troops to 12,000.

Donald Trump, who has kept up a steady Twitter commentary as the disaster has unfolded, returned to the White House from Camp David. He was expected to visit Texas Tuesday.

The scale of the disaster has brought fresh scrutiny of Houston’s developmen­t into wetlands and the conflictin­g advice given to Texas residents as the hurricane moved toward shore at the end of last week. While the state’s governor urged people to flee their homes before Harvey hit, the mayor of Houston said people should shelter at home. Now, many of those people are trapped.

On Sunday, Greg Abbott, the Republican governor, refused to blame his Democratic mayor.

“Now is not the time to second-guess the decisions that were made,” he said at a news conference. “What’s important is that everybody work together to ensure that we are going to, first, save lives and, second, help people across the state rebuild.”

Meanwhile, Turner said ordering 2.3 million residents to evacuate would have created chaos on the highways.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sgt. Chad Watts of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries rescued Madelyn Nguyen, 2, and her family by boat in Houston on Monday.
GERALD HERBERT / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sgt. Chad Watts of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries rescued Madelyn Nguyen, 2, and her family by boat in Houston on Monday.
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