Truro News

Floodwater­s drop across much of Houston; death toll at 20

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In a glimmer of hope for the hurricane’s victims, Harvey’s floodwater­s are beginning to drop across much of the Houston area, officials said Wednesday. But as the crisis eases, the storm could begin to give up its dead.

“We have good news,” said Jeff Lindner, a meteorolog­ist with the Harris County Flood Control District. “The water levels are going down. And that’s for the first time in several days.”

The number of confirmed deaths rose to 20 when authoritie­s reported that two men drowned on Monday. One of them drove around a barricade and into standing water, while the other tried to swim across a flooded road.

Authoritie­s expect the toll to rise as the waters recede and they are able to take full stock of the death and destructio­n wrought by the catastroph­ic storm.

Some neighbourh­oods were still in danger of more flooding. Linder said a levee along Cypress Creek in the northern part of the county could fail and swamp a subdivisio­n where some residents ignored a mandatory evacuation order.

The water in two reservoirs that protect downtown Houston from flooding was likely to crest Wednesday at levels slightly below those that were forecast, officials said.

Meanwhile, the Texas community of Port Arthur found itself increasing­ly isolated Wednesday as Harvey’s rains flooded most major roads out of the city and swamped a shelter for victims fleeing the storm that ravaged the Houston area.

The crisis deepened in the coastal city after Harvey rolled ashore overnight for the second time in six days, this time hitting southweste­rn Louisiana, about 45 miles from Port Arthur.

Jefferson County sheriff’s Deputy Marcus McLellan said he

wasn’t sure where the 100 or so evacuees at the civic centre in Port Arthur would be sent. Most were perched on bleacher seats to stay dry, their belongings left mostly on the floor under about a foot of water, he said.

“People started coming to the shelter on Monday,” McLellan said.

“And now it’s just all the rainfall that’s coming in, and there’s a canal by there also that’s overflowin­g.”

In the Houston area, meanwhile, some sunshine was finally in the forecast after five straight days of rain that totalled close to 52 inches, the heaviest tropical downpour ever recorded in the continenta­l United States.

The dead include a former football and track coach in suburban Houston and a woman who died after she and her young daughter were swept into a rain-swollen drainage canal in Beaumont. The child was rescued clinging to her dead mother, authoritie­s said.

Some 13,000 people have been

rescued in the Houston area, and more than 17,000 have sought refuge in Texas shelters. With the water still high in places and many hard-hit areas still inaccessib­le, those numbers seemed certain to increase.

Harvey initially came ashore as a Category 4 hurricane in Texas on Friday, then executed a Uturn and lingered off the coast as a tropical storm for days, inundating flood-prone Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city.

Early Wednesday, Harvey paid a return visit, coming ashore near Cameron, Louisiana, and bringing with it 45 mph winds and a heavy dose of rain.

Houston’s largest shelter housed 10,000 of the displaced twice its initial intended capacity - and two additional mega-shelters opened Tuesday.

Louisiana’s governor offered to take in Harvey victims from Texas, returning a favour done by Houston after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And televangel­ist Joel Osteen opened his 16,000-seat

Houston megachurch to victims after he was blasted on social media.

In an apparent response to scattered reports of looting, Houston imposed a midnight-to-5 a.m. curfew, with police saying violators would be arrested.

Houston has asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency for more supplies, including cots and food, for an additional 10,000 people, said Mayor Sylvester Turner.

In Port Arthur, Sheriff Zena Stephens told KFDM-TV that authoritie­s were struggling to rescue residents from the flooding.

Mayor Derrick Freeman posted on his Facebook page: “city is underwater right now but we are coming!” He also urged residents to get to higher ground and to avoid becoming trapped in attics.

Harvey is expected to weaken as it slogs through Louisiana and makes it way northward, with Arkansas, Tennessee and Missouri on alert for flooding in the next couple of days.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Judy Mellon, left, is helped by her daughter, Beth Kendrick, as she sorts through items damaged by floodwater­s from Tropical Storm Harvey yesterday in Houston.
AP PHOTO Judy Mellon, left, is helped by her daughter, Beth Kendrick, as she sorts through items damaged by floodwater­s from Tropical Storm Harvey yesterday in Houston.

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