Arab Times

The downtown Houston skyline and flooded Highway 288 are seen on Aug 27, as the city battles with tropical storm Harvey and resulting floods.

More than 30,000 people expected to be placed temporaril­y in shelters

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HOUSTON, Aug 28, (Agencies): Houston is facing worsening historic flooding in the coming days as Tropical Storm Harvey dumps more rain on the city, swelling rivers to record levels and forcing federal engineers on Monday to release water from area reservoirs in hopes of controllin­g the rushing currents.

Harvey was the most powerful hurricane to strike Texas in more than 50 years when it came ashore on Friday near Corpus Christi, about 220 miles (354 km) south of Houston, and has killed at least two people. It has since lingered around Texas’ Gulf Coast, where it is forecast to remain for several more days, drenching parts of the region with a year’s worth of rain in the span of a week.

Rains have submerged cars and turned freeways into rivers, with more flooding expected when the storm shifts back in the direction of Houston. Harvey’s center was 90 miles (148 km) southwest of Houston on Monday morning and forecast to arc slowly toward the city through Wednesday, with the worst floods expected later that day and on Thursday.

Schools, airports and office buildings in the nation’s fourth largest city were shut on Monday as chest-high water filled some neighborho­ods in the low-lying city that is home to about 2.3 million people.

The metropolit­an area, home to 6.8 million people, also is the nation’s refining and petrochemi­cal hub, which has been crippled by the storm. Numerous refiners shut operations, likely for weeks.

Torrential rain also hit areas more than 150 miles (240 km) away, swelling rivers upstream and causing a surge that was heading toward the Houston area, where numerous rivers and streams already have been breached. Some areas have already seen as much as 30 inches (76 cm) of rain, according to the National Weather Service.

By the end of the week in some Texas coastal areas the total precipitat­ion could reach 50 inches (127 cm), which is the average rainfall for an entire year, forecaster­s said.

Coast

Harvey is expected to produce an additional 15 to 25 inches (38 to 63 cm) of rain through Friday in the upper Texas coast and into southweste­rn Louisiana, the National Hurricane Center said.

More than 30,000 people are expected to be placed temporaril­y in shelters, FEMA Administra­tor Brock Long said at a news conference on Monday. The George Brown Convention Center in downtown Houston now has about 2,500 people, up from 1,000 last night, as people continue to arrive at the center.

Wendy Rom, 24, was among those taking refuge at the center with her husband and 1 1/2-year-old daughter.

“The water was high, entering our house,” she said, “so we moved to the second floor but they started evacuating the neighborho­od so I came with my whole family.”

Dallas, 240 miles (386 km) north of Houston, also was setting up a “mega shelter” at its convention center to house 5,000 evacuees, the city said in a statement.

The US Army Corps of Engineers said Monday that it was releasing water from two nearby reservoirs into Buffalo Bayou, the primary body of water running through Houston.

“If we don’t begin releasing now, the volume of uncontroll­ed water around the dams will be higher and have a greater impact on the surroundin­g communitie­s,” said Colonel Lars Zetterstro­m, Galveston district commander of the Corps.

The Harris County Flood Control District said it expected the release to start flooding homes around the Addicks and Barker reservoirs on Monday morning.

Authoritie­s ordered more than 50,000 people to leave parts of Fort Bend County, about 35 miles (55 km) southwest of Houston, as the Brazos River was set to crest at a record high of 59 feet (18 m) this week, 14 feet above its flood stage.

Houston did not order an evacuation, even a voluntary one, due to concerns about people being stranded on city highways now consumed by floods, Mayor Sylvester Turner said on Sunday.

FEMA’s Long on Monday did not question the decision, saying the time frame “for evacuation of the city of Houston could take days, days, literally days.”

Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who had suggested on Friday that people leave the area, on Monday told “CBS This Morning” that “the time for making that determinat­ion has passed, and (there’s) no need to for us to relitigate that issue right now.”

Plans

US President Donald Trump plans to go to Texas on Tuesday to survey the damage, a White House spokeswoma­n said on Sunday. On Monday he approved an emergency declaratio­n for Louisiana.

Trump, facing the first big US natural disaster since he took office in January, had signed a disaster proclamati­on for Texas on Friday, triggering federal relief efforts. Abbott said on Sunday he planned to add 1,000 more National Guard personnel to the flood battle.

Almost half of the US refining capacity is in the Gulf region. Shutdowns extended across the coast, including Exxon Mobil’s facility in Baytown, the nation’s second largest refinery. More than 2.4 million barrels of capacity were offline as of Monday morning, about 13 percent of daily US production.

The outages will limit the availabili­ty of US gasoline and other refined products and push prices higher, analysts said. Gasoline futures rose 3 percent on Monday.

Federal authoritie­s predicted it would take years to repair the damage from Harvey. The expected rain conjured memories of Tropical Storm Allison, which lingered for days over South Texas in 2001, flooding 70,000 homes and causing $9 billion in damage.

Damages are not likely to be as extensive as Katrina in 2005, which killed 1,800 people in and around New Orleans, or Sandy, which hit New York in 2012, said a spokeswoma­n for Hannover Re, one of the world’s largest reinsurers. Those caused $80 billion and $36 billion in insured losses, respective­ly.

All Houston port facilities are closed on Monday because of the weather threat, a port spokeswoma­n said.

More than 263,000 customers in the Houston area were without power on Monday morning, utilities CenterPoin­t Energy, AEP Texas and TNMP said. CenterPoin­t warned, though, it could not update its figures due to limited access caused by flooding.

Jose Rengel, 47, a constructi­on worker who lives in Galveston, helped rescue efforts in Dickinson, southeast of Houston, where he saw water cresting the tops of cars.

“I am blessed that not much has happened to me but these people lost everything,” he said.

“And it keeps raining. The water has nowhere to go.”

Shelters

In related news, the Red Cross quickly set up Houston’s George R. Brown Convention Center and other venues as shelters. The convention center was also used as a shelter for Katrina refugees in 2005. By Monday morning, it had already reached half its capacity.

Ken Sandy, a shelter manager for the American Red Cross, said more than 2,600 people had taken shelter there. Organizers with the Red Cross estimate the convention center can accommodat­e roughly 5,000 people, although Sandy cautioned that the shelter had run out of cots and waiting for more to arrive.

With the reservoir releases and Harvey still pouring rain on the Houston area, thousands more people are expected to abandon their homes.

The Army Corps of Engineers started the reservoir releases before 2 a.m. Monday — ahead of schedule — because water levels were increasing at a rate of more than 6 inches (15 cms) per hour, Corps spokesman Jay Townsend said.

Officials in Fort Bend County, Houston’s southweste­rn suburbs, late Sunday issued mandatory evacuation orders along the Brazos River levee districts as the river neared major flood stages. County Judge Robert Herbert said at a news conference that National Weather Service officials were predicting that the water could rise to 59 feet (18 meters), three feet (90 centimeter­s) above 2016 records and what Herbert called an “800-year flood level.” Herbert said that amount of water would top the levees and carries a threat of levee failure.

On Sunday, incessant rain covered much of Houston in turbid, gray-green water and turned streets into rivers navigable only by boat. In a rescue effort that recalled the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, helicopter­s landed near flooded freeways, airboats buzzed across submerged neighborho­ods and high-water vehicles plowed through water-logged intersecti­ons. Some people managed with kayaks or canoes or swam.

Volunteers joined emergency teams in pulling people from their homes or from the water. Authoritie­s urged people to get on top of their houses to avoid becoming trapped in attics and to wave sheets or towels to draw attention to their location.

 ??  ?? (AFP)
(AFP)

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