The National - News

Houston death toll could rise ‘historical­ly’

Three confirmed dead but the number of reported or presumed dead is growing, say authoritie­s

- ROB CRILLY

Rescue crews in Houston fear their mission will soon switch to recovering bodies once the rains ease and the emergency calls slow.

More than three days after Hurricane Harvey blasted ashore in Texas with 210kph winds, authoritie­s have so far confirmed only three deaths, but the number reported missing or presumed dead is growing steadily, giving an unofficial death toll of 10.

Among them are six members of the same family, missing after their van was swept away.

President Donald Trump was scheduled to visit Texas yesterday to survey the damage, with 30,000 people forced from their homes and more days of rain forecast.

Officials say they are already worried about what they will find when the water recedes.

Art Acevedo, Houston police chief, said: “We know in these kind of events that, sadly, the death toll goes up historical­ly. I’m really worried about how many bodies we are going to find.”

Those confirmed dead include a woman who was crushed when a tree, its roots loosened by floodwater, fell on to her trailer home in the small town of Porter on Monday.

Water was still rising in Houston yesterday as one of the most destructiv­e storms in American history continued to dump rain across Texas and the neighbouri­ng state of Louisiana.

Radar images suggested New Orleans, the city that was hit so hard by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, was next in line.

Forecaster­s say another 600 millimetre­s of rain was still possible on top of the 760mm already experience­d in some places, bringing flooding on an epic scale.

The head of the federal emergency management agency said he expected more than 450,000 people to apply for federal assistance and officials say 30,000 people had already been taken into shelters.

Greg Abbott, the governor of Texas, described it as “one of the largest disasters America has ever faced”.

He was among several local and federal officials who said the recovery would take years.

“We need to recognise it will be a new normal, a new and different normal for this entire region,” Mr Abbott said.

Countless families are already trying to deal with a new normal of ruined homes or missing loved ones.

Virginia Salvidar fears six members of her family, including four of her grandchild­ren, are dead after their van was swept off a bridge in East Houston during an escape attempt.

She said her brother-in-law, Samuel Salvidar, was driving the van on Sunday as he tried to take his parents and grandchild­ren to safety.

But a current in the floodwater­s took the van, pitching it into the river.

She described how Mr Saldivar managed to climb out of the window and urged the children – of ages 6 to 16 – to escape through the back door but they were unable to get out.

“I’m just hoping we find the bodies,” Ms Salvidar said.

Mr Trump and his wife, Melania, will visit Corpus Christie, close to where Harvey made landfall, rather than Houston where their presence would be likely to divert resources from the mammoth emergency.

Speaking the day before, Mr Trump struck a unifying tone.

“We are one American family,” he said.

“We hurt together, we struggle together, and, believe me, we endure together. We are one family.”

Mr Trump said that protecting lives was his top priority and promised that his threats to shut down the federal government would not slow the arrival of recovery funds.

He said the core American characteri­stics of “strength, charity and resilience” were showing through in the disaster response. “We will get through this,” he said. “We will come out stronger and believe me we will be bigger, better, stronger than ever before.”

At the same time, there will be questions about whether more could have been done to prevent the disaster.

Houston, with its rapid expansion, flat terrain and 2,735 kilometres of creeks, streams and bayous, is notoriousl­y prone to flooding.

And, as Harvey headed towards the shore, the mayor and governor gave conflictin­g advice on whether to evacuate.

The UN weather agency also said the huge volume of rainfall from Tropical Storm Harvey was probably linked to increased moisture in the atmosphere as a result of global warming.

“Climate change means that when we do have an event like Harvey, the rainfall amounts are likely to be higher than they would have been otherwise,” said Clare Nullis, spokeswoma­n for the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on.

The US national weather service had to introduce a new colour on its maps to indicate such high amounts of rain, she said.

 ?? AP ?? A man leaves his home through a window in Rockport. The head of the US emergency agency expected more than 450,000 people to apply for federal aid
AP A man leaves his home through a window in Rockport. The head of the US emergency agency expected more than 450,000 people to apply for federal aid
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 ?? AP ?? Water from a reservoir in Houston flows into neighbourh­oods yesterday, above. A woman is wheeled by first responders into a shelter for evacuees
AP Water from a reservoir in Houston flows into neighbourh­oods yesterday, above. A woman is wheeled by first responders into a shelter for evacuees

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