Yorkshire Post

Floods recede, but casualties increase

Six people found dead in sunken van

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS REPORTER Email: yp.desk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

The flood waters from Tropical Storm Harvey are beginning to drop across much of the Houston area, emergency officials said.

But the number of confirmed deaths rose to 22 when authoritie­s reported that two men died in separate drownings.

THE FLOOD waters from Tropical Storm Harvey are beginning to drop across much of the Houston area, emergency officials said.

But the crisis is far from over, and the storm has begun to give up more of its dead.

The number of confirmed deaths rose to at least 22 after authoritie­s found the submerged van in which six members of a Houston family, including four children, were believed to have died when their vehicle was swept off a bridge.

The bodies of at least two adults were spotted inside in the murky water, authoritie­s said.

“Unfortunat­ely, it seems that our worst thoughts are being realised,” said Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez.

While conditions in Houston appeared to improve, the disaster took a turn for the worse along the Texas-Louisiana state line.

The Texas communitie­s of Beaumont and Port Arthur struggled with rising floodwater­s and worked to evacuate residents after Harvey rolled ashore early Wednesday for the second time in six days, hitting southweste­rn Louisiana as a tropical storm with winds of 45mph and heavy rain.

For much of the rest of the Houston area, forecaster­s said the rain is pretty much over and the water is already back within its channels in some places.

“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.”

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

Neverthele­ss, many thousands of homes in and around the nation’s fourth-largest city were still swamped and could stay that way for days or longer.

Some Houston-area neighbourh­oods were still in danger of more flooding from a levee breach. And officials said emergency call centres in the Houston area were still getting more than 1,000 calls an hour from people seeking help.

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

The dead include a man who tried to swim across a flooded roadway, 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.

Harvey itself was “spinning down” and expected to weaken into a tropical depression sometime on Wednesday, National Hurricane Centre meteorolog­ist Dennis Feltgen said. A tropical depression has winds of 38mph or less.

From there, the remnants of the hurricane are expected to move from Louisiana into Mississipp­i, Tennessee and Kentucky in the next few days, with flooding possible in those states.

“Once we get this thing inland during the day, it’s the end of the beginning,” Mr Feltgen said. “Texas is going to get a chance to finally dry out as this system pulls out.”

Eugene Rideaux, a 42-yearold mechanic who showed up at evangelist Joel Osteen’s huge Lakewood Church to sort donations for evacuees, said he had not been able to work or do much since the storm hit, so he was eager to get out of his dark house and help.

“It’s been so dark for days now, I’m just ready to see some light. Some sunshine. I’m tired of the darkness,” Mr Rideaux said.

The water levels are going down for the first time in several days. Jeff Lindner, a meteorolog­ist with the Harris County Flood Control District.

 ?? PICTURES: AP ?? NO ESCAPE: Evacuated residents sit in raised stands at the Bowers Civic Centre in Port Arthur, Texas. Inset, Interstate 10 is closed by flooding from Storm Harvey.
PICTURES: AP NO ESCAPE: Evacuated residents sit in raised stands at the Bowers Civic Centre in Port Arthur, Texas. Inset, Interstate 10 is closed by flooding from Storm Harvey.

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