Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

AID FLOWS from state as Wal-Mart beefs up supply chain.

Agencies, companies offer resources

- BILL BOWDEN

Arkansans have been helping the victims of Hurricane Harvey after floodwater­s turned Houston streets into raging rivers on Sunday.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. sent 1,023 truckloads of emergency merchandis­e to Texas, said Ragan Dickens, a spokesman for the Bentonvill­e-based retailer. A total of 927 of them were carrying only water, he said.

“We’ve had our emergency operations center set up at the home office in Bentonvill­e for the last three or four days,” Dickens said Monday. “We’re coordinati­ng with the stores in the Texas region.”

Wal-Mart has 512 stores in Texas — more than in any other state.

Based on the store locator at walmart.com, there are 86 Wal-Mart stores within 50 miles of Houston.

The trucks were sent from several distributi­on centers. Some trucks left last week, before the storm hit.

Others were en route over the weekend and some left Monday, Dickens said.

“The main thing we’re focusing on right now is just getting the right product to the right store,” he said.

Dickens said he didn’t know how many trucks were taking donations to the victims, compared with the number that were hauling merchandis­e to restock empty store shelves.

Dickens said flooded streets have made it impossible for employees or shoppers to get to some stores, which are temporaril­y closed as a result. Other stores were open, but with many roads flooded, getting there was a challenge for the truck drivers, he said.

Dickens said some trucks were delivering products to stores in other Texas cities where they’re likely to have an influx of people who have fled the flooded Gulf Coast region and are in need of basic necessitie­s. Other trucks will be within a short distance of the flood zones so merchandis­e can be delivered to stores as soon as the water recedes and roads are passable.

The company and the WalMart Foundation are giving at least $1 million in money and product donations to organizati­ons helping respond to the severe weather in Texas and Louisiana, Dickens said.

Wal-Mart was praised for its quick response to help New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Wal-Mart provided $17 million in cash assistance during and after Katrina and $3 million worth of merchandis­e and in-kind donations to shelters and command centers in Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Texas, according to the company.

The Arkansas National Guard sent its 61st Civil Support Team to Houston on Monday, said Maj. Will Phillips, the Guard’s public informatio­n officer for Arkansas.

He said the 14-member team will assist with soil, water and air sampling to make sure there are no chemicals that would be toxic to humans. But the team likely will have to wait a day or two for floodwater­s to recede before they can begin their mission, he said.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced on Monday that he had activated the entire Texas National Guard in response to Hurricane Harvey, bringing the total number of deployed guardsmen to about 12,000. They will assist with search and rescue, then remain for the extensive recovery effort, according to a news release.

The Louisiana National Guard has activated about 210 soldiers and airmen in response to the hurricane, with another 230 full-time guardsmen supporting the effort, according to a news release.

They began arriving in southwest Louisiana last week. Flooding didn’t begin there until late Monday afternoon as heavy rain from the storm moved east, Staff Sgt. David Kirtland said.

The Louisiana guardsmen had distribute­d more than 1,150 ready-to-eat meals, 750 bottles of water and 247,000 sandbags as of late Monday.

At the request of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the Sebastian County sheriff’s office in Fort Smith sent its boat team and several members of its search-andrescue team to Houston on Monday, according to a news release.

Melody Daniel, a spokesman for the Arkansas Department of Emergency Management, said the agency is ready to assist its neighbors in Texas but hadn’t been asked to do so as of late Monday afternoon.

“Texas has done a really good job responding with what the flood victims needed,” she said. “But they will need additional resources.”

Tyson Foods Inc. of Springdale plans to send its Meals That Matter disaster relief semi-trailer to Houston on Wednesday, said Derek Burleson, a spokesman for the company. The 53-foot-long trailer has room for 20,000 pounds of food in addition to grills, tents, warmers, plates, utensils and condiments.

If all goes according to plan, Tyson employees from Clarksvill­e, Dardanelle and Texarkana will be in Houston on Thursday to do the cooking, Burleson said. They’ll provide free meals for victims, volunteers and first responders.

“We will be there as long as there’s a need,” Burleson said.

Tyson Foods provided free meals for about three weeks after Superstorm Sandy in 2012. The company also provided free meals after tornadoes in Joplin, Mo., in 2011 and Moore, Okla., in 2013.

Southweste­rn Electric Power Co. is sending 187 employees and contractor­s to assist its sister company, AEP Texas, in power restoratio­n efforts, said Peter Main, a spokesman for the company. AEP stands for American Electric Power.

The number includes 18 linemen, engineers and other personnel from SWEPCO’s Fayettevil­le, Rogers and Greenwood operations centers in Arkansas.

AEP Texas, based in Corpus Christi, serves about 1 million electric consumers in south and west Texas. It had 220,000 customers without power on Saturday, Main said. The number without power was 147,000 late Monday afternoon, he said.

Entergy will send 90 of its Arkansas employees to Texas today, said Kerri Case, a spokesman for the company’s Arkansas operations. She said that will include linemen, servicemen, safety specialist­s, distributi­on operations, crew leads and logistics support.

Entergy serves customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Texas.

The Salvation Army of Northwest Arkansas’ three local officers deployed Monday to serve those affected by Hurricane Harvey. All three officers will be deployed for a minimum of two weeks to provide logistical, physical, and spiritual care on the front lines, according to a news release.

Hurricane Harvey made landfall on Friday night. According to the National Weather Service, a flash flood warning remains in effect through Wednesday for much of southeast Texas.

“Catastroph­ic and epic flooding continued this afternoon in and around the Houston and Galveston areas and surroundin­g communitie­s,” the National Weather Service said on Monday. “Rainfall since Saturday has totaled 15 to over 30 inches. Additional life-threatenin­g rainfall of 10 to 20 inches with isolated higher amounts are possible. If these amounts materializ­e, the results could be devastatin­g, especially if any of these rains fall where catastroph­ic flooding has already occurred.”

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? Clay Kleinebrei­l, an intern in internal communicat­ions at Tyson Foods, loads frying oil Monday onto a Meals that Matter Tyson Food Disaster tractor trailer in Springdale. Kleinebrei­l and Pat Bourke, manager of Corporate Social Responsibi­lity, loaded...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK Clay Kleinebrei­l, an intern in internal communicat­ions at Tyson Foods, loads frying oil Monday onto a Meals that Matter Tyson Food Disaster tractor trailer in Springdale. Kleinebrei­l and Pat Bourke, manager of Corporate Social Responsibi­lity, loaded...

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