Chattanooga Times Free Press

Relatively low Harvey death toll is ‘astounding’ to experts

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AUSTIN, Texas — Harvey has so far killed at least 70 people who drowned in floods, got crushed by trees and died during power outages — a surprising­ly low toll that experts say reflects heeded warnings, swift action by first responders and volunteers, and no small amount of luck.

“It was astounding that we didn’t have a much larger loss of life,” said Phil Bedient, co-director of a Rice University effort to research severe storms and evacuation­s. “It is a relatively low number for as big a storm as this was.”

The system intensifie­d from an ordinary storm to a Category 4 hurricane in just more than two days before striking Texas on Aug. 25 and dropping 52 inches of rain while parked over the Houston area. Authoritie­s and experts say lessons learned from previous disasters made a major difference. Floodgates installed around hospitals kept the power on. Search-and-rescue crews raced toward the coast ahead of time. Houston leaders did not call for a mass evacuation in an area with 6.5 million people, keeping them off highways that would ultimately be underwater.

Nor did authoritie­s mince words on social media: Houston’s police chief told people not to retreat into attics unless they could break out with an ax.

There was also luck. It helped that Harvey crashed ashore along one of the more rural stretches of the Texas coast. The storm surge reached 12.5 feet in a wildlife refuge in Aransas County, where so far the only death reported was a person killed in a fire.

“As far as we know, there were few or no storm surge fatalities,” said National Hurricane Center Acting Director Ed Rappaport. “That’s kind of remarkable given that it’s a Category 4 landfall.”

Harvey’s full toll won’t be realized for weeks. At least 18 people are still missing in Houston alone, and bodies are still emerging. The most recent discoverie­s include the body of a 3-month-old baby who was swept away from her parents when their truck was shoved off the road by raging floodwater­s.

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