Chicago Sun-Times

TEXAS GOVERNOR: ‘ THIS IS GOING TO BE A VERY MAJOR DISASTER’

Thousands evacuate ahead of Hurricane Harvey

- Kirsten Crow, Rick Jervis and Doug Stanglin

Hurricane Harvey, taking dead aim on the Texas Gulf coast, strengthen­ed to a Category 4 storm Friday only hours before it was set to roar ashore and unleash life- threatenin­g high winds, flash flooding, storm surges and 3 feet of rain or more.

“This is going to be a verymajor disaster,” said Gov. Greg Abbott, who declared a state of disaster for 30 counties and requested 700 National Guard members to be activated.

He warned of record- setting flooding in multiple regions of the state and urged people to get out of harm’s way. “You don’t want to put yourself in a situation where you could be subject to a search and rescue.”

Some forecasts are calling for as much as 5 feet of rain from Harvey.

As many as 1.25 million Texans could lose power from the storm, according to forecast models at Texas A& M University.

Some 700,000 people live in the hurricane warning zone, roughly half of them around Corpus Christi. Traffic backups tied up roads such as Interstate 37 as people moved toward San Antonio and other inland locations.

Fueled by the warm Gulf waters, Harvey jumped within hours from a Category 2 to Category 4 hurricane Friday. As of 4 p. m. CDT, the center was located 60 miles east- southeast of Corpus Christi. The storm had winds of 125 mph and wasmoving to the northwest at 10mph.

The NationalWe­ather Service warned that Harvey could linger for days and even spin back offshore to regenerate in the Gulf before heading toward Louisiana.

“The flooding will be catastroph­ic and life- threatenin­g,” weather service director Louis Uccellini said. “The economic impact will likely be devastatin­g.”

Locations may be uninhabita­ble for weeks or months, the weather service in Corpus Christi said.

It would be the strongest hurricane to hit the U. S. in 12 years. A major hurricane is one that’s a Category 3 or above on the Saffir- Simpson scale of hurricane intensity. The last Category 3 storm to hit the U. S. wasHurrica­ne Wilma, which barreled into Florida in October 2005.

President Trump weighed in on the storm, tweeting that he is “closely monitoring” and “here to assist as needed.”

All seven Texas counties on the coast from Corpus Christi to the western end of Galveston Island have ordered the mandatory evacuation­s of tens of thousands of residents from low- lying areas.

Most people heeded the warnings to clear out of exposed or low- lying areas. In Bloomingto­n, Texas, more than 60 residents checked into a Red Cross shelter in the city 78 miles north of Corpus Christi and square in the path of the hurricane.

Inside a high school basketball stadium, residents on Friday lingered on cots, stockpiled blankets or checked on relatives via cellphones.

For Michelle Pettis, 24, the retreat to the shelter was an easy decision: The trailer home in which she lives with her 4- year- old daughter, Aubrey Cardenas, and 1- year- old son, Ethan Cardenas, wasn’t stable enough and her mother was in Florida on vacation. She gathered pictures, important documents, blankets and toys for the kids and moved into the shelter Thursday night.

More so than strong winds, its Harvey’s pounding rains that motivated her to move, she said.

“Flooding is what scares me the most,” Pettis said. “We don’t know how long it’s going to last or what it’s going to do.”

ThomasWest­gate, a Red Cross supervisor at the shelter, said the gym is equipped to house about 300 residents. Residents have been trickling in all day, as they realize the scope and intensity of the storm, he said.

The Red Cross has designated the storm and shelters a “Level 6,” one of the highest rankings it has. “This could be a huge event,” Westgate said.

Voluntary evacuation­s have been urged for Corpus Christi and for the Bolivar Peninsula, where many homes were washed away by the storm surge of Hurricane Ike in 2008. Corpus Christi city councilman Greg Smith, who represents Padre Island, said residents who stay could be stranded for days if the storm surge surpasses 10 feet.

State transporta­tion officials were considerin­g when to turn all evacuation routes from coastal areas into one- way traffic arteries headed inland.

John Barton, a former deputy executive director of the Texas Department of Transporta­tion, said timing and determinin­g where to use it are the key factors. Storms change paths, and if contraflow starts too early, supplies such as extra gasoline needed to support impacted areas can’t get in, he said.

Corpus Christi Mayor Joe McComb and county officials stopped short of ordering a mandatory evacuation for the city, but they said residents who stay are risking their lives.

Not everyone was headed for higher ground. Kendra Holbert, 40, said she was staying put with her mother, two sisters and two sons — all in a Corpus Christi apartment.

The family had stocked up on water, canned goods, flashlight­s, batteries and peanut butter and jelly. Holbert was visiting a Stripes gas station Friday morning for last- minute gas and tacos. Like other residents, she said she was most worried about Harvey lingering in the area for days.

“As long as we’re together,” she said, “we’ll be all right.”

One of the toughest tasks after Harvey trudges ashore will fall to Jeff Saunders, director of Texas Task Force 1, one of 28 federal teams under FEMA’s National Urban Search and Rescue System.

In a typical hurricane that hits a coast and keeps moving, Saunders would wait until winds died down to weak tropical storm strength before dispatchin­g his teams to help local law enforcemen­t rescue residents off rooftops or from floodravag­ed homes. But since Harvey is forecast to stall over the region for several days, hemay not have that luxury, Saunders said.

Nine water squads are spread out across the Texas coast, waiting on orders to go in.

CoreLogic, a company based in Irvine, Calif., that conducts global property analysis, estimates that almost 233,000 homes along the Texas coast are at risk and that the potential reconstruc­tion would total almost $ 40 billion. Contributi­ng: Julie Garcia and MattWoolbr­ight, Corpus Christi Caller- Times; Gregory Korte, USA TODAY andMelanie Eversley, USA TODAY; The Associated Press. Stanglin and Rice reported fromMcLean, Va.

 ?? COURTNEY SACCO ?? Crews board up windows at the La Palmera Mall in Corpus Christi on Friday as Hurricane Harvey approaches.
COURTNEY SACCO Crews board up windows at the La Palmera Mall in Corpus Christi on Friday as Hurricane Harvey approaches.
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