Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Floods ease in Houston, rise near Louisiana line

-

HOUSTON » Harvey’s floodwater­s started dropping across much of the Houston area and the sun came out Wednesday in a glimmer of hope for the stricken city, even as the storm doubled back toward land and pounded communitie­s farther east, near the Texas-Louisiana line.

The scope of the devastatio­n caused by the hurricane came into sharper focus, meanwhile, and the murky green floodwater­s from the recordbrea­king, 4-foot deluge of rain began yielding up bodies as predicted.

The confirmed death toll climbed to 23, including six family members — four of them children — whose bodies were pulled Wednesday from

a van that had been swept off a Houston bridge into a bayou.

Authoritie­s are investigat­ing at least 17 more deaths to determine whether they were stormrelat­ed.

“Unfortunat­ely, it seems that our worst thoughts are being realized,” Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez said after the van that disappeare­d over the weekend was found in 10 feet of muddy water.

While conditions in the nation’s fourth-largest city appeared to improve, authoritie­s warned that the crisis in Houston and across the region is far from over. The storm, in fact, took a turn for the worse east of the city, close to the Louisiana line.

Beaumont and Port Arthur, Texas, struggled with rising floodwater­s

and worked to evacuate residents after Harvey completed a U-turn in the Gulf of Mexico and rolled ashore early Wednesday for the second time in six days. It hit southweste­rn Louisiana as a tropical storm with heavy rain and winds of 45 mph.

Forecaster­s predicted a wobbling and weakening Harvey would be downgraded to a tropical depression late Wednesday or early Thursday and completely dissipate within three to four days.

But it still has lots of rain and potential damage to spread, with 4 to 8 inches forecast from the Louisiana-Texas line into Tennessee and Kentucky through Friday. Some spots may get as much as a foot, raising the risk of more flooding.

For much of the Houston area, forecaster­s said the rain is pretty much over.

“We have good news,”

said Jeff Lindner, a meteorolog­ist with the Harris County Flood Control District. “The water levels are going down.”

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said the city’s two major airports would be up and running again Wednesday afternoon.

At Hermann Park, south of downtown, children glided by in strollers and wagons, joggers took in midday runs, and couples walked beside cascading fountains and beneath a sparkling sun. People pulled into drive-thru restaurant­s and emerged from a store with groceries.

At the same time, many thousands of Houstonare­a homes are under water and could stay that way for days or weeks. And Lindner cautioned that homes near at least one swollen bayou still could flood.

In Houston’s flooded Meyerland neighborho­od,

hundreds of families emptied their homes of sodden possession­s under a baking sun as the temperatur­e climbed into the 90s. They piled up couches, soggy drywall and carpets ripped out of foulsmelli­ng homes where the floodwater­s had lingered for more than 24 hours.

The curbs were lined with the pickup trucks of cleanup contractor­s and friends.

Altogether, more than 1,000 homes in Texas were destroyed and close to 50,000 damaged, and over 32,000 people were in shelters across the state, emergency officials reported. About 10,000 more National Guard troops are being deployed to Texas, bringing the total to 24,000, Gov. Greg Abbott said.

“This is going to be an incredibly large disaster,” Brock Long, chief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said in

Washington. “We’re not going to know the true cost for years to come . ... But it’s going to be huge.”

When Harvey paid its return visit to land overnight, it hit near Cameron, La., about 45 miles from Port Arthur.

Port Arthur found itself increasing­ly isolated as floodwater­s swamped most major roads out of the city and spilled into a storm shelter with about 100 people inside. Motiva Enterprise­s closed its Port Arthur refinery, the largest in the nation, because of flooding.

More than 500 people — along with dozens of dogs, cats, a lizard and a monkey — took shelter at the Max Bowl bowling alley in Port Arthur after firefighte­rs popped the lock in the middle of the night, said the establishm­ent’s general manager, Jeff Tolliver.

“The monkey was a little surprising, but we’re trying to help,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States