Los Angeles Times

Infrastruc­ture takes multiple hits

Water supply goes out in Beaumont, Texas, closing major hospital. Receding floodwater­s reveal devastatio­n.

- By Molly HennessyFi­ske, Laura King and Matt Pearce molly.hennessy-fiske @latimes.com laura.king@latimes.com matt.pearce@latimes.com Times staff writers Hennessy-Fiske reported from Houston, Pearce from Beaumont, Texas, and King from Washington. Staff wri

HOUSTON — With the weakened remnants of former Hurricane Harvey delivering drenching inland rainfall and yet more flooding Thursday, Houston and the vast area already hammered by the massive storm grappled with fresh perils as the waters began to recede, leaving behind a stew of toxic muck.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott called for a day of prayer across his stricken state, and rescuers continued to pluck victims from floods inundating small towns. A major hospital in Beaumont, east of Houston, was forced to evacuate after the municipal water supply failed.

The death toll from the storm — which roared ashore last Friday as a hurricane and was downgraded first to a tropical storm, then overnight to a tropical depression — reached 31, but was expected to rise, perhaps sharply. The grim work of recovering the bodies of those who were trapped in homes or vehicles gathered speed in Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city.

Methodical block-byblock searches were underway in some of the hardesthit areas, said Houston’s assistant fire chief, Richard Mann.

The disaster’s full scope and scale was still emerging, with new reports of damage pouring in hourly. White House homeland security advisor Tom Bossert told reporters in Washington that 100,000 homes had been either damaged or destroyed.

In what could prove an ominous precursor in the Gulf Coast’s sprawling petrochemi­cal hub, flames and plumes of smoke soared skyward early Thursday at a chemical plant on the city’s outskirts. Rising temperatur­es and a power cutoff had set off volatile chemical reactions inside the Arkema Inc. plant in Crosby, 30 miles northeast of downtown Houston, authoritie­s said.

Ten Harris County sheriff’s deputies were treated for possible chemical inhalation after the emission of fumes, local law enforcemen­t officials said Thursday morning. In Washington, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency said preliminar­y informatio­n suggested there were “no concentrat­ions of concern for toxic materials reported at this time” from the emissions.

The Texas Commission on Environmen­tal Quality concurred, describing the smoke and fumes as “acrid and irritating,” but apparently not toxic.

The Trump administra­tion was maintainin­g a visible presence in the hurricane-hit zone. After a highprofil­e visit Tuesday by President Trump, Vice President Mike Pence flew in, accompanie­d by several Cabinet secretarie­s.

In the shattered town of Rockport, Pence told a crowd gathered in front of the badly damaged First Baptist Church: “We are with you, and we will stay with you” as the recovery progresses. Later, the vice president donned work gloves and helped clear downed tree branches.

The White House said Trump had pledged a $1million personal donation for storm relief, but gave no details. The president planned to return to the disaster zone Saturday, spokeswoma­n Sarah Huckabee Sanders said.

Bossert, the homeland security advisor, pledged full support from Washington, but also praised the efforts of local and state officials.

“It’s an all-hands-ondeck operation, not just a federal one,” he said.

The storm sent more than 30,000 people into shelters after making landfall Friday as the most powerful hurricane to hit Texas in five decades. Even downgraded to a tropical depression as it marched east-northeast, Harvey was drenching parts of Louisiana, with the National Weather Service warning that torrential rains could hit areas of Mississipp­i, Tennessee and Kentucky. There were flashf lood warnings as far away as southern Ohio.

Military assistance to the hurricane-hit zone was ramping up. The Navy ordered the amphibious assault ship Kearsarge and the dock landing ship Oak Hill to sail from their home port in Norfolk, Va., to the hurricane zone to provide medical and logistical support.

About 690 U.S. Marines were aboard the Kearsarge, along with more than a dozen helicopter­s.

The Marines were also bringing water purificati­on systems and stood ready to help with aerial reconnaiss­ance and aid distributi­on, the Pentagon said. About 6,400 active-duty military personnel are deployed to the affected area, as well as 73 helicopter­s, three C-130 transport planes and eight search and rescue teams.

High waters were expected to linger for a week in some areas, said Gov. Abbott, a Republican. The storm-affected zone was larger than that surroundin­g New Orleans when it was pummeled a dozen years ago by Hurricane Katrina.

Even those who had managed to escape the floodwater­s awakened to new woes Thursday.

In Beaumont, 90 miles east of Houston, residents turned on their faucets and nothing came out. The city of about 118,000 people lost access to water after floods knocked out a pump station along the Neches River, along with its backup water supply from wells in neighborin­g Hardin County, municipal authoritie­s said.

That prompted what medical officials described as the painful decision to halt emergency services and start evacuating facilities.

“Due to the failure of the city’s water pump, it is in the best interest of our current patients to transfer to other acute care facilities,” Baptist Hospitals of Southeast Texas said in a statement.

Another hospital in Beaumont, Christus St. Elizabeth, said it would stay open because it had well water and a big enough store of drinkable water for now.

Beaumont officials said earlier that they did not know how long repairs to the water system would take.

Amid the devastatio­n, there were nascent signs of recovery.

Houston’s two major airports were operating again, and services including trash pickup and limited bus and light rail were resuming. The public school district, the state’s biggest, announced a date for the start of classes: Sept. 11, two weeks late. Just south of downtown, restaurant­s and grocery stores were doing brisk business.

But in parts of the city, receding waters gave way to a landscape that was sometimes hard to recognize. Moldy, soaked debris piles lined the streets of the Meyerland neighborho­od, bisected by Brays Bayou, which also flooded last year.

While areas of downtown Houston buzzed with activity — morning rush hour, businesses reopening — work crews in the neighborho­od set to the task of removing soaked carpets other debris amid the hum of industrial fans and dehumidifi­ers. By Thursday, some residents had stripped their homes down to the studs and left, exhausted.

“It’s devastatin­g to anyone who loses most of their possession­s to go to work and try to make a living with this aggravatio­n,” said Alan Ross, who lives in the neighborho­od and was helping his son clean up.

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? BAPTIST HOSPITALS of Southeast Texas evacuated facilities in Beaumont, Texas, after the city lost its water supply. Another Beaumont hospital, Christus St. Elizabeth, remained open using its own water supply.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times BAPTIST HOSPITALS of Southeast Texas evacuated facilities in Beaumont, Texas, after the city lost its water supply. Another Beaumont hospital, Christus St. Elizabeth, remained open using its own water supply.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? WES HIGGINS finishes his last of five days of patrolling flooded Houston neighborho­ods for stranded residents. He organized a team of volunteers with 10 boats.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times WES HIGGINS finishes his last of five days of patrolling flooded Houston neighborho­ods for stranded residents. He organized a team of volunteers with 10 boats.

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