Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Houston attempts to safeguard some areas by flooding others

- By Jeff Amy and Juan A. Lozano

Associated Press

HOUSTON — Officials in Houston sought Friday to safeguard parts of their devastated city by keeping others flooded in the wake of Harvey, which retained enough rain-making power to raise the risk of flooding in the middle of the country a week after it slammed into Texas.

The mayor announced that ongoing releases of water from two reservoirs could keep thousands of homes flooded for up to 15 days and told residents that if they stayed and later needed help, first responders’ resources could be further strained.

In another Texas city with no drinking water, people waited in a line that stretched for more than a mile to get bottled water. And a new fire erupted Friday evening at a crippled Houston-area chemical plant that was the scene of an earlier explosion and fire.

Residents of the still-flooded western part of Houston were asked to evacuate due to the releases from two reservoirs protecting downtown. The ongoing releases were expected to keep flooded homes that had been filled with water earlier in the week. Homes that are not currently flooded probably will not be affected, officials said.

It could take three months for the Addicks and Barker reservoirs, which are normally dry, to drain. The Harris County Flood Control District said the water releases had to continue to protect the reservoirs’ structural integrity and in case more heavy rain falls.

Some of the affected houses have several feet of water in them, and the water reaches to the rooftops of others, district meteorolog­ist Jeff Lindner said.

Mayor Sylvester Turner pleaded for more high-water vehicles and more search-and-rescue equipment as the nation’s fourthlarg­est city continued looking for survivors or corpses that might have somehow escaped notice in flood-ravaged neighborho­ods.

Search teams quickly worked their way down streets, sometimes not even knocking on doors if there were obvious signs that all was well — organized debris piles or full cans of trash on the curb, for instance, or neighbors confirming that the residents had evacuated.

Authoritie­s considered it an initial search, though they did not say what subsequent searches would entail or whenthey would commence.

Mr. Turner also asked the Federal Emergency Management Agency to provide more workers to process applicatio­ns from thousands of people seeking government help. The mayor said he will request a preliminar­y aid package of $75 million for debris removal alone.

The storm had lost most of its tropical characteri­stics but remained a source of heavy rain that threatened to cause flooding as far north as Indiana.

By Friday evening, Harvey had dumped more than 9 inches of rain in parts of Arkansas and Tennessee and more than 8 inches in Alabama and Kentucky. Its remnants were expected to generate another 1 to 3 inches in other parts of Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ists expect Harvey to break up and merge with other weather systems over the Ohio Valley late Saturday or Sunday.

More than 1,500 people were staying at shelters in Louisiana, and that number included people from communitie­s in Texas. The state opened a seventh shelter Friday in Shreveport for up to 2,400 people, said Shauna Sanford, a spokeswoma­n for Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards.

The Texas city of Beaumont, home to almost 120,000 people near the Louisiana state line, was trying to bring in enough bottled water for people who stayed behind after a water pumping station was overwhelme­d by the swollen Neches River.

Authoritie­s raised the death toll from the storm to 39 late Thursday, while rescue workers conducted a block-by-block search of tens of thousands of Houston homes.

The latest statewide damage surveys showed the extent of destructio­n. An estimated 156,000 dwellings in Harris County, or more than 10 percent of all structures in the county database, were damaged by flooding, according to the flood control district for the county, which includes Houston.

Mr. Lindner called that a conservati­ve estimate.

Figures from the Texas Department of Public Safety indicated that nearly 87,000 homes had major or minor damage and at least 6,800 were destroyed.

Gov. Greg Abbott warned Friday in an interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” that it could take years for Texas to “dig out from this catastroph­e.” President Donald Trump tweeted that there’s still “so much to do” in Texas’ recovery.

At the Arkema chemical plant in Crosby, thick black smoke and towering orange flames shot up once again. The company has blamed the blasts and fires on floodwater­s that engulfed the plant’s backup generators and knocked out the refrigerat­ion necessary to keep unstable compounds from degrading and catching fire.

In Beaumont, people waited Friday in a line of cars that stretched more than a mile at a water-distributi­on center at a high school football field. Each vehicle received one case. Earlier, people stood in line at a Kroger grocery store that was giving away gallon jugs of water, which were gone in two hours.

While city officials said little about plans to restore water service, a spokeswoma­n for ExxonMobil, which has a refinery and chemical plants in Beaumont, said Friday that the company helped install a temporary intake pipe to the city’s treatment plant.

 ?? KTRK via AP ?? Thick, black smoke rises Friday from the Arkema chemical plant in Crosby, Texas, near Houston.
KTRK via AP Thick, black smoke rises Friday from the Arkema chemical plant in Crosby, Texas, near Houston.
 ?? Gregory Bull/Associated Press ?? People wait in line for donated goods from a makeshift distributi­on center set up among the cubicles of an office Friday in Pasadena, Texas.
Gregory Bull/Associated Press People wait in line for donated goods from a makeshift distributi­on center set up among the cubicles of an office Friday in Pasadena, Texas.
 ?? Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via AP ?? A worker for a contractor guts a flood-damaged home Friday in the Meyerland neighborho­od in Houston.
Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via AP A worker for a contractor guts a flood-damaged home Friday in the Meyerland neighborho­od in Houston.

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