Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

All a town wanted for Christmas: Fresh water

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske molly.hennessy-fiske@latimes.com

ROSE CITY, Texas — It was before dawn when the woman responsibl­e for running this small town’s water system got a frightenin­g call: The water tower was running low. Since Hurricane Harvey inundated this rural area 90 miles east of Houston with almost 10 feet of water in August, Janice Ratcliff has submitted drinking-water tests to the state, hoping to lift an order requiring nearly 600 residents to boil water. It would be a small step toward livability in a town full of campers with Christmas trees set up outside.

She returned to her flooded office the week after the storm in waders and kept the water plant operating manually, working seven days a week. Before Thanksgivi­ng, residents were among 3,750 people in southeast Texas without clean drinking water. The total was down to 1,150 people last week, state officials said. Rose City has supplied donated bottled water and hasn’t charged for tap water since the boil order was issued. Ratcliff had hoped new tests would get the order lifted in time for the holidays. Insurance red tape and failed tests had delayed the process before. Now a glitch had kept the water tower from filling overnight and threatened to set back the city’s plans.

At 5:15 a.m. Thursday, Ratcliff rushed to the tower above the water plant behind City Hall, all still being rebuilt after the storm and surrounded by mud and debris. To her relief, the tower still had enough water and pressure to avoid extending the boil water order. She gathered samples and sent them off to the state, hoping for good news in the next 24 hours.

The first one she hoped to call with the good news would be Mayor Bonnie Stephenson, who lost her home in the flood. After four years as mayor, the former union secretary and real estate agent found herself unloading trucks of donated supplies, coordinati­ng relief centers including a military tent and temporary laundromat. She’s 72.

Some residents have received assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but many have not. FEMA is set to hold a meeting in Rose City on Jan. 4. “Hopefully we’ll get some answers, or some help,” Stephenson said. All but two of the 207 homes in Rose City were destroyed, she said.

There are no roses — the town was named after a nearby oilfield — but there are towering pines, the thick forest of east Texas mixed with the bayous of Louisiana, whose border is less than 25 miles away. Some homes were built in the 1800s, and families have lived here for generation­s.

Across from City Hall, City Secretary Tonya Veazey set up her Christmas tree under a carport serving as her family’s kitchen and den, with a couch, TV, smokers and a grill. Neighbors know where she lives and come to the fence line looking for help — with the water, drywall and other building materials they cannot afford. Husband C.J. Veazey, 40, trimmed brisket on a table nearby to sell during the holiday. “Because people didn’t have money for flood insurance, we’re rebuilding penny by penny, paycheck by paycheck,” said Tonya Veazey, 34.

Volunteers came to help after the storm, including Los Angeles police and those who were flooded the year before outside Baton Rouge, La. Some volunteers remained at Rose City Baptist Church, where Veazey joined them Thursday sorting donated toys for children in town. The church was gutted, a tent of supplies and stained glass windows piled outside.

Across the railroad tracks, an 86-year-old neighbor’s daughter tried to persuade her to leave after the storm destroyed her house. When she refused to leave Rose City, the daughter returned from Dallas to help her rebuild. Juanita Cardenas recalled how she and five siblings slept on the floor with their parents growing up, with cardboard for insulation. Back then, East Texas was segregated, which meant only her mother, the lightestsk­inned in the family, was allowed into local shops. When an African-American man came to work up the road, a cross was burned on their corner.

Instead of moving away, most children — including hers — bought or settled the land, growing family plots. “We survived,” Cardenas said.

Her four-bedroom house was razed after the flood. She got help building a one-room shack with a kitchenett­e, and she hopes to move in after New Year’s. The family lost three houses on the plot and is still waiting for all of its FEMA aid. They can’t afford to rebuild but hope to find a larger trailer. “I’m just thankful we’ve got something to live in,” said daughter Helen Ford, 59.

On Friday, Ratcliff gave them something else to celebrate. “Merry Christmas from the operators at the water plant in Rose City,” she announced on Facebook — the order to boil water had finally been lifted.

 ?? MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Operator Janice Ratcliff has been having water in Rose City, Texas, tested ever since Hurricane Harvey ravaged the region. The town was placed under a boil order in September.
MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE/LOS ANGELES TIMES Operator Janice Ratcliff has been having water in Rose City, Texas, tested ever since Hurricane Harvey ravaged the region. The town was placed under a boil order in September.

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