The Commercial Appeal

West Houston to see new flooding

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USA TODAY

Electric company workers started going door-to-door Sunday in a still-flooded area of west Houston under a mandatory evacuation order, warning that service would be shut off nine days after Tropical Storm Harvey ravaged the city.

Crews with Center Point Energy checked homes in the zone that Mayor Sylvester Turner ordered evacuated where about 300 residents still remain. People in houses that have taken on no water will not have their electricit­y cut off.

Water releases from the Addicks and Barker reservoirs need to flush through the area after several feet of rain from Harvey filled them to capacity.

“If you have water in your homes, I have issued a mandatory evacuation for them because it’s dangerous for those who are choosing to live there,” Mayor Sylvester Turner told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”

Sunday morning, exhausted Houstonian­s poured into churches throughout the region.

At Christ Church Cathedral in downtown Houston, the Rev. Barkley Thompson rallied his congregati­on to action from the pulpit.

“Forty-two thousand are presently housed in shelters across this city and state. Forty people have died. Rockport was devastated. Beaumont drowned. One runs out of superlativ­e adjectives to describe things — and then one simply runs out of the energy to speak at all,” Thompson said.

The Episcopal church enlisted attendees to sign up and volunteer to feed the homeless, provide temporary housing, help with home cleanups and host potluck dinners.

In Beaumont, emergency workers continued trying to restore drinking water service, while in Crosby, outside of Houston, officials tried to stabilize a crippled chemical plant.

Beaumont’s water treatment plant failed after the swollen Neches River inundated the main intake system and backup pumps failed.

In Port Arthur, school superinten­dent Mark Porterie said the district “is looking at about three weeks before the school year begins.” Some schools still had several inches of standing water inside — while a middle school was still being used a Red Cross shelter.

In Crosby, authoritie­s kept close watch of the Arkema plant where trailers with hazardous materials ignited in recent days because of lack of power and refrigerat­ion, sending thick black smoke into the air.

The death toll tied to the storm is at least 44 and pushed the Harris County morgue to near capacity. Financial estimates of the damage have soared well above $100 billion.

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