The Post

Callouts overwhelm rescuers

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UNITED STATES: Harvey sent devastatin­g floods pouring into the nation’s fourth-largest city yesterday as rising water chased thousands of people to rooftops or higher ground and overwhelme­d rescuers who could not keep up with the constant calls for help.

The incessant rain covered much of Houston in turbid, graygreen water and turned streets into rivers navigable only by boat. In a rescue effort that recalled the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, helicopter­s landed near flooded freeways, airboats buzzed across submerged neighbourh­oods and high-water vehicles ploughed through water-logged intersecti­ons.

Some people managed with kayaks or canoes or swam.

Volunteers joined emergency teams to pull people from their homes or from the water, which was high enough in places to gush into second floors. The flooding from Harvey, which made landfall on Saturday as a Category 4 hurricane and has lingered dropping heavy rain as a tropical storm, was so widespread that authoritie­s had trouble pinpointin­g the worst areas.

They urged people to get on top of their houses to avoid becoming trapped in attics and to wave sheets or towels to draw attention to their location.

Residents living around the Addicks and Barker reservoirs designed to help prevent flooding in downtown Houston, were warned that a controlled release from both reservoirs would cause additional street flooding and could spill into homes.

Judging from federal disaster declaratio­ns, the storm has so far affected about a quarter of the Texas population, or 6.8 million people in 18 counties. It was blamed for at least two deaths.

As the water rose, the National Weather Service issued another ominous forecast: Before the storm that arrived as a Category 4 hurricane is gone, some parts of Houston and its suburbs could get as much as 1.3 metres (50 inches) of rain. That would be the highest amount ever recorded in Texas.

Some areas have already received about half that amount. Since Friday, South Houston recorded nearly 63cm, and the suburbs of Santa Fe and Dayton got 69cm.

‘‘The breadth and intensity of this rainfall is beyond anything experience­d before,’’ the National Weather Service said.

The director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Brock Long, predicted that the aftermath of the storm would require FEMA’s involvemen­t for years.

‘‘This disaster’s going to be a landmark event,’’ Long said.

Rescuers had to give top priority to life-and-death situations, leaving many affected families to fend for themselves. And several hospitals in the Houston area were evacuated due to the rising waters.

Tom Bartlett and Steven Craig pulled a rowboat on a rope through chest-deep water for a mile to rescue Bartlett’s mother from her home in west Houston. It took them 45 minutes to reach the house. Inside, the water was halfway up the walls. Marie Bartlett, 88, waited in her bedroom upstairs. ‘‘When I was younger, I used to wish I had a daughter, but I have the best son in the world. In my 40 years here, I’ve never seen the water this high.’’

It was not clear how many people were plucked from the floodwater­s. Up to 1200 people had to be rescued in Galveston County alone, said Mark Henry, the county judge, the county’s top administra­tive post.

Houston’s George R. Brown Convention Centre was quickly opened as a shelter. It was also used as a shelter for Katrina refugees in 2005.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said authoritie­s had received more than 2000 calls for help, with more coming in. He urged drivers to stay off roads to avoid adding to the number of those stranded.

The deteriorat­ing situation was bound to provoke questions about the conflictin­g advice given by the governor and Houston leaders before the hurricane. Governor Greg Abbott urged people to flee from Harvey’s path, but the Houston mayor issued no evacuation orders and told everyone to stay home.

The Coast Guard deployed five helicopter­s and asked for additional aircraft from New Orleans.

The White House announced that President Donald Trump would visit Texas tomorrow. He met yesterday by teleconfer­ence with top administra­tion officials to discuss federal support for response and recovery efforts.

Harvey was the fiercest hurricane to hit the US in 13 years and the strongest to strike Texas since 1961’s Hurricane Carla, the most powerful Texas hurricane on record. - AP

 ??  ?? A rescue helicopter hovers in the background as an elderly woman and her poodle use an air mattress to float above flood waters from Tropical Storm Harvey while waiting to be rescued from Scarsdale Boulevard in Houston, Texas.
A rescue helicopter hovers in the background as an elderly woman and her poodle use an air mattress to float above flood waters from Tropical Storm Harvey while waiting to be rescued from Scarsdale Boulevard in Houston, Texas.

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