Los Angeles Times

Trump meets with victims of flooding

His return to areas hit by Harvey follows criticism of last visit. Survivors’ attention is on recovery efforts.

- By Matt Pearce, Hailey Branson-Potts and Anna M. Phillips

HOUSTON — A week after Hurricane Harvey lashed Texas with record rainfall, President Trump returned to the Lone Star State, as storm survivors began to return to their neighborho­ods and stark divisions between those who lost everything to the floodwater­s and those who escaped relatively unscathed were on display.

Parts of west Houston were still reeling Saturday. In residentia­l neighborho­ods near the Addicks Reservoir, which overflowed during the storm, residents relied on boats including canoes and kayaks to run errands and commute to work. Some had power; some didn’t. Some of the singleand two-story brick homes remained swamped with several feet of fetid water; others were dry.

“It’s a tale of two cities right now,” said Pete Carragher, 64, a geologist who returned home by canoe with his son-in-law, who lives nearby, to check on their houses and fetch supplies.

“You go a mile north and you would never know anything had happened, apart from the extra lines at the gas stations and the few shops being shut,” Carragher said. He stood in knee-deep water, dressed in waders and boots. “It’s just if you’re in this floodplain areas here, it’s devastatin­g.”

In much of Houston, the floodwater­s have receded, allowing traffic to flow on the city’s freeways, where there had been dramatic scenes of white-capped waves only days before.

But cities and towns to the east remained underwater. In Beaumont, where the population is about 118,000, Saturday marked the third day residents went without clean water after flooding overwhelme­d the city’s pump system.

Throughout the state, relief workers and volunteers

continued to survey the wreckage of homes and neighborho­ods, searching for survivors or those who died. According to the Houston Chronicle, more than 50 people are thought to have lost their lives to the storm.

During his second visit to the region last week, an upbeat Trump, with First Lady Melania Trump, toured a hurricane relief center in Houston, where he handed boxes of food to evacuees and sought to reassure residents that his administra­tion was engaged in Texas’ recovery efforts. Declaring himself “very happy” with the efforts underway, he told reporters, “It’s been really nice. It’s been a wonderful thing. As tough as this was, it’s been a wonderful thing. I think even for the country to watch it, for the world to watch. It’s been beautiful.”

“It’s going so well that it’s going fast, in a certain sense,” he said of the response to the storm, adding that while the process of rebuilding might take some states years, “because this is Texas, you’ll probably do it in six months.”

The president’s second post-hurricane trip, which included a stop in southeast Louisiana, came after criticism that he didn’t meet with victims of the storm during his visit Tuesday to Corpus Christi. Trump said that was intentiona­l because he did not want to interfere with rescue and recovery operations.

“We’re signing a lot of documents now to get money,” he said, a reference to the White House’s request to Congress on Friday for $7.9 billion in aid. Officials said this was only a down payment, a portion of a funding request that could exceed $100 billion.

Trump’s visits and comments after Harvey have been notable for how little attention they’ve gotten from Texans.

In the presence of reporters over the last week, Trump’s name has been spoken little inside distressed neighborho­ods stretching from wind-slammed Rockport in south Texas to flooddrenc­hed Port Arthur in east Texas.

The same has been true of any other outsider not trapped inside the storm’s tumultuous world. In the places with running television­s, screens have been glued to storm coverage, not politics. They show news conference­s from Texas county judges rather than congressio­nal leaders; viewers hear from little-known meteorolog­ists and hydrologis­ts rather than panels of famous political journalist­s.

In a year when it seems like all politics has been all Trump, the flooded communitie­s in Texas have shown how intensely local disaster politics can be.

Take the subdivisio­n of Millwood in unincorpor­ated Fort Bend County, for example. In the well-to-do neighborho­ods in nearby Sienna Plantation, the floodwater­s from heavy rains have dropped, leaving behind a layer of brown muck on the roads but otherwise allowing owners to return to their homes to begin cleanup.

But in Millwood, water was still pooled in the streets Saturday, preventing trucks from entering. Residents hauled ladders and boxes down an elevated earthen levee running along a nearby canal so that they could climb the brick walls behind their homes and get in.

Inside Amar Gowda’s brick-and-stone home, which had about a foot of water, men in white hazardous materials suits and masks stripped soggy hardwood planks from the floor, tossing them into a pile with a clatter.

To Gowda, a 33-year-old software architect, the historic hurricane may have been an act of God, but the flooding in his neighborho­od was not. When he bought the home, he said he was told it was not in a flood zone, so he doesn’t have federal flood insurance to cover his losses.

He blamed “poor planning” by the subdivisio­n’s developers, and blamed local officials for not bringing in more water pumps sooner. Now he and his neighbors are considerin­g a class-action lawsuit.

Asked about Trump, neighbor Jay Parekh, 40, replied, “We are not interested in what he’s doing right now. Nobody here has flood insurance.”

One of the neighbors who does have flood insurance was Judy Wong, a 66-yearold retiree. When she briefly became emotional during an interview, it wasn’t when she spoke about Trump, but about her homeowners associatio­n.

“I feel like they’ve done everything they can,” Wong said of Trump and the federal government. But in her neighborho­od, she said, “The pumps were not adequate.”

Sitting outside the neighborho­od, at guard, was a Fort Bend County deputy who said he’d been working more 100 hours straight. “Let’s get them out first, and then litigate,” he said.

Up in western Houston, along the Buffalo Bayou, residents’ lives have been shaped most dramatical­ly not by Trump but by floodcontr­ol infrastruc­ture and federal agencies whose emergency response programs long predate the president.

Two dams upstream from the bayou were filled to the brims with rains from Harvey. To protect the dams from failing and possibly destroying more neighborho­ods, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has started steady releases that have flooded some homes along the bayou.

“Thirty years, we’ve never had anything back there,” said Olga Cortez Bullock, 76, sitting in a chair in the shade in a neighborho­od along the bayou as she waited for men she’d hired to bring back some of her belongings on a boat. Her house and home office had been flooded with 2 feet of water.

The water from the rains “had just gotten up to the last step and it stopped,” Cortez Bullock said. Then the dams began spewing water into the bayou, flooding her home and three cars. “I’m not happy about that release,” she said.

Asked about Trump’s visit, Cortez Bullock instead wanted to know when the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Small Business Administra­tion would begin processing recovery claims so she could get back to work running a watch and jewelry convention.

“In the meantime, small businesses suffer,” Cortez Bullock said. “A lot of people are hired by small businesses, so what are they supposed to do? ... People are not going to come into your house to fix it if they’re not sure they’ll get paid.”

A couple blocks over, Ronnie Wathough, 58, waited at the edge of the water for his son-in-law, who was on a boat, to fetch some belongings from Wathough’s flooded home. Wathough, too, had criticism for floodcontr­ol officials. “I understand why they opened it,” Wathough said. “I understand why they did what they did. I think they did it too late.”

Asked about the president, Wathough was indifferen­t. “I don’t care if you’re the president, the pope, the king,” Wathough said. “There’s nothing you can say to make these people feel better.”

Amid the signs of gradual progress came warnings of the difficulti­es ahead.

Houston city officials alerted residents Saturday that scammers claiming to work for insurance companies were calling flood victims and claiming they had to pay overdue premiums or they would lose their insurance. And in a statement issued jointly with FEMA, the city warned of disturbing reports of people impersonat­ing emergency response officials in order to enter victims’ homes.

Officials with the Houston Independen­t School District, the fourth-largest in the country, reported that after surveying most of the district’s nearly 300 schools, only 115 had so far been deemed safe to open by the target date of Sept. 11. By that time, officials hope that about 218,000 students will be able to return to school.

About 75 schools sustained major or extensive damage, and the district expects to have to relocate 10,000 to 12,000 students.

The Houston Astros were scheduled to play their first home game since the storm, returning Saturday for a doublehead­er against the New York Mets at Minute Maid Park, less than half a mile from the evacuation site at the George R. Brown Convention Center. The team announced it would provide 5,000 tickets to each game to volunteers, first responders and evacuees.

Inside Minute Maid Park, the Jumbotron above right field read: “Houston strong” in blue, orange and white. “Dedicated to all those who lost their lives, property and were affected by the f lood,” it said.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? EVACUEES take a selfie with President Trump, joined by FEMA Director Brock Long, left, and Housing Secretary Ben Carson, at the NRG Center in Houston.
Susan Walsh Associated Press EVACUEES take a selfie with President Trump, joined by FEMA Director Brock Long, left, and Housing Secretary Ben Carson, at the NRG Center in Houston.

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