Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Major disaster declared in Texas

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HOUSTON — President Joe Biden signed a major disaster declaratio­n that will allow much of Texas to tap vast reserves of federal aid, the White House said Saturday, offering a new lifeline to a state struggling to recover from a brutal winter storm that left more than 50 dead and millions without power across the South.

Mr. Biden said Friday that he hopes to travel to Texas next week but doesn’t want his presence and the accompanyi­ng entourage to distract from the recovery.

“They’re working like the devil to take care of their folks,” Mr.Biden said of Texas officials.

As Texas thawed from days of frigid darkness, an epic blame game emerged over who is responsibl­e for the billions of dollars in damages from what some expected would become the most costly weather disaster in state history.

Texas’s deregulate­d electrical grid triggered mass outages that left residents in the nation’s second-most populous state trapped without heat for days in freezing homes. Several died following desperatea­ttempts to stay warm, including a 75-year-old woman and her three young grandchild­ren in a suburban Houston housefire sparked by a fireplace.

Many other households faced jaw-dropping electrical bills from some of the state’s increasing­ly popular variable-rate plans, which charged thousands of dollars for a few days of power as wholesale energy prices soared.

The plans offer a potentiall­y lower-cost alternativ­e to

traditiona­l fixed-rate energy payments, but the outages quickly raised havoc. One company, Griddy, said it was forced to raise its prices to 300 times higher than the normal wholesale rate, meaning a typical $2-a-day household would face more than $600 in daily charges.

Mr. Biden has spoken to the governors of the seven states most affected by the winter weather. He tweeted a photo of himself on the phone with Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican.

Mr. Abbott said Saturday he was convening an emergency meeting with state lawmakers to discuss the spikes, saying in a statement that “it is unacceptab­le for Texans who suffered through days in the freezing cold without electricit­y or heat to now be hit with skyrocketi­ng energy costs.”

The Electric Reliabilit­y Councilof Texas, which manages the state’s power grid, faces a state investigat­ion and two lawsuits arguing that its failure to prepare for extreme cold left residents freezingan­d in the dark.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Friday he was launching an investigat­ion into how ERCOT and other power companies had “grossly mishandled” the winter storm. An ERCOT official defended its decision to trigger rolling outages, saying ina statement Saturday that it had been the “right choice to avoida statewide blackout.”

The catastroph­ic winter storm was expected to become the “largest insurance claim event in [Texas] history,” said the Insurance Council of Texas, a trade group, which estimated the damage would far outpace the $19 billion in claims from Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

Mr. Biden’s major disaster declaratio­n in Texas, which followed similar stateof-emergency notices in Louisiana and Oklahoma, will allow the general public and business owners to apply for temporary-housing grants, home-repair loans and other emergency aid. Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson, a Democrat, said Saturday that the declaratio­n would “help our city recover.”

Mr. Biden’s Texas declaratio­n offers individual assistance to 77 of 254 counties, including the areas around Houston, Dallas and Austin, but does not cover the entire state.

Mr. Abbott said Saturday that the “partial approval is an important first step,” and the White House said more counties could be covered as government officials continue assessing the damage. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has in recentdays provided generators, food, water and other supplies statewide.

The gatekeeper­s of the Texas power grid — famously unregulate­d and disconnect­ed from the broader U.S. — are expected to face intense scrutiny over whether they neglected infrastruc­tural upgrades and weather safeguards that could have helpedduri­ng the disaster.

Congress is likely to open an investigat­ion next week into what went wrong, and the Texas Legislatur­e is expected hold its own hearings. At least two Texans have filed lawsuits faulting ERCOT for not heeding safety warnings or boosting energy supplies.

Although temperatur­es have risen since the Arctic storm dropped air below freezing, many across the South are just beginning to recover from the devastatio­n of burst pipes, power failures and flooded homes.

More than 14 million people across the South are still without a consistent supply of clean drinking water, and roughly 80,000 utility customers across Texas woke up Saturday morning without heat or power.

In Houston, the nation’s fourth-largest city, residents Saturday were still being told to boil all water. In Austin, thestate capital, many homes still lacked running water, and officials couldn’t say whenit might return.

“This has just been one thing after another,” Austin Mayor Steve Adler, a Democrat, told CNN on Friday. “This is a community of people that are scared and upset and angry. We’re eventually going to need some better answers to why we’re here.”

More than 50 recent deaths have been linked to the bitterly cold weather and its aftermath, including from hypothermi­a, house fires and carbon-monoxide poisoning from people using cars or ovens to stay warm.

In the Houston suburb of Sugar Land, Loan Le, 75, and her three grandchild­ren — ages 5, 8 and 11 — died in a house fire early Tuesday after using a fireplace to stay warm overnight while without power, city spokesman Douglas Adolph said.

Even as temperatur­es warmed, the threat of ruptured pipes and dry water supplies threatened further strain. In Killeen, a fire at a fully occupied Hilton Garden Inn raged out of control after the hotel’s sprinkler system failed, officials said. No deaths were reported, and the cause of the blaze is still unknown.

Many in the Lone Star State, faced with an uncertain recovery, have pushed to take matters into their own hands. Don Nichols, 70, visited four hardware stores Saturday trying to find parts to fix the busted pipes at his home in Crosby, 25 miles northeast of Houston, where he also owns a barn and some rental properties. He, his tenants and his 100 cows had been without water for most of the week.

On Saturday afternoon, Mr. Nichols stood in line with about 30 others at a Home Depot in the city of Humble, waiting to pick through the remaining plumbing supplies. He said he still remembers the last time it was this cold for this long: Christmast­ime 1989.

“I had my blankets on and my feather bed and my comforter and all of that, and I was still freezing to death,” he said. “I’m a pretty tough ol’ Boy Scout, and I don’t worry about that. But this time, man, I did.”

 ?? Ben Torres/The Dallas Morning News via AP ?? Ivet Cantu, 45, points to her electricit­y bill from Griddy energy on an app showing her energy cost — $3,114.27 — during recent severe winter weather Friday in Dallas.
Ben Torres/The Dallas Morning News via AP Ivet Cantu, 45, points to her electricit­y bill from Griddy energy on an app showing her energy cost — $3,114.27 — during recent severe winter weather Friday in Dallas.

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