Damage toll from Harvey mounts as rescuers strive to reach stranded communities
VICTORIA, Texas — Search and rescue teams sifted through wreckage across Texas on Saturday after Hurricane Harvey slammed onto the Gulf Coast as a powerful Category 4 storm, flattening mobile homes, tearing roofs off buildings and leaving more than 300,000 homes and businesses without power.
Across southern Texas, officials had yet to uncover the full extent of the damage. Heavy rain and lashing winds had covered roads in debris, blocking access to many small towns and rural areas.
Roy Laird, assistant fire chief with the Rockport Volunteer Fire Department, said three people were dead in Aransas County. Throughout the day, emergency responders combed through the debris of collapsed buildings, broken power poles and uprooted palm trees.
With winds topping 130 mph, Harvey is the first Category 4 storm to make landfall in the United States since Hurricane Charley struck Florida in 2004 and the first to hit Texas since Hurricane Carla in 1961.
Even as Harvey weakened Saturday to a tropical storm with 65 mph winds, weather officials warned residents to expect “extremely serious” flooding, life-threatening storm surges and tornadoes.
“Tropical storm barely moving,” the National Hurricane Center in Miami said in a public advisory Saturday afternoon, noting that the storm was stalling about 45 miles northwest of Victoria and was not expected to leave the area for days. “Torrential rains will continue.”
“This is just the beginning,” said Jeff Evans, a meteorologist in the National Weather Service’s Houston/Galveston office. “We could see catastrophic flooding for a lot of people, historic flooding for parts of Texas. We’re looking at measuring rainfall not in inches, but in feet.”
The eye of the storm made landfall about 10 p.m. Friday near Rockport, a small fishing town about 30 miles northeast of Corpus Christi, snapping trees, tossing boats onto roads and demolishing homes and businesses.
“It’s about what you would expect if a Category 4 hurricane entered your front door,” said Rockport Mayor Charles “C.J.” Wax, who had evacuated to San Antonio. “Widespread devastation.”
At the Saltgrass Landing apartment complex, several brick buildings were destroyed. It was as if the seaward half of each building had simply melted under the force of the hurricane’s winds, exposing their contents for anyone to see.
One crib on the second-floor apartment was piled full of blankets and soggy bits of dry wall and insulation. Dressers and washing machines had toppled out of the building. But there were no sounds of shouting, or crying, or saws and hammers. Just an atonal symphony of smoke alarms from several apartments and the barking of two lost dogs.
Mobile home parks in the city were similarly devastated and similarly abandoned — many of them tossed on their sides. One former home near the Four Seasons Mart was destroyed. No trace of its owner, except for the overpowering odor of spilled cologne.
Republican Gov. Greg Abbott expanded a state of emergency from 30 to 50 counties Saturday. At a news conference he said that there had already been about 20 inches of rain in Corpus Christi and about 16 inches in Houston.
“Our primary concern remains dramatic flooding,” he said. “Our biggest concern is the possibility of between 20 and 30 more inches of rain.”
Rockport’s firefighters worked Saturday with no internet service and only one phone line, which rang nonstop as residents called to ask responders to check in on their loved ones. Many haven’t been able to reach them since the storm hit and knocked out cellphone service.
The city has been threatened many times by storms that didn’t turn out to be devastating. Many people, Laird said, chose to wait out Harvey instead of evacuating.
“This is something that just snuck up on us,” he said. “We did the best we could with the time we had.”
Amid drizzle and pummeling winds, the city’s two emergency teams were using backhoes, dump trucks and bulldozers to clear debris off the roads and allow ambulances and fire trucks to traverse the city.
“I’m very worried about the days ahead,” the mayor said, noting that rain falling further inland was likely to flow to the coast and into his community. “We’ve already been hit once with the storm. Now we’re going to get hit again with a flood.”
Outside of town, a marina had been transformed into a graveyard of pleasure boats. Blown open by the winds, a mass storage structure revealed boats smashed into each other like a pile of dominos. The remaining sheet metal on the structure clattered and groaned in the winds as a handful of boat owners tried to secure the area.
Kelly White, 45, and Terry Reed, 63, both of Rockport, had fled the storm before landfall and then accidentally drove into a tornado when they first tried to return early Saturday morning.
The cyclone briefly lifted the back wheels of Reed’s Chevy Tahoe up off the ground, leaving the tires accelerating helplessly when he hit the gas. That’s when they decided to turn back.
Now they were trying to board up a friend’s marina-front home after the storm blew in the windows on one end and propelled the contents of the home out the other.
“He let us drink beer on his porch, so we keep his house in shape,” said White as the men nailed a soggy piece of particle board over an exposed window.
Reed was relieved to discover that his boat, which had been tied to the dock, had only been tossed to the opposite side of the marina instead of sinking to the bottom of the marina.
“This wasn’t a major, major hurricane,” Reed said.
Richard Helmich, 72, was not so lucky. His boat, the Gypsy Soul, was pinned between two larger boats. He also lost his 54-foot house trailer. Now he stood among his scattered belongings where a storage hut at the marina had tipped over and spilled its contents.
“Hard to believe this was the roof,” Helmich said, looking at the pile of wood in front of him.
About 20 miles south, Port Aransas, a small city on Mustang Island, sustained heavy damage.
“Our town took a real beating,” Mayor, Charles R. Bujan said. “We took a major hit, but there was no life lost, no injuries, thank God.”
The hurricane wreaked havoc in the town’s marina, he said, and the Pioneer RV Beach Resort, a trailer park nestled in the sand dunes south of downtown, was destroyed.
“It is 100 percent gone,” he said. “Luckily, the owner made everyone there leave.”
In Victoria, a town of 62,000 people about 30 miles from the coast, heavy rains were pounding sideways Saturday as ferocious winds lashed the city.
The streets were empty of cars and littered with downed trees and power lines. Several gas station overhangs had collapsed and fallen on top of the pumps. Water began to pool on neighborhood streets.
At a local Red Cross shelter, more than 300 residents huddled inside, slumped on cots as they awaited news about the storm.
The initial hurricane warning spanned a wide stretch of coastline from Port Mansfield to Sargent, a region that is home to about 4 million people. An additional 12 million, many in the major cities of Houston and San Antonio, were under a tropical storm warning.
What makes Harvey so potentially dangerous, even as it weakens, is that it will continue to linger in the area, meteorologists say.
“Typically, a hurricane comes in and pulls inland,” Laird said, “but this is moving slowly, and it’s expected to stall, wobble and maybe loop back to where it came in.”
On Saturday morning, the National Weather Service warned that some areas could get as much as 40 inches of rain — about the amount of rainfall many Texas coastal towns get in a year.
Along the coast, some residents ventured out Saturday morning to check on family and friends. “It’s like a little ghost town,” Eddie Canales, 69, said as he drove his car across Corpus Christi — past broken fences, toppled trees and dark traffic lights — to check on his uncle and cousins.
“There’s very little traffic. All the Whataburgers are closed — every single one of them.”
The winds had calmed, and there was little floodwater, Canales said. With his house intact, his main concern was when power would be restored.
“Everything seems to be getting back to normal,” Canales said. “If electrical power comes back, I’ll be prepared. If not, I’ll have to move further inland.”
Before the eye of the storm reached land, President Donald Trump announced on Twitter that he had granted Abbott’s request for a disaster declaration, “which unleashes the full force of government help!”
Shortly after midnight, downgraded to a Category 3 storm, Harvey made a second landfall along the northeastern shore of Copano Bay, the National Weather Service reported.
Before Harvey, the most recent major hurricane to make landfall was Wilma, a Category 3 storm that hit Florida in October 2005, two months after Hurricane Katrina.
Historically, slow-moving tropical storms and hurricanes have caused some of Texas’ most severe flooding. In 2001, Tropical Storm Allison hovered above the Houston area for days, dumping up to 30 inches of rain — as much as 80 percent of the area’s average annual rainfall — over some neighborhoods.
The last hurricane to hit the Texas coast — Hurricane Ike, a Category 2 storm that wreaked havoc after making landfall in Galveston in 2008 — killed at least 37 people and resulted in more than $30 billion in damage.
Hurricane Harvey poses the first major test of emergency response for the Trump administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s new administrator, Brock Long, who was confirmed in June.
Trump plans to travel to Texas next week, homeland security adviser Tom Bossert said. Speaking to reporters at a news briefing Friday, he added that federal officials had significantly improved their ability to respond to natural disasters since Hurricane Katrina caused widespread flooding in New Orleans in 2005, and the president seemed determined to provide help to Texas in the face of the storm.
In some parts of Texas, residents were bombarded with contradictory advice from state and local officials as the storm approached.
On Friday afternoon, Abbott urged residents of low-lying and coastal areas prone to flooding — including parts of Houston — to evacuate.
“What you don’t know and what nobody else knows right now is the magnitude of flooding that will be coming,” the governor said.
Shortly afterward, Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner reminded residents that city officials had not issued an evacuation order and urged them to stay in place, noting that residents fleeing Hurricane Rita in 2005 had caused major traffic chaos.
“Please think twice before trying to leave Houston en masse,” he said on Twitter. “No evacuation orders have been issued for the city.”
Flash floods and isolated tornadoes popped up throughout the Houston metropolitan area Saturday, closing roads or making them impassable. One tornado hit about 30 miles northwest of downtown just after 4 p.m. and later blew over trees and caused minor roof damage to a home, said Paul Lewis, a meteorologist in the National Weather Service’s Houston/Galveston office.
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(Pearce reported from Victoria, Texas, Jarvie reported from Atlanta and Castillo reported from Los Angeles.)