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Hurricane Harvey douses Texas as coastal residents find 'devastation'

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Hurricane Harvey douses Texas as coastal residents find 'devastation' Empty Hurricane Harvey douses Texas as coastal residents find 'devastation'

Post by Harry Sat Aug 26, 2017 2:14 pm

Hurricane Harvey douses Texas as coastal residents find 'devastation'

By Nicole Chavez, Steve Almasy, Ray Sanchez and Doug Criss, CNN

Updated 1726 GMT (0126 HKT) August 26, 2017

A burnt out house that caught fire after Hurricane Harvey hit Corpus Christi, Texas is seen on August 26, 2017. Hurricane Harvey hit the Texas coast with forecasters saying its possible for up to 3 feet of rain and 125 mph winds.

Now Playing Official to town...
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A burnt out house that caught fire after Hurricane Harvey hit Corpus Christi, Texas is seen on August 26, 2017. Hurricane Harvey hit the Texas coast with forecasters saying its possible for up to 3 feet of rain and 125 mph winds.
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A tree blocks a street as Hurricane Harvey makes landfall in Corpus Christi, Texas, on Friday, Aug. 25, 2017. Hurricane Harvey smashed into Texas late Friday, lashing a wide swath of the Gulf Coast with strong winds and torrential rain from the fiercest hurricane to hit the U.S. in more than a decade. (Nick Wagner /Austin American-Statesman via AP)
See Hurricane Harvey's power and destruction
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Resident: Harvey sounds like freight train
US President Donald Trump walks to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House August 25, 2017, in Washington, DC. Trump will travel early next week to Texas, said press secretary Sarah Sanders, shortly before Trump left for the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland, where he plans to spend the weekend. Texas residents were bracing Friday for the impact of Hurricane Harvey, on course to be the strongest storm to hit the US mainland in more than a decade. / AFP PHOTO / Brendan SmialowskiBRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images
Trump to the people of Texas: Good luck
harvey landfall
Hurricane Harvey makes landfall in Texas
What Hurricane Harvey looks like from space
A man carries personal items through a flooded street caused by remnants of Hurricane Matthew on October 11, 2016 in Fair Bluff, North Carolina. Thousands of homes have been damaged in North Carolina as a result of the storm and many are still under threat of flooding.
Wind isn't the biggest worry during a hurricane
how hurricanes are named orig_00002729.jpg
How are hurricanes named?
orig weather preparing for a hurricane_00000000.jpg
How to prepare for a hurricane
IN SPACE - In this handout photo provided by NASA, Hurricane Patricia is seen from the International Space Station. The hurricane made landfall on the Pacfic coast of Mexico on October 23. (Photo by Scott Kelly/NASA via Getty Images)
What you should know about hurricanes
A burnt out house that caught fire after Hurricane Harvey hit Corpus Christi, Texas is seen on August 26, 2017. Hurricane Harvey hit the Texas coast with forecasters saying its possible for up to 3 feet of rain and 125 mph winds.
Official to town residents: Write name on arm
Hurricane Harvey Houston flooding flores nr_00000000.jpg
Houston faces flooding from Hurricane Harvey
Stormchaser captures Hurricane Harvey's force
A tree blocks a street as Hurricane Harvey makes landfall in Corpus Christi, Texas, on Friday, Aug. 25, 2017. Hurricane Harvey smashed into Texas late Friday, lashing a wide swath of the Gulf Coast with strong winds and torrential rain from the fiercest hurricane to hit the U.S. in more than a decade. (Nick Wagner /Austin American-Statesman via AP)
See Hurricane Harvey's power and destruction
harvey storm damage
Resident: Harvey sounds like freight train
US President Donald Trump walks to Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House August 25, 2017, in Washington, DC. Trump will travel early next week to Texas, said press secretary Sarah Sanders, shortly before Trump left for the Camp David presidential retreat in Maryland, where he plans to spend the weekend. Texas residents were bracing Friday for the impact of Hurricane Harvey, on course to be the strongest storm to hit the US mainland in more than a decade. / AFP PHOTO / Brendan SmialowskiBRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images
Trump to the people of Texas: Good luck
Story highlights

More flooding expected after storm's "severe blow," mayor of coastal Rockport said
Category 1 Harvey slows to 2 mph, creeping north as it drenches inland areas

(CNN)Texans who rode out the most powerful hurricane to hit the United States in a decade ventured out Saturday to find "widespread devastation" as Hurricane Harvey lumbered north in what was "now turning into a deadly inland event."
With dire warnings of tornadoes, torrential downpours and days of flooding to come, broad swaths of southeast Texas were littered with uprooted trees, toppled signs, flagpoles that snapped like toothpicks and clusters of bricks peeled like scabs from walls and rooftops.

Fatalities were feared in coastal Rockport, Texas, where an estimated 5,000 residents had stayed put for the storm, which blasted ashore as a Category 4 around 11 p.m. ET Friday, between Port Aransas and Port O'Connor, Aransas County Sheriff Bill Mills said.
A damaged home sits amid a flood on August 26, 2017, after Hurricane Harvey slammed Rockport, Texas.
A damaged home sits amid a flood on August 26, 2017, after Hurricane Harvey slammed Rockport, Texas.
Callers to the local emergency dispatch line told of walls and roofs collapsing on people across the city, where an official had warned those who opted to stick out the storm to write their Social Security numbers on their arms for body identification.
"There's been widespread devastation," Rockport Mayor Charles Wax told CNN late Saturday morning. No deaths had been confirmed, he said, noting that emergency workers were just beginning to go house to house to check on residents and assess damage.
"We've already taken a severe blow from the storm, but we're anticipating another one when the flooding comes," he said.
The storm by late Saturday morning was still a Category 1, packing winds of 75 mph as it slowed its trek northward to just 2 mph. Some places even far inland were predicted to get as much as 40 inches of rain through Wednesday.
While the worst of the storm surge had ended by midday Saturday, the coastal flooding threat was due to increase as already-swollen rivers and bayous get pounded with heavy rain, CNN meteorologist Michael Guy said. Sea water pushed onto the shore also won't recede quickly, he said, meaning "this is going to be a long, ongoing flood event."
Harvey wielded the "highest potential to kill the most amount of people and cause the most amount of damage," Brock Long, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, had warned. He echoed forecasters who predicted Harvey would be leave areas "uninhabitable for weeks or months," echoing language last seen ahead of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Here's where we stand:
Latest developments
-- Even after weakening upon landfall, Harvey was still a dangerous storm and "turning into a deadly inland event," the FEMA chief tweeted.
-- Due to stall over Texas, Harvey could maintain tropical storm strength through early Monday, then weaken into a tropical depression, the weather service predicted.
-- Parts of southeastern Texas remained under a flash flood watch through Tuesday evening, the National Weather Service office in Houston said.
-- More than 300,000 customers on the Texas Gulf Coast had no power around 9:30 a.m. ET Saturday, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas said, amid reports of downed power lines and trees.
-- Heavy rain from Harvey's bands also had reached flood-prone Houston, about 150 miles from the point of landfall.
TRACK THE STORM
-- Almost 10 inches of rain was reported by 5 a.m. ET Saturday, at a few locations in southeast Texas, the National Weather Service said.
-- A tide gauge in Port Lavaca, Texas, reported storm surge of 6.4 feet, the hurricane center said.
-- Structural and building problems were reported in Rockport, Aransas Pass, and Port Aransas, Texas, said Tom Beal, a meteorologist with National Weather Service office in Corpus Christi.
-- President Donald Trump tweeted early Saturday that he's "closely monitoring" Harvey from Camp David. Trump, who plans to visit the storm zone next week, has signed a disaster declaration for Texas.
Damage assessments underway
Firefighters who hunkered down in their station in Rockport as Harvey passed over the city of 9,000 residents recounted a harrowing night.
The wind was "howling," said Roy Laird, assistant chief of the city's volunteer fire department. "We had probably 140-mph winds earlier."
For hours, Karl Hattman and his family listened to "what sounded like a freight train" roar outside their Rockport home. When the fury calmed, they headed out into the darkness to find many trees down, debris blocking their driveway and Hattman's vehicle damaged by flying roof tiles.
Robert Jackson also likened the force of the storm in Rockport to a passing freight train -- one with "square wheels." He didn't sleep all night.
"It was about the most stressful thing I've ever been through," he said, adding, "It's my last one to ride out, I'll tell you that."
Joey Walker, 25, rode out the storm at a house on Galveston Island. The Galveston Island Beach Patrol employee posted video of near-white out conditions overlooking Stewart Beach.
Taking shelter and bracing for rain
As rain bands reached Houston, Mayor Sylvester Turner urged drivers to stay off the roads.
"This is going to be a major rainmaker," he told CNN Saturday. "We anticipate four to five days of this."
"This thing is turning into quite the marathon," Nick Gignac, of Corpus Christi, told CNN around 2 a.m. ET. "You expect these things to be a quicker flash-and-bang than they are. To be honest, the intensity still hasn't let up as the storm came in. Things were a little lighter than they are right now, and you expect it to get intense and let up. And things have not let up at all."
In San Antonio, about 950 people took refuge in shelters, Woody Woodward, a spokesman for the city fire department, told CNN, adding that there was still plenty of space for more people.
Ten critically ill babies in Corpus Christi were taken to a hospital in North Texas ahead of the storm, the Cook Children's Hospital in Fort Worth said in a statement.
"All our babies made it here safely," Dawn Lindley, a registered nurse with Children's Health Transport Team, told CNN. "The majority ... were premature and had ongoing issues. They were easily accommodated to the hospitals here to make sure they had continued care and the storm wasn't going to be a factor in how they recovered from their illnesses."

CNN's Dave Alsup, Artemis Moshtaghian, Joe Sterling, Amanda Jackson, Matt Rehbein, AnneClaire Stapleton, Dakin Andone, David Williams, David Shortell, Eliott C. McLaughlin, Nick Valencia contributed to this report.

Harry
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