Thursday, August 31, 2017

Full Measure Of Harvey's Destruction Starts To Sink In As East Texans Grapple With Flooding

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

VIDOR, Texas — Just after 1 p.m. on Thursday a convoy of pickup trucks and SUVs approached a blockade on I-10, just west of Orange, Texas. After conferring with the state patrol manning it, Lieutenant Tom Hebert pulled the convoy down the exit ramp for an impromptu meeting.

“You come at your own risk,” Hebert said.

Conditions on I-10 had deteriorated over the course of the morning, and long stretches of it’s westbound lanes were now deep lakes. The only way to get to Beaumont, where Acadian ambulance drivers were waiting to be resupplied, was down the eastbound side.

But traffic would be coming at them, Hebert said, and although concrete barricades were holding back the flood waters for now, they could break at any moment, releasing a 3-foot-high wall of water into the line of relief vehicles. Although he’d help try and keep traffic away, he couldn’t guarantee anyone’s safety.

Heads nodded solemnly all around, and within minutes, the convoy was rolling directly into oncoming traffic.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

For the army of flood rescuers that have descended on east Texas in the wake of Hurricane Harvey, plenty of work remains. Although most rescue operations have halted in Orange, which on Wednesday had become a focal point of volunteer efforts, constant pleas for help from small towns along the I-10 corridor between Orange and Beaumont were still coming in to dispatchers for the volunteer Cajun Navy.

A young woman was stranded with three others in 3 feet of water in West Orange. An elderly man with emphysema had run out of medicine and was in dire condition in Mauriceville. Thirty people were stuck on a roof in Vidor.

The problem was getting there. Between Orange and Beaumont, the surface roads were almost entirely impassable, turning the rural enclaves into literal islands in a sea of fast moving, polluted waters.

Although the rains had ended late Wednesday evening, run off from the north was combining with releases from dams across the region to keep water levels rising, flooding communities already crippled by the storm and shutting down I-10’s westbound lanes.

And travel on the eastbound side was treacherous. Long lines of cars began streaming east Thursday afternoon after Beaumont officials began closing shelters there due to a lack of water and power, making nearby Lake Charles, Louisiana, the only safe place storm victims could be brought.

For miles, the Acadian convoy and other rescue workers made their way down the shoulder, past abandoned cars roof-deep in water and desolate stretches of country road that had become turbulent creeks and streams.

The way was slow going, with 3-foot-high flood waters on one side and massive troop vehicles filled with evacuees zipping past on the other. Cracks were forming all along the unintentional dam, and jets of floodwater were pouring out. Long sections of the eastbound lanes were under 2 feet of water, slowing progress significantly.

The convoy (center) traveling the wrong way on I-10. To their left is eastbound traffic and to their right are fully submerged cars on the westbound side.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

As the convoy approached the exit for Vidor, a small town 20 miles west of Orange, Hebert once again brought it to a halt. A young man in an Acadian uniform standing on the shoulder picked his way through traffic to the convoy as Hebert and the other drivers huddled under the intense Texas sun.

Standing with the members of the convoy, Zack Wright explained the situation. The barricades west of Vidor had broke, he said, sending a torrent of water south across the entire highway. Vidor was completely walled in to the west by water now, and there was no longer a way to get the supplies to Beaumont.

Wright, 35, had been stuck in Vidor for two days, watching as the water had risen, forcing his family to evacuate.

“This is the third spot we’ve evacuated to. Each time it’s risen. My house has water up to the roof,” Wright said.

It was the end of the line for the convoy, and the decision was quickly made to turn it around. Hebert was worried that the barricades the group had passed on the way in would buckle, leaving them stranded, potentially for days.

While the company would arrange for Wright to be airlifted to Beaumont later that day, the men unloaded 24 cases of drinking water they were carrying into a Vidor city worker’s pickup. Although some places in town still had running water, none of it was drinkable and supplies were running low.

As he was getting ready to head east, Hebert was asked what he thought of the situation. The barrel chested sheriff paused.

“In 28 years in, I’ve seen it a couple of times,” he said with a wry laugh. “We just went through it last year in Lafayette with the floods. Around here it’s always, a flood, or a hurricane, or some kind of natural disaster.”

Pallets of water are unloaded for evacuees in Vidor.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

If Orange was the epicenter of volunteer work in east Texas Wednesday, by Thursday those efforts had shifted to smaller towns like Vidor, where dozens of trucks and boats were navigating deeply flooded streets in search of survivors. Although many were using the Cajun Navy’s dispatch system, many others weren’t, meaning rescuers had to be on the constant look out for people on the roofs of their houses and cars.

When state Department of Public Safety Sgt. John Henke arrived in Vidor, things were getting worse. Water levels weren’t going down, and without power, water, or gas, the few shelters in Vidor that were still open didn’t have the resources to take care of victims.

Henke, who’d spent the past two days in Kady, Texas, rescuing people in chest deep water, got into Vidor in midafternoon. He’d been tasked with organizing the evacuation of as many people as possible from the town, as soon as possible.

“They said get over there and set up an evacuation,” Henke said, motioning toward the knot of relief workers, national guardsmen, and state and local police who were busy at work in a mall parking lot feeding evacuees and preparing them for transport on school buses, troop carriers, and even dump trucks.

Vidor was no longer safe, and it was time to go.

A little boy arrives at the emergency operation center in Vidor.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

Although the full extent of the impacts of storm won’t be known for months or years, in some places it was already obvious they will be profound. In Orange, flood waters were already receding, laying bare the challenges of recovery.

Power was still out throughout much of the city, due in part to dozens of downed trees along Orange’s main drag, 16th Street. Crews of neighbors were busy cutting the huge trunks into manageable sizes and dragging them free of the wires.

In the parking lot of the Market Basket — which 24 hours before had sheltered hundreds of soaked evacuees — volunteers were bringing pallets of drinking water bottles that ran out almost immediately.

It was clear from the dazed looked in the eyes of residents who’d stayed on through the floods that while the rescue process may have only taken less than 48 hours, recovery would take much longer.

But in Vidor, Harvey’s attack was still happening.

Vidor natives Maryanne, her grandson Hunter and their dogs await transport to a shelter.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

Nicky Coleman sat in a bit of shade behind the Air National Guard’s trailer awaiting transport to Lake Charles. A resident of Beaumont, Coleman had tried to leave there when conditions got bad, only to get stuck in his SUV as the flood waters rushed into Vidor.

Holding his knees close to his chest, Coleman had the look of a fighter who still hadn’t quite realized they’d been knocked out.

“I was deep in the water, but I just kept on going,” he said. “I thought I was gonna get on dry land. But I got stuck.”

Asked about the storm, Coleman was quick to answer.

“Worse than Katrina,” he said. “Oh yeah, definitely.”

While it may not have fully hit many of the residents of East Texas, the weight of the devastation is definitely on the minds of people like Henke.

“This, it just breaks my heart. The devastation that happening here is just unfathomable,” Henke said, his voice cracking slightly.

Though he praised the work of volunteers and state and federal officials, having worked during Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Ike, he was clearly worried about the lasting effects the storm will have.

“Harvey is by far the worst one I’ve seen,” he said.

If you've been impacted by the storm in Texas or have a tip about rescue, relief, government, or aid efforts, call the BuzzFeed News tipline at (646) 589-8598. Find us on Signal, email, SecureDrop, and more here.

LINK: Live Updates: Houston Residents Return Home To Find Destruction And Ruin



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These Satellite Photos Show What Texas Looked Like Before And After Harvey Hit

Lots of flooding.

Here are some of the images from DigitalGlobe, a company that provides satellite images to the US government and others, that show Texas before and after the storm.

Via Image courtesy © 2017 DigitalGlobe

Via Image courtesy © 2017 DigitalGlobe

Via Image courtesy © 2017 DigitalGlobe


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Georgia Officer Who Said "We Only Kill Black People" Resigns As Department Moves To Fire Him

Screenshot from WSB

A Georgia police officer who told a white woman during a traffic stop she had nothing to worry about because "we only kill black people" resigned Thursday after the department announced he would be fired.

After watching the footage and conducting an internal investigation, Cobb County Police Chief Mike Register said Thursday that the department was going to fire Lt. Greg Abbott, emphasizing that the comments were “inexcusable and inappropriate.”

"I’ve known Abbott for a number of years, always perceived him to be an honorable man, and he made a mistake,” Register told reporters. “I don’t know what’s in his heart, but I know what’s in his mouth, and it's not appropriate.”

After being notified of his impending termination, the lieutenant decided to retire Thursday afternoon, his attorney, Lance LoRusso, told BuzzFeed News.

In the video of the July 2016 traffic stop recently obtained by WSB Channel 2 News, a nervous woman can be heard telling Abbott that she’s afraid to put her hands down to get her cell phone because "she’s seen way too many videos of cops…"

She trails off and Abbott interjects, standing at the passenger side window, “But you’re not black. Remember, we only kill black people. Yeah. We only kill black people, right?”

“All the videos you’ve seen, have you seen any white people get killed?” he continues.

youtube.com

But Abbott, who has been with the Cobb County Police Department for 27 years, was merely attempting to lighten and de-escalate a tense situation after the female passenger refused to cooperate, his attorney said.

“You can hear that on the video. He was using her reasoning and statements, trying to get her to comply with his request that she call someone to get her from the scene,” LoRusso explained.

Register acknowledged that Abbott was being sarcastic, but reiterated that there is no situation in which such comments are tolerable.

“It’s hard to put those statements into any type of context that makes them appropriate,” the chief said.

Around 3 a.m. on July 10, 2016, Abbott pulled over a male driver on suspicion of drunk driving. The woman was in the passenger seat and was expressing fear about moving her hands, Surinder Chadha Jimenez, who represented the driver in the case, told BuzzFeed News.

The driver is Latino and while the woman is light-skinned, she is Greek and also identifies as a minority, Jimenez said, noting that the two had been pulled over just days after a Minnesota police shot and killed Philando Castile during a traffic stop. Castille had been moving his hands when the officer fired seven bullets into the driver’s seat.

Castile's girlfriend, who was also in the car, used Facebook to live stream the graphic aftermath of the shooting, saying that Castile was reaching for his wallet and ID when officer Jeronimo Yanez opened fire. Yanez was found not guilty in June.

“I'm sure that was in the back of her head when this was going on," Jiminez said. "It’s not an irrational fear. “Minorities are scared when they are pulled over.”

Speaking on behalf of his client, Jimenez praised the chief’s “bold and brave” decision to fire the Georgia police officer.

While the comments were “disgusting and in bad humor,” Jimenez says he did not see any malice in it and does not believe Abbott was targeting minorities.

“My client and the passenger was afraid there would be some retaliation after this came out, but they are glad it’s out there,” he said. “It brings exposure and awareness to what many minorities feel when they interact with police.



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"I’m Devastated": Houston Residents Return Home To Ruin As Floodwaters Recede

Edward Casanova carries a chair as he helps dry out items from a friend's house in Houston.

Gregory Bull / AP

HOUSTON — The last time Dora Yudelevich saw her home, before she and her family were forced to flee on Sunday, water was up to her waist, her neighborhood looked like a raging river, and Tropical Storm Harvey continued its unprecedented downpour. When she returned three days later, the streets were dry, the sun was out, and the house she’d lived in for 25 years was ravaged.

By Thursday morning, furniture, mattresses, and garbage bags filled with ruined possessions were piled five-feet high on the curb, beside the car that had been drowned beyond repair. Inside the house, Yudelevich sorted through cabinets and closets, pushing through the long process of deciding what to keep and what to toss. In one room, relatives placed water-damaged photos on a table to dry.

“I’m devastated,” said Yudelevich, who arrived in the US from Chile in the ‘80s, later opened a clothing store, and worked seven days a week into her sixties. “You feel like at this age you're ready to retire, then you lose everything. We had no savings other than this house.”

Dora Yudelevich stands in her flood-damaged bedroom Thursday.

Albert Samaha / BuzzFeed News

It was a sentiment felt across the city Thursday as residents returned to the homes they fled amid rapidly rising floodwaters caused by the most intense rainfall in US history. Six days after the storm began, the roads were clearing, the shock was fading, and the adrenaline-fueled haze that had consumed residents was lifting, leaving them to face the reality of figuring out how to fix the damage the storm had wrought on their lives.

To the west of the city, water-levels remained high enough for boats to float through neighborhoods. To the north, a flood-damaged chemical plant was igniting into flames and poised to explode, forcing a mandatory evacuation in the surrounding area. And to the east, a potential crisis was developing as municipal pump failures left stranded residents without access to clean drinking water.

But in America’s fourth-largest city, the recovery process was underway.

Firefighters went door-to-door in the most hard-hit neighborhoods, checking for injured survivors and those who couldn’t escape in time. As one unit, led by District Chief James Pennington, marched down the sidewalk in the Meyerland neighborhood, knocking on doors and peeking into windows, firefighters passed scores of residents and subcontractors clearing out debris from houses that, from the outside at least, looked no different than they had a week ago — other than the mounds of wooden beams, soaked couches, busted televisions, and rolled-up carpets that lined curbs on nearly every block.

Firefighters walk around debris removed from once flooded homes during a door-to-door survey Thursday.

Lm Otero / AP

“A few days ago it looked like we were living on a lake,” said Susan Reeves, who’d waited out the storm on the second floor of her house. “Today you wouldn't even know it.”

For many Houston residents who spent the past several days with the single-minded focus of staying alive and dry, it was now unclear what to do next.

Justin Anderson, a construction worker, was riding on a bus on his way home from work Friday when the flooding made the streets impassable, leaving him stranded at a transit center downtown. He spent the next few nights at the George R. Brown Convention Center, the city’s biggest shelter, before making his way back to his first-floor apartment in the Memorial neighborhood. It was ruined. With no place else to go, he packed a few clothes and valuables into a small duffel bag and went back to the shelter, where he offered to serve as a volunteer.

Thousands of evacuees remained at the convention center, many arriving from other shelters on Tuesday and Wednesday. Some, who had been staying with friends and relatives, dropped by to file applications for temporary housing vouchers with FEMA.

Damien Lawrence, left, and Justin Anderson sit outside the George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston.

Albert Samaha / BuzzFeed News

“It’s a waiting game,” said Damien Lawrence, who has been staying at the shelter since evacuating his first-floor apartment on Sunday. “To rebuild your life, it takes resources.”

Lawrence filed his application online Wednesday but was unsure how long it would be before receiving a response from the federal agency. He contacted FEMA by phone, waiting on hold for 90 minutes only to be directed from one operator to another before the call eventually dropped. By Thursday, Lawrence said he still hadn’t been able to return to his home and didn’t know the extent of the damage.

“You deteriorate mentally,” he said, as he sat on a bench in front of the convention center watching the crowds pass. “You lose all sense of hope. Sometimes it feels like you gotta do it all on your own.”

Lawrence had food available to him here, along with extra clothes, clean water, and a large contingent of volunteers at every turn eager to help him find what he needed. What he yearned for most, though, was peace of mind and a sense of when his life might return to some semblance of normalcy.

“That feels like a long way off,” he said. “I don’t know what happens next.”



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These Companies Will Soon Start Building Prototypes Of Trump's Long-Promised Border Wall

Jose Luis Gonzalez / Reuters

The Trump administration on Thursday announced the four companies that will build concrete prototypes for the president’s long-promised border wall with Mexico.

Ronald Vitiello, acting deputy commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), said it marked a “significant milestone” in implementing Trump’s order to build a border wall.

“This is the first tangible result of the action planning that has gone on,” Vitiello said at a news conference.

The companies that received the contracts are Caddell Construction Co., LLC, Montgomery, Alabama; Fisher Sand & Gravel Co., DBA Fisher Industries, Tempe, Arizona; Texas Sterling Construction Co., Houston, Texas; WG Yates & Sons Construction Company, Philadelphia, Mississippi.

Construction in San Diego, California, is expected to begin in a few weeks, at which point the four companies will have 30 days to build.

Ronald Vitiello, acting deputy commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) showing reporters renderings of where the wall would be built.

CBP / Via youtube.com

Vitiello said the contracts for each company range from just under $400,000 to nearly $500,000. The Department of Homeland Security identified $20 million to be re-directed for the construction of the prototypes, but not to build the actual wall.

The four prototypes will be built near each other and are expected to be 30 feet long and up to 30 feet high.

They will also feature “see-through features.”

Trump has said he wants the new border wall to be transparent so people can avoid being hit with “large sacks of drugs” being thrown over the barrier.

“Part of the proposal was to give us see-through features so we’ll see when they’re built how they’ll address that,” Vitiello said.

Renderings of the enforcement zone where the wall would be built.

CBP

The prototypes will also be expected to make space for technology like sensors, cameras, and towers that border patrol agents can use.

Christian Ramirez, director of the Southern Border Communities Coalition and Human Rights Director of Alliance San Diego, said building a border wall will come at the expense of upgrading the nation's outdated ports of entry.

"Our booming binational region is in need of infrastructure that facilitates trade and commerce, investment in protecting our sensitive environment and assurances that the rights and dignity of border residents will be protected," Ramirez said in a statement. "The administration's misguided insistence that a border wall must be built is an affront to the just demands of border communities to revitalize and not militarize our region."



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Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke Has Resigned

Sheriff David Clarke, Jr., of Milwaukee County, Wis.

Mark Humphrey / AP

David Clarke, the controversial conservative sheriff of Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, has resigned, officials said Thursday.

Milwaukee County Clerk George L. Christenson told BuzzFeed News Clarke submitted a letter of resignation at 3:16 p.m. local time.

Clarke was an early and staunch supporter of President Donald Trump during the campaign, and was at one point thought to be considered for a cabinet position in the administration.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates and follow BuzzFeed News on Twitter.



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Shelters And Hospital Forced To Evacuate As Flooding Cripples Beaumont And Port Arthur

A boat sits near flooded homes in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Harvey can be seen in Beaumont, Texas, Aug. 31, 2017.

Gerald Herbert / AP

The city of Beaumont in eastern Texas lost its water supply Thursday as a result of flooding from Tropical Depression Harvey, forcing evacuations of shelters and a local hospital, officials said.

Beaumont's primary and secondary water supply pumps were submerged by floodwaters from the overflowing Neches River nearby, city officials said, adding that they're not sure when they'll be able to begin repairs.

"We will have to wait until the water levels from this historical flood recede before we can determine the extent of damage and make any needed repairs," the city of Beaumont said in a statement. "There is no way to determine how long this will take at this time."

Beaumont police told BuzzFeed News on Thursday that the city will have to evacuate 1,400 people currently taking refuge in its two main storm shelters —Beaumont Civic Center and the Montagne Center at Lamar University — because they don't know when they'll be able to restore running water.

"Right now, what we're doing is we are woking with our assets to help move the displaced the residents to a more permanent shelter out of the city," said Hayley Morrow, public information officer for the Beaumont Police Department. "At this point right now, the two main shelters that we were using in the city, they were both full and right now we haven't been able to start moving them out."

FEMA chief Brock Long said his agency is working with the Department of Defense and local authorities to set up water distribution stations in the city.

"We're working with partners at DOD and state to open points of distribution to service citizens there in that dire situation,' Long told NPR News. "Residents have lined up at the few stores that are open to buy bottled water. City officials say they can't get to repairs until floodwaters recede."

As a result of the lack of drinking water, the Baptist Hospital Beaumont is closing down entirely, including its emergency department, spokeswoman Mary Poole said.

Staff / Reuters

"We never expected to lose water," she told the Beaumont Register, adding that patients were being transferred to other regional hospitals via ambulance and helicopter.

Residents were also sending out pleas for help on social media on Thursday, asking for assistance getting drinking water to the area.

As conditions begin to improve in parts of Houston, Beaumont, Port Arthur and other parts of the city are still contending with dangerous conditions.

The Beaumont-Port Arthur area received a record-breaking 26 inches of rain on Tuesday alone, and received 47.35 inches since the Hurricane Harvey struck.

Some 5,500 homes were destroyed since the storm began, according to Jefferson County (which covers both Port Arthur and Beaumont), while another 16,00 homes were significantly damaged.

Though the storm has passed over the area, some residents are still stranded in flood waters and the Neches River overflowing nearby is causing continued damage. The river isn't expected to crest and recede until Friday night or Saturday morning.

In Port Arthur, officials were forced to close a shelter in the Bob Bower Civic Center on Wednesday after flood waters entered the venue.

"It was something that we weren't prepared for," Port Arthur Mayor Derrick Freeman said on Good Morning America on Thursday. "We didn't know that we would have to get them out of there while we were rescuing people out of 4 foot water."

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

The evacuees were moved to other shelters in the city. As the rain subsided in Port Arthur on Thursday, Freeman said, the city's priorities were beginning to shift to recovery and re-building efforts.

As rain pounded Port Arthur on Tuesday and Wednesday, people sent out distress calls from the city via social media.

Reuters Tv / Reuters

People still taking refuge in shelters in Port Arthur on Thursday were sending messages that stores and shelters in the city were running short on supplies like food, water and clothing.

The Port Arthur Office of Emergency Management did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

If you've been impacted by the storm in Texas or have a tip about rescue, relief, government, or aid efforts, call the BuzzFeed News tipline at (646) 589-8598. Find us on Signal, email, SecureDrop, and more here.



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People Are Trolling Joel Osteen Over His Response To Flood Victims And Now It's A Hilarious Meme

“I support the innkeeper’s decision to turn away Mary and Joseph. It’s an inn, not Labor and Delivery!”

Houston's famous megachurch pastor Joel Osteen came under fire this week, after he initially didn't open his enormous Lakewood church as a shelter for flood victims.

Houston's famous megachurch pastor Joel Osteen came under fire this week, after he initially didn't open his enormous Lakewood church as a shelter for flood victims.

Cindy Ord / Getty Images

The church initially said it was closed due to flooding, but Osteen then said the church hadn't opened its doors to flood victims because the city didn't ask it to. The church opened as a shelter on Tuesday, but people were already pretty pissed at the pastor and have been destroying him online.

The church initially said it was closed due to flooding, but Osteen then said the church hadn't opened its doors to flood victims because the city didn't ask it to. The church opened as a shelter on Tuesday, but people were already pretty pissed at the pastor and have been destroying him online.

Cindy Ord / Getty Images


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Here’s Where Houston’s Calls For Help Were The Loudest

This map shows the cumulative calls for help compiled by the Harvey Relief and Harvey Rescue volunteer groups, which has gathered information from social media and through Google Forms. Many of these people have since been rescued.

Hurricane Harvey doused Houston with record-setting rainfall and flooding, bringing the nation shocking social media posts of people stranded and desperate for rescue.

Nowhere in the city did those cries for help on Twitter and Facebook seem more pronounced than its northeast corridor extending from Lake Houston and the San Jacinto River to nearly the city’s center.

“Someone send a boat our way 3 kids and 7 adults. one adult is a handicap mother that is diabetic who can’t walk in this water or get on a roof Please send someone!” Leticia Rodriguez, who lives in East Houston, posted on Facebook during threatening floodwaters.

BuzzFeed News crunched data compiled by a group of coders and organizers — some members of the #AltGov movement, one a Snopes employee, and some former government officials who worked on Katrina relief — known as @harveyrescue and Harvey Relief. They are compiling and mapping rescue requests from social media and entering them directly on a spreadsheet being circulated on social media. And while every post hasn’t been verified, and the list of posts isn’t definitive and is consistently evolving, it appears as though the highest concentration of distress calls came from three ZIP codes — 77044, 77049, 77078. The neighborhoods are largely black or Latino with relatively low incomes.

BuzzFeed News spoke to nearly 30 people in those those three ZIP codes and two neighboring ZIP codes that saw a high volume of social media posts, offering a glimpse into how people used social media as they grappled with the devastation Harvey left behind.

Many people reported that 911 calls were not going through to operators, and according to the Federal Communications Commission, 16 of the area’s 911 call centers were having problems dealing with the deluge of calls.

Houston officials pleaded with people to call 911 and hold the line if they needed rescue. But, unwilling to waste phone battery on call waiting, people or their friends and family members posted their location and details of their situation, replied to government accounts posting official information, and pleaded for help after waiting for hours with no food, no water, and without important medications. It seems most of the people have since been rescued.

“All the lines here were jammed,” East Houston resident Trina Moore said about 911. Her photo of her children on a kitchen counter with floodwater as high as the cabinets below them went viral. “It was just so many people needing help that you couldn’t get through. To me, it was easier to post on social media.”

The footage of people desperate for rescue evoked Hurricane Katrina in 2005. But unlike today, smartphones didn’t exist during Katrina. Twitter hadn’t been invented yet. And Facebook was still reserved for college students.

Some amateur rescue workers were monitoring the social posts. Jose Reyna, 33 — who has been responding to calls for help on social media since Sunday — told BuzzFeed News, “There’s just not enough boats to get to people.”

Reyna said he expects to see a jump in casualties, especially the elderly, sick, and people with disabilities.

“There was a cancer patient on support that lost power in the neighborhood, and I just couldn't get to him at that moment,” he said. Reyna has been going live on Facebook sharing where he is — and people commented and tagged others who need help.

The East Houston neighborhood — zip code 77078 — is 62.3% black and 32.6% is Hispanic or Latino of any race, according to Census data from 2015. More than 92% of the area’s population has not finished college and more than 60% of individuals makes less than $35,000 a year.

In the 77049 zip code, which includes parts of Channelview and sections of Sheldon, has a population of 31,111. Approximately 60% is Hispanic or Latino of any race and about 24% is black. The median individual income is about $26,500.

The 77044 area which includes Summerwood has a population of 37,753 with 45% being Hispanic or Latino of any race and 26% black. The median individual income is $38,225.

Rodriguez, 25, who ended up being rescued by a civilian, told BuzzFeed News she never saw authorities in her East Houston neighborhood.

“I don’t think they took us seriously,” Rodriguez said of officials.

Yolanda Jackson, 45, said she was waiting on the roof of her house with her husband and three children for almost 24 hours before she was rescued by a volunteer — who told her he saw a screenshot on Reddit of a Facebook post Jackson’s friend posted with her address.

“We were out of food. Dehydrated. It was raining, and windy, and cold,” she told BuzzFeed News.

Several of the people BuzzFeed News spoke to recounted escaping their homes submerged in neck-high waters, and walking miles in trash-filled floodwater that public experts say carries harmful chemicals and bacteria that could spread infections.

At about 4:30 a.m. on Sunday, Moore, 49, stepped out of her bed into ankle-high, muddy, murky water and immediately called the Coast Guard.

Moore had four children in her care and moved them on top of the kitchen counter, out of the rising water’s reach. She took a photo of the children, which quickly went viral.

Moore recounted loading the two young boys into plastic laundry containers and the two girls in a long trash-can-type container, and wading into the water, walking against the current.

Half-swimming, half-walking through water containing bugs, garbage, and fast-moving trash cans swept up from people’s yards, the Moores reached their neighbor’s house, where the water inside was chest-high on the first floor. Some men there had a raft to help get people up the stairs, which had broken under the water’s weight.

Her family was rescued by a Coast Guard helicopter at 5 p.m. that day. If it weren’t for the pressure of her viral photos, she thinks it would have taken much longer.

Harvey Relief and Harvey Rescue said it has hundreds of volunteers working around the clock to refine their maps and data. “People need to be rescued. They’re desperate,” one of the creators told BuzzFeed News. “Of course they’re going to connect on social media.”

LINK: Some Government Veterans From Katrina Are Crowdsourcing Rescue Requests From Harvey Victims



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People Think This All-Female Remake Of "Lord Of The Flies" Completely Misses The Point

“The all-girl remake of Lord of the Flies won’t work because realistically the girls would set aside their differences and work to get off the island.”

There's a new Lord of the Flies movie in the works, and it's got a major twist: all the boys stranded on the island will instead be girls.

There's a new Lord of the Flies movie in the works, and it's got a major twist: all the boys stranded on the island will instead be girls.

Castle Rock Entertainment

The remake, which was first reported by Deadline, will be written and directed by Scott McGehee and David Siegel for Warner Bros.

The novel, written by William Golding in 1954, focuses on a group of boys who, after getting stranded on an island, attempt to govern themselves and wind up descending into savagery.

McGehee told Deadline the new film "is aggressively suspenseful, and taking the opportunity to tell it in a way it hasn’t been told before, with girls rather than boys, is that it shifts things in a way that might help people see the story anew. It breaks away from some of the conventions, the ways we think of boys and aggression."


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Meet The Veterans Who Built A Volunteer Rescue Army In Houston


Dan Alarik (left) and other veterans help a woman retrieve medication from her flooded home.

Courtesy Daniel Alarik

HOUSTON — Buck Buchanan was at home in San Antonio watching the news when Harvey, then a tropical storm, slammed into Houston. As the former US Marine — who served from 1999 to 2006 — watched the scene unfold, he realized two things: first, that the situation looked really bad; and second, that he might be able to do something.

"I called a couple of guys and said, 'We should go help. It doesn’t look like they were ready for this,'" Buchanan told BuzzFeed News.

By Wednesday, Buchanan's idea had grown into a small army of more than 200, mostly former US service members, who had shown up to traverse the city in boats and truck convoys, looking for people to pull from their homes and carry to safety.

The group — which sprang up almost literally overnight — is one of many that have responded to the disaster with boats, supplies, and manpower, and which have played a major role this week in saving lives.

Buchanan's group goes by the name Houstonrescue on Facebook, and operates out of a small office space in west Houston. From here, leaders in the group dispatch teams, usually of four people, in a boat to flooded areas.

The office is half military headquarters and half clubhouse, with a rotating cast of veterans coming in as they returned from missions on Wednesday. In the front, a whiteboard displays logistics such as key assets and target areas, while in the back, couches and pizza greet new arrivals.

Volunteers in the group have different roles depending on their skills, and there is a loose command structure that works, it appears, because nearly everyone there has experience of taking orders and working as a unit.

This has allowed the volunteers to move quickly from site to site, including on Wednesday morning when a team was dispatched to help an older woman retrieve her medication from a home that was under several feet of water.

Two veterans paddle through a Houston neighborhood while performing search and rescue operations.

Courtesy Daniel Alarik

Dan Alarik — a 35-year-old former Army drill sergeant who is now using his clothing company to raise money for Houston — went on that mission.

"An older lady who was a school teacher, an art teacher, said 'I just need my meds,'" Alarik — another organizer of the veterans' group who has used his social media skills to raise its profile — told BuzzFeed News. "And we boated all the way out there."

When they arrived, the water reached Alarik's chest and the woman's neck. In order to get inside, he ended up having to lift her out of the inflatable raft and carry her through the flood. But they managed to get the woman's medicine, as well as a mink coat.

"Her mom just died, and she wanted her mom's coat, which is soaked in sewage water," Alarik said. "But she's like, 'It's important to me.'"

Alarik said the woman was in good spirits as they floated back to safety, but not every situation goes as smoothly. Johnathan Wojtewicz, a 33-year-old former Marine, described one rescue in which a family initially didn't want to abandon their home — despite it being under 4 feet of water.

"There are some people who want to be rescued and there are people who don’t," he said.

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Wojtewicz, who lives in Austin and runs a nonprofit with his wife that helps veterans start businesses, brought his boat to the Houston rescue effort. Over several days, it has been loaded with both people and pets.

He was part of a group that rescued a deer on Tuesday.

Amid rescuing numerous people, the veterans also saved a deer.

Courtesy Johnathan Paul Wojtewicz

John Litton, a 38-year-old Army veteran from Rockwall, Texas, told BuzzFeed News the deer was "very bad off" when they approached it behind a flooded house.

"Both hind legs were raw and bleeding," Litton said. "When they got it in the boat it was as calm as can be."

The rescuers eventually handed the deer over to an emergency veterinarian for care.

Johnathan Wojtewicz (right) holds a boy during a rescue operation.

Courtesy Johnathan Wojtewicz

Many other members of the veterans group told BuzzFeed News about other rescues. They spoke of climbing up to the second floors of flooded homes to find people, of wading from block to block to get through flooded neighborhoods, and of negotiating hazards like live electrical wires.

"We were swimming around pretty much most of the time," Litton said of one recent rescue.

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Like the military branches most of the volunteers used to be members of, the army of rescuers relies on a significant outside support network — though in this case it's based on donations. The office that serves as headquarters was donated by Derek Sisson, a 51-year-old Marine Corps veteran who normally uses the space for his bourbon company.

"During these conditions, I'm certainly not using my office," Sisson told BuzzFeed News. "And since its centrally located, what better central staging point is there than this place?"

Sisson has also been going out on rescues, including staying out until about 3 a.m. Wednesday morning.

"I spent the night here," Sisson said, gesturing toward his office. "Then I went over to my place and now we're flooded because of the levee situation."

The group also relies on donated supplies, a large shipment of which arrived Wednesday afternoon on a huge former military transport truck. With the need for water rescues diminishing — the rain ended a day earlier and the water levels in many areas were holding steady or falling — the volunteers set about packaging the donations so they could be distributed to people who were displaced.

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Wojtewicz's wife, Sabrina — who helped organize donations — told BuzzFeed News that things like food and towels were donated by a variety of Austin-area businesses, churches, and nonprofits.

A group of veterans stand in front of a boat they used for several days to rescue people in Houston.

Jim Dalrymple II for BuzzFeed News

Most of the veterans who spoke with BuzzFeed News Wednesday had a matter-of-fact attitude about why they decided to volunteer, and in many case take time off work, to crisscross flooded Houston neighborhoods.

And many said it was the Texas way.

"It's Texans helping Texans," Wojtewicz said.

"This is Texas, we’re helping Texas," Shilo Harris, a 42-year-old Army veteran, told BuzzFeed News. "This is home for us all and when something happens we rally and make it better."

Buchanan agreed, explaining his reasons for helping by saying simply that "people needed help."

"That’s what we kind of do in the military," Buchanan said. "If you can do something, you do it."

LINK: "We Expected To Come Back To Nothing": Residents Survey The Damage After Hurricane Harvey




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Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Volunteers In Flooded Texas Town Take On The Frantic Task Of Rescuing Strangers

Amanda Labove surveys the scene as she directs rescue efforts.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

ORANGE, Texas — None of the volunteers awaiting orders in the American Airboat parking lot seemed to know her name, not that any of them had time to find out, or even needed to. If you had a question, you simply talked to the “woman in the neon yellow shirt.”

Even without the shirt, Amanda Labove’s calm confidence made it clear she was in charge of the makeshift command center.

“I need a boat, it’s an emergency,” Labove said, turning to a group of five men. “There’s a mother and infant stuck on a car and the infant is turning blue.”

Two men quickly volunteered and, with address in hand, they climbed into their pickup and sped off west with their flat bottom fishing boat in tow.

It was just one of dozens, maybe even hundreds, of rescue missions Labove would dispatch complete strangers on throughout Wednesday to Orange and other small communities along the Texas-Louisiana border.

Evacuees are assisted to safer ground in Orange, Texas, on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

By 1 p.m., volunteers estimated they’d already picked up 500 people in Orange alone.

And they kept on coming.

Although the National Guard and Coast Guard would arrive in the early evening hours of Wednesday, for most of the day, the rescues were being done by an army of volunteers, most of whom had no training in search and rescue or even knew each other.

“I just showed up early this morning and just started taking calls, sending people where they needed to be, and doing the best I can,” said Labove, a resident of Lake Charles.

After she set up shop in the parking lot, Labove said the volunteers simply started showing up “from all over, from all over the United States. Georgia, Alabama, obviously Louisiana.”

Rescuers prepare to head out for more stranded residents near Orange, Texas, on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

Chase Moreau and Lance Broussard stood in the warm rain, preparing to head out for their second trip into Orange of the day. A few minutes earlier they had arrived back at the American Airboat lot, bringing with them an 82-year-old flood victim. She was in bad shape, and her oxygen tank was running low when they found her.

“It’s rough seeing how it is. People standing out there, with maybe a bag. That’s all they can carry with them. And they’ve lost everything else,” Moreau said.

Like most of the rescuers working in Orange, Moreau and Broussard weren’t part of a highly organized search and rescue operation. The two friends had decided early Wednesday morning that they had to try and help the people of Orange. So first they went to the Civic Center in Lake Charles, which is operating as a regional shelter for victims of the storm. There, they met members of the Cajun Navy, a volunteer group from Louisiana that helps flooding victims. They signed up and headed off with their boat to Orange.

“Sitting at home knowing all these people needed help, we decided to come over here and get em to safety,” Moreau said matter-of-factly.

Evacuated residents are ferried to safety in Orange, Texas, on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

Most residents here were caught by surprise — according to locals the town hasn’t seen major flooding in over a decade, and the storm had been forecast to move further east and hit Lake Charles, Louisiana, which had already taken a beating earlier in the week during Harvey’s first landfall.

But instead the storm tracked farther to the west than forecasters had predicted. And while Lake Charles was largely spared, Orange and other communities along the border between the two states were inundated overnight. Still, most of the town’s population went to bed assuming the best.

“We came to Orange to stay with my grandparents, because it’s never flooded here,” said Byron Ellis, a pastor at Redemption Church in Beaumont, which was hit with a massive deluge of water Monday and Tuesday. “Three hurricanes, they’ve never got any water in the house — no flooding, nothing. So me and my wife and our nine month old baby came to stay with my grandparents.”

At first, he said, everything was fine.

Byron Ellis and his family on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

“We didn’t lose electricity or nothing. And then around 3 o’clock in the morning, water started coming in. Within an hour or so, it was probably waist deep,” Ellis said.

A neighbor picked up the family a few hours later in his boat, and brought the young family first to a nearby church, and then eventually to the parking lot of the Market Basket grocery store, where they waited with hundreds of other flood victims to be ferried through the deep water that cut off much of the town from safety.

“It’s great, especially since two weeks ago we had all that bullshit with the white supremacists … [but] it’s sad that it takes something like this to bring unity to our people,” the young pastor said.

Tasha Layles surveys the scene at Orange, Texas, on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

Tasha Layles stood waist deep in the water in the intersection of East Lutcher Drive and 16th Street. With the I-10 freeway looming above her, Layles calmly directed the bizarre traffic of trucks, canoes, fishing boats, and even a plucky Volkswagen Bug, that was churning through the flood waters.

“Evacuees need to be dropped off over there! No there!” she called out to a man towing a boat full of water-logged flood victims behind his truck.

Originally from Dequincy, Louisiana, Layles and a group of other locals had banded together just four days ago to form the Dequincy Rescue Rangers to help save people in Harvey’s path.

“We’re just a small community, and everybody came together and we thought this would be a good way to help out,” Layles said.

Until federal authorities showed up, the rangers made up the largest single contingency of people working in the part of Orange. The rangers had more than 30 boats patrolling the town’s streets looking for people in need of help, and a team of volunteers were organizing pickups and drop offs of flood victims, staging them in the relative safety of Market Basket’s awning before moving them east to shelters in Lake Charles.

Authorities and volunteers move through floodwaters in Orange, Texas, on Aug. 30, 2017.

Amy K. Nelson for BuzzFeed News

They’d even brought a number of church vans from Dequincy to help move flood victims back and forth.

“We’ve just been out helping people get rescued, meeting their needs and seeing if we can help them with anything,” Layles said with an earnest smile.

The flooding also worsened after local authorities decided to open the spillway to release pressure on a dam in Louisiana. The Sabine River Authority first noted at 9 a.m. Monday that water levels at Toledo Bend Lake were approaching levels that would require spillways to be opened.

By 3:30 p.m., 11 spillway gates were open 2 feet. Water level at the lake was at 172.94 above mean sea level after increasing through the day. Water was flowing from the spillways at 22,000 cubic feet per second, up from 5,000 early in the day, officials reported.

If you've been impacted by the storm in Texas or have a tip about rescue, relief, government, or aid efforts, call the BuzzFeed News tipline at (646) 589-8598. Find us on Signal, email, SecureDrop, and more here.

—Claudia Koerner contributing reporting

LINK: Live Updates: Death Toll Rises As Harvey Is Downgraded To Tropical Depression



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Some Texas Flood Victims Are Losing Or Abandoning Their Dogs And The Photos Are Heartbreaking

But thanks to heroic rescuers, many of the pups are OK.

The victims of Tropical Storm Harvey's deadly floodwaters this week are not only human. Many animals, from dogs and cats to livestock, have had to flee their homes as well.

The victims of Tropical Storm Harvey's deadly floodwaters this week are not only human. Many animals, from dogs and cats to livestock, have had to flee their homes as well.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Many pet owners were able to grab their furry family members to evacuate in time.

Many pet owners were able to grab their furry family members to evacuate in time.

Scott Olson / Getty Images


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Demand For Shelter In Houston Begins To Subside, Freeing Up Critical Space, Officials Say

The George R. Brown Convention Center in Houston, TX.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Despite Texas cities like Dallas, San Antonio, and Austin building emergency shelters to house thousands of Tropical Storm Harvey evacuees, Houston on Wednesday assured residents there are no plans to send those in need out of the city.

“We greatly appreciate all the offers of shelter assistance from other cities, but currently we have no plans from the city or the main partner, the American Red Cross, to transition individuals into other outlying areas,” Houston city spokesman Marc Eichenbaum told BuzzFeed News.

The need for shelter assistance "crested" in Houston as Harvey moved away from the city Wednesday morning and some waters began to recede, Eichenbaum said.

“This is natural as you have individuals in shelters who are there because their houses are uninhabitable,” he said. ”And you have other people whose houses were threatened and they needed to escape the elements and now, as the storm has passed, some are finding that their houses are safe to return to, or the need to be sheltered from the elements is no longer an issue.”

On Sunday and Monday, Houston's George R. Brown Convention Center, took in almost twice its capacity of 5,000 people. As of Wednesday, that number has dropped to around 8,000, Eichenbaum said, and people are now being sent to other centers with more space, including the the NRG Center, a mega-shelter with a capacity of 10,000 that opened Tuesday night in the south side of the city.

Harris County Judge Ed Emmett told BuzzFeed News on Wednesday the center has been holding between 600 and 1300 evacuees since it opened.

Despite the reassurances in Houston, other city officials said they would remain on standby and were prepared to take in large influxes of evacuees if needed.

In Dallas, the majority of rows and rows of beds — 5,000 in total — at Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center were empty. By 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, just 277 people had checked into the center.

Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

BuzzFeed News

Several organizations had been gearing up for evacuees to arrive at the convention center — educational services to register children and teenagers at Dallas schools, along with daycare centers ready to relieve parents when needed.

“Everyone is just waiting,” Alaa Ali, a volunteer with the Islamic Relief Fund, said.

A prayer room had also set up for Muslim evacuees.

“If all of [the evacuees] showed up right now, we’d have the resources there to handle it,” said Krystal Smith, regional digital communications specialist for the Red Cross in Dallas. “And obviously we’re expecting a huge influx of people.”

Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

BuzzFeed News

San Antonio had prepared to take in 10,000 evacuees, with more than 200 buses ready to transport people out of Houston.

“We are collectively a city on standby, so we have not been asked to start deploying to pick up vast numbers of people from Houston,” said Woody Woodward, a spokesman for the San Antonio Office of Emergency Management. “That’s the big question that we’ve all been wondering for the last couple of days, is if in fact we’re going to be asked to bring large numbers of folks here,” he said.

San Antonio has around 800 people in its shelters, but most of them are from other storm-ravaged parts of Texas, not Houston, Woodward added.

In Austin, where a 2,500-person shelter in the convention center was being set up, the city was still preparing to take people in, a spokesperson told BuzzFeed News. And the Texas Department of Public Safety told BuzzFeed News that while there are buses on standby in surrounding cities, none have been deployed because Houston authorities have not requested them.

A family in Houston waits to be transferred to a shelter by the National Guard.

Erich Schlegel / Getty Images

Back in Houston, Eichenbaum said that while the number of people seeking shelter has peaked, that does't mean the city is out of the woods.

“We are continuing to still do rescues, there are still areas that are experiencing flooding,” he said. “There will continue to be people in difficult situations that will need shelter services.”

He said the city’s next step will be to consolidate smaller community-run shelters into the larger, better-equipped shelters being run by the Red Cross and the city.

“We have the shelter capacity for the individuals in need, that need has reached its peak, and we are concentrating on serving their need...so that they’re able to exit out of the shelters into a more transitional or permanent situation so they can continue with their lives.”

If you've been impacted by the storm in Texas or have a tip about rescue, relief, government, or aid efforts, call the BuzzFeed News tipline at (646) 589-8598. Find us on Signal, email, SecureDrop, and more here.

LINK: Live Updates: Death Toll Rises As Tropical Storm Harvey Makes Second Landfall



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Houston Police Officers Say They Lacked Training And Equipment For Hurricane Harvey

A boat travels along Interstate 10 as floodwaters from Tropical Storm Harvey cover a portion of the highway in Houston.

David J. Phillip / AP

HOUSTON — Despite Houston's history of flooding, the police department lacked the training and equipment to respond to the disaster amid record rainfall from Tropical Storm Harvey, several officers told BuzzFeed News.

Most officers had not gone through flood training, had no access to boats, and were unable to respond to an untold number of emergency calls because the department had only a limited fleet of high-water vehicles, they said.

“I can’t tell you off the top of my head how many we have, but I can tell you that it wasn’t enough,” said Joe Gamaldi, vice-president of the Houston Police Officers’ Union. “The unexpected challenge we had was that this ended up being one of the most epic storms in history.”

The torrential rain that pounded Houston nonstop from Friday through Monday left the city’s more than 5,000 officers — all on-duty, most working 16-hour shifts — scrambling to find ways to reach residents stranded in homes surrounded by rising floodwaters. One officer, Sgt. Steve Perez, a 34-year veteran of the force, died after driving his cruiser into a flooded underpass early Sunday morning.

As emergency dispatchers were overrun with calls through the weekend and into Monday, police officials resorted to calling on civilian assistance, asking boat owners to provide officers with water crafts in order to conduct rescues.

Four officers who spoke to BuzzFeed News said that every boat they used for rescues had been brought to them by civilians, including some from out of state. None of the four officers said they had trained specifically to handle flood situations.

According to Gamaldi, only a specialized unit of officers undergoes flood training, though he did not know how many were in this group.

The Houston Police Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Other than those specialized units and a team of officers trained in diving, the bulk of rank-and-file officers found themselves attempting to make difficult rescues in unfamiliar, often dangerous circumstances. At least one boat filled with patrol officers capsized and had to be rescued by another group of officers, Gamaldi said.

In another instance, an officer in a boat saved another law enforcement agent who had been swept away in current so strong that it pulled his boots off.

Houston police SWAT officer Daryl Hudeck carries Catherine Pham and her 13-month-old son after rescuing them from their home surrounded by floodwaters on Aug. 27, 2017, in Houston.

David J. Phillip / AP

When the storm hit on Friday, the four officers told BuzzFeed News, they weren’t exactly sure what to do.

"Just follow directions at that point,” one of the officers said. “We weren’t expecting it to get as bad as it did."

Some officers said they were caught off guard by the city’s lack of available shelters. On Monday night, after officers on a boat rescued Kenneth Hurst, who had been stranded in his partially flooded first-floor apartment for three days, they didn’t know where to take him, he told BuzzFeed News.

Once on dry land, they escorted him to a high school that they thought was serving as a shelter, but discovered it was closed. They then tried another location to no avail before taking Hurst to a dimly-lit empty supermarket parking lot. When Hurst refused to stay there, officers dropped him off at West Houston Medical Center, not knowing it was being evacuated.

Hurst eventually ended up at Lakewood Church.

“They didn’t have a game plan,” he said. “When they found out I had no people I could call, they said there was nothing they could do. They said they had to get back in their boat to find more people.”

By Wednesday afternoon, with the rain stopped, the sun shining, and the waters receding, many officers had their first chance to catch their breath in days. Their shifts were down to 12 hours now, the emergency calls less frequent.

Officer Daniel Cerda said he hadn’t been home since early Friday. Like other officers, he slept at the police station. He still wasn’t sure when he’d next see his family.

It was a tough few days, he admitted, but his experience was nowhere near as tough as what he’d seen.

“We haven’t had it as bad as a lot of other people,” he said.

LINK: Harvey Death Toll Rises As Texas Braces For More Rain

LINK: Live Updates: Tropical Storm Harvey Makes Second Landfall




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15 Stories From Houston That Will Restore Your Faith In Humanity

Normal people became everyday heroes.

Amid the devastation wrought on the city of Houston by flooding from Tropical Storm Harvey, people are stepping to the plate to help others in incredible ways.

Amid the devastation wrought on the city of Houston by flooding from Tropical Storm Harvey, people are stepping to the plate to help others in incredible ways.

Erich Schlegel / Getty Images


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This Conservative Blogger's Tweet About "How It Ought To Be, Despite What Your Gender Studies Professor Says" Backfired Into A Huge Meme

It’s basically the second coming of the “future that liberals want” meme.


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People Are Slowly Trickling Into Dallas' New Mega-Shelter For Harvey Survivors

Lam Thuy Vo for BuzzFeed News

DALLAS – Dallas is ready and waiting to welcome those displaced by Storm Harvey – but the roads are too flooded to get most of them here yet.

On Tuesday in Houston, 10,000 people had fled the floods to hunker down in the city’s overcrowded convention center, half of them needing to sleep on the floor because of a lack of beds.

Just 240 miles away in Dallas, mayor Mike Rawlings stood under bright blue skies and announced the opening of the Harvey “mega-shelter” at Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center.

It has the potential to hold 5,000 evacuees – with a 10,000 square foot medical center, a Walmart pharmacy, rows upon rows of cots and dozens of volunteers – but on Tuesday night, only 227 people had checked in. A planned evacuation flight from Galveston on Tuesday was cancelled due to the flooding.

Tropical storm Harvey barely touched Dallas, a bustling commercial hub, and the city has now opened four shelters to house displaced people – including the mega-shelter.

Most evacuees who are in Dallas fled before the storm hit , such as Jaime Lunez and Angelica Pulito and their three children, Victor Escobar, 16, Ruby Lunez, 10 and Jimmy Lunez, 7. After four nights in a Dallas motel, the family from Freeport, Texas, checked in Tuesday to the Samuell Grand Recreation Center, which became an Red Cross-run emergency shelter from Sunday night.

Lam Thuy Vo for BuzzFeed News

The family is glad they weren't stuck in flooding, but hadn't counted on being away from home for this long.

“I want to go back to my house and my work,” said Pulito, who works two jobs as a dishwasher and kitchen hand. “To return to my normal life.”

Another nine inches of rain fell in their small coastal city of Freeport on Monday night, and authorities continued to evacuate homes due to flooding. Harvey continues to devastate Texas: 16 people have died, the roads of Houston have turned into rivers and around 30,000 people have been displaced.

Since opening on Sunday, 40 people have stayed at Samuell Grand Recreation Center. On Tuesday the center hit capacity – 186 beds were filled, plus an additional 91 coming to eat. Of those staying overnight at the shelter on Tuesday, 79 of them were children.

The facility has plenty of supplies and services for all evacuees: including a donations room overflowed with clothes, books, toys, diapers and shoes. Paramedics and doctors are on hand and ready to give out prescription medications left behind and room was set aside to help sign people up for SNAP benefits (food stamps).

Lam Thuy Vo for BuzzFeed News

A local elementary school is excepting kids during the day, and a Dallas daycare is offering free childcare for people at the center. If people arrive with pets, the SPCA is taking them to nearby shelters and there's a phone charging truck outside, along with a mobile hot shower block.

When asked if there's anything that the shelter was missing, the shelter's lead Red Cross worker Linda Boone joked, “Margaritas?” The shelter is run by 20 Red Cross volunteers, half of whom are from Texas.

“We’re doing fine. We've got a fantastic team,” she added.

And new volunteers are arriving from across the country every day.

Hunter Kramer, a 28-year-old international relations grad student at George Washington University in DC, answered an email callout by the Red Cross for 4,000 volunteers and flew to Dallas on Tuesday.

"I kept seeing on the news how horrible it was and how many people were displaced and I knew I could do something," said Kramer, who was assigned to work Bulk (helping with logistics like bedding) and Mass Care (helping with feeding and talking to people) at the convention center mega-shelter.

Just across the road from the convention center, Houston resident Shawn Mushtaq, 23, (who says he doesn't normally touch alcohol), was drowning his sorrows about his city on Tuesday night while lying in a rooftop jacuzzi at an upscale Dallas hotel.

"We drink to forget," he said.

He fled Houston with his brother Waleed and sister-in-law on Thursday, when the rain started, and have been staying at the Dallas hotel ever since.

Mushtaw was worried about a used car dealership he runs with his brother – they've heard nothing about if their car lot of 15-20 cars, several of them pre-sold.

"It's been really surreal. Nothing is going on in Dallas," he told BuzzFeed News, dressed in a bathing suit and his hotel bathrobe.

He hopes to return home in two days, assuming Interstate 45, the road connecting Houston to Dallas, is re-opened by then.

But Houston is still dealing with a major natural disaster of epic proportions. Another 3,000 homes flooded on Tuesday, after two flood control basins on the west side of Houston began to overflow. So far authorities have rescued 7,000 people from the storm.

Lam Thuy Vo for BuzzFeed News

The state has 250 buses on standby in Houston, ready to bring people who stayed at home during the storm and are now displaced by the flooding, to the convention center in Dallas as soon as I-45 re-opens.

Dallas and the surrounding area can handle up to 6,500 people displaced by Harvey, said Mayor Rawlings.

"This is going to be the start, I believe, of a long process," said Rawlings on Tuesday, when opening the mega-shelter.

"We just want to tell people we're ready for them. We hope as few people come as possible, not because we don't want them to come to Dallas. We just want them not to be displaced," he added.

Now Dallas is just waiting for them to turn up.

If you've been impacted by the storm in Texas or have a tip about rescue, relief, government, or aid efforts, call the BuzzFeed News tipline at (646) 589-8598. Find us on Signal, email, SecureDrop, and more here.

Keep up to date with all of the Harvey news here.



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