Category Archives: Hurricane Blogging

Experiences in and thoughts about hurricanes.

Food Chain

From KTRK-13:

A Texas helicopter task force flew 115 rescuers onto the heavily damaged resort barrier island of Bolivar Peninsula, just east of hard-hit Galveston. Task force leader Chuck Jones said they were the first rescuers to reach the area that is home to about 30,000 people in the peak summer beach season.

Of particular concern is a resident who collects exotic animals who is now holed up in a Baptist church with his pet lion. “We’re not going in there,” Jones said. “We know where he (the lion) is on the food chain.”

Mmmmm kay. One hopes the resident has a fine appreciation of where he is on the food chain.

Who’s Doing What?

From the Chronicle:

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff pledged on Sunday that his team was “working feverishly” to get the centers open, even as Mayor Bill White expressed concern over how long the process was taking.

“If they fulfill these commitments in the coming week, on a reasonable timetable and not a bureaucratic timetable, then they’ll get high marks,” White said. “And if they don’t, they’ll get low marks.”

FEMA officials responded that setting up the centers was contingent on assurances that city workers would be on hand to staff them.

They just went around my office looking for volunteers to work 6-8 hour shifts handing out food and water, meaning the city is trying to find the people to staff those centers. Probably a third of our staff is missing; many of those here today do not have electricity at home yet. Not finding many takers. (No word on whether it’s paid city time or a true volunteer work. For reasons of physical limitations, I declined. I’m one of the lucky ones, and we are taking care of friends/family who need to wash clothes etc.)

FEMA, as was repeated endlessely after Katrina, is a managment agency. It’s j0b is to coordinate everyone else; it’s not a primary responder itself. In other words, by the intent of the design, it’s the city that has fallen through here. Given that city employees are among the lowest paid, and therefore have fewer personal resources to meet this great of a challenge (I’m a major exception in terms of preparedness, but then, I have no expensive children), they are natrually more likely to be among those needing help and support rather than those able to give it.

Just another way that shortchanging city employees shortchanges their city.

The city’s 311 service line this morning was back in operation, with at least 40 lines up and running.

Not exactly. The truth is, 311 calls been diverted to Utility Customer Service, whose employees are not trained (or were, once for a few hours, two years ag0) in the software used by 311. It’s not easy or intuitive, and they have no experience in it. Expect problems — and why the hell isn’t the actual 311 center up? It was supposed to be disaster-hardened.

I notice a trend in the viewer comments at the Chronicle: whiners get voted down, positive and sensible messages are getting voted up. Bush-bashing is only 40-60 thumbs-down, but then BDS is a chronic disease…

Stuck on Stupid

The press is going out of it’s way to pick fights with Centerpoint, Governor Perry, FEMA, and whomever else they can over the most trivial stuff. And what’s with Lampson bloviating over random glitches? Get real, people. There’s probably 20 or 30 agencies out there; the Army, Navy, Air Force recon, Coast Guard, FEMA, EPA, Tx DPS, other state agencies, local agencies, groups on loan from other states… you know, I might be a little conservative with that count if I toss in Centerpoint/utilities, Red Cross…

Glitches? It’s a miracle of organization that anyone even knows who all the players are. The press is trying to dig themselves a hole…or pander to the useless drones who just want to sit around and whine… but what the hey, we elected those drones. 🙂

Then there’s the people wanting to know when they’re going to get an express delivery of ice or water to their door.

Ike: Pictoral

Let me say that if you’re looking for visceral pictures of devastation, you’re going to be disappointed. Our area got off pretty light. This is just what I observed immediately before, during, and right after the storm. Also note that the pictures taken right after the storm are strangely distorted. This is because I was taking them from inside my car, through the window, and it was raining, so the water on the glass makes for odd warping.

Head below the fold….
Continue reading

“Gilchrist is Gone”

News ‘copters and crews are making their way to the Bolivar Peninsula and High Island, north and east of Galveston Island. This area took the brunt of the storm’s right side, and is pretty much devastated. The pictures aren’t quite as spectacular as the Mississippi coast after Katrina, but that’s largely because the area wasn’t as built up. I described it to someone as a “blue-collar beach community,” and that’s about right. No gambling boats, not a major tourist attraction, just homes on stilts and a few businesses. Evidently no one was paying attention to the huge storm surge built up by Ike; approximately 500 (est.) people were caught on the island when the water came up at 4 a.m. Friday morning, twenty-two hours before the storm’s eye made landfall. The Coast Guard and others were able to get 130 or so off before they had to suspend operations. There are obviously a number of survivors, but no one knows how many, nor how many died yet. Those that remain are running out of gas for their generators, but many are still refusing to leave. There are some houses left, many with severe damage. The San Martin ferry is sitting in someone’s front yard, half out of water. Saw a picture of a commercial building sitting in the middle of an intersection on Hwy. 87. (Update: “15 miles of neighborhoods completely wiped out” — official on High Island.)

Back on the other side, of the bay, the West End (of Galveston island) fared somewhat better, but the amount of beach erosion has placed many damaged houses right on the water, which means even if they’re viable (and many don’t appear to be) the state will condemn them. Erosion patterns looked like most of it was done by outflow; I’d bet the water was shoved into the bay through the main channel, then went down behind the island until it could get around the seawall, where the west side of the hurricane pushed it back over the island. Chunks of that seawall are missing; not large ones, but it was beginning to break apart under the pounding of the surf, and overtopping. It’s widely reported as being 17.5 feet high, but it’s actually settled to a height of only 15′. A cat 4 would have destroyed it. Probably 2,000 people have accepted offers to be evacuated from the Island, which will remain closed for the foreseeable future. It will be a week before the top priority structure, the University of Texas Medical Branch, can get power. I’m not impressed by the Galveston mayor, who declared a 6p.m. curfew. Hello, it’s light until 8 p.m. The military is standing around with trailers of ice and MRE’s, wondering where their lines went. Good show. (This is the brilliant mayor who had to be shown a slide show by Governor Perry to get her to call an evac, which she did too late, IMHO. Still, she’s not quite Ray Nagin. That would require lots of flooded buses and no mandatory evacuation order.)

Further north, the Kemah Boardwalk is pretty much totaled. The ferris wheel is “pretty banged up.” Few stores are open south of the Beltway. Entire strips are missing from Reliant’s roof; it was supposed to survive a hurricane with no damage. Not surprised by this; conspiracy freaks will obsess over the fact that it was designed by KBR; those of us who watch local government will look at the involvement of some politically connected firms that got handed part of the work. Houston is under curfew also now. Downtown is still closed. I’m hearing something about 100-150 people from an assisted living center screaming where’s their food, where’s their lights. The national media should be there shortly to blame it on Bush.

A cool front has arrived and the humidity dropped a lot. Feels nice out there; too bad the city’s a wreck from a hurricane.

Locally, our neighborhood came through in great shape, aside from a few fences down and one unfortunate fellow with a large tree added to his roof. Not to mention a hole to put it in. Long line at Kroger’s, which opened late today.

Removed most of our boards today; left one one near where the generator sits… just in case. Water pressure almost normal but can’t trust it yet. Washing lots of clothes and such before they mildew. I have to report to work tomorrow. Will try to post pictures next…

Power On! (Updated)

Praise Centerpoint and press the power switch! Electricity restored about 9:30 am at my house. Still the odd million or so without power out there so I’m very lucky. No damage to the house, everyone’s fine, Redneck Guy & family came through too.

Exhausted. Fixing lunch, more thoughts and recap of experiences later.

Update: Hurricanes are exhausting. Centerpoint just become my favorite company ever by getting power back on here this morning. I’m fortunate, in that this area was first built out about 35 years ago, and then underwent a recent growth spurt; it has mostly underground power and communications lines. The older neighborhoods in town are not so fortunate; they’ll be a long time getting power.

Random impressions and what not: All of Galveston island went under water from what I’ve heard. Several historic buildings damaged or demolished. The Strand; a historic district with 1890’s era buildings (and a tourist site), went under several feet of water. Heard some tales of harrowing escapes from flooded houses; there is no doubt bodies will be found. (SAR people working on rescue now, recovery later.) Across the bay to the north, the Bolivar Peninsula, Crystal Beach, and High Island…. everythings gone. Not damaged, gone. There were once dozens of beach houses on stilts there, and the area had several canals dug so that even houses 3 and 4 rows back from the beach could have docks for their boats. The occasional lonely piling is still sticking up, plus one very incongruous house that somehow survived. Other than that, water and the occasional bit of greenery. It appears that a historic “iron lighthouse” is gone; the media chopper couldn’t find it.

Memorial Hermman hospital system had 9 of 12 hospitals on generators. Downtown is closed; there doesn’t appear to be a building left with windows (well, if there were, the media choppers didn’t show them, but then they wouldn’t, would they?). Before the hurricane hit, the word was “oh, all the damage from Alicia was due to gravel roofs, but we changed the building codes there, so it’s not a problem this time.” I just laughed. Sure, the new buildings didn’t have gravel roofs. City employees working for the 311 system were supposed to report at 6am this morning. As of 11 a.m, the system still wasn’t up; supposedly a hardware system. The mayor foolishly said for emergency out of water situations, call 911. He didn’t make that clear enough, so of course the 911 system then got jammed. At least one lady called in to a local TV station to report flooding in her neighborhood and ask for help, since she couldn’t get through to 911. Later Mayor White came back on and explained that only assisted living facilities that had no water should use 911; everyone else wait on 311 to come up. Note that there are 1200 OTHER water districts in Harris County — so what happened was that residents from all those districts were calling the city’s 911. People’s grasp of the basics, or lack thereof, never ceases to amaze me. And the mayor’s grasp of people is about the same, it seems.

8-10″ of rain from Ike’s long tail this morning; a few bayous came out of bank and some freeways flooded, catching people unexpectedly. Very, very, very few stores open, all had long lines of people wanting ice or water. Few reports of fatalities yet, but 30+ people treated for carbon monoxide poisoning due to lack of common sense with their generators. One fatality from a fire started from a candle. Some looting; an HISD officer was quoted as saying some of the schools were suffering break-ins; thieves going after computers. Several hundred rescues since yesterday, but nothing like the thousands after Katrina.

Lots of roof damage (shingles & tar paper) to all the new condo’s near downtown. Why does a major city sitting on a hurricane-prone coast NOT have better building codes for roofing? This stuff often pulls loose with nails, which then become hazards in the street.

Football on TV? It’s Sunday? Weird. I remember Thursday, and sorta Friday, then it gets kinda blurry.

12:35

Out of power and back in again somehow. Media reports are constant that transformers are popping. Hope Bumblebee and the rest are fine…

Channel 13 is practically begging it’s field reporters to find some debris to put on camera. Constantly asking “have you seen any debris?” So disappointed by the “no” answers.

Report of a fire in downtown Houston: Brennan’s restaurant. 2 injuries. Update: 4 y.o. and 26 y.o; another transformer.

12:20 AM

Still here. Lost power several times, but it keeps coming back. Can hear the wind sometimes, despite heavy wood on the windows.

A dozen houses burned in Galveston. The eye wall is hitting Galveston now.

Update: Eyewall estimated to get here between 3:30 to 4 a.m.

11:45 Update

Accidental double post due to power glitch. Losing it for 20-30 seconds at a time. Edit: Dickinson and League City without power.

Update: all Transtar traffic cameras on I45 south down. Baycliffe EMS has lost it’s roof. UTMB in Gaveston first floor flooded; water at 11′ on Galveston island, still rising. Eye still 2 hours offshore.

11 PM

Another blink. Decided it was time to check the laptop I plan on trying to use after the power was out… and discovered it was completely dead. Power supply wasn’t plugged in, and apparently it wasn’t shut down, so it’s completely drained. Not enough time to charge it, I’d bet. So much for trying to stay online.

It’s raining here now.

10:50 Update

From Weather.com:

The Weather Channel’s Julie Martin reports the U.S. Coast Guard made 65 rescues on Texas’ Bolivar peninsula today. But no more rescue attempts will be made until conditions are calmer.

That’s the southern end of the seriously misnamed High Island, which is the next one northeast of Galveston Island.

The Hooters in Galveston appears to have been seriously damaged. That is a tragedy.

Here’s what I’m hoping about evacs: Even if Harris and Galveston County officials blew it, village and town officials in northern Galveston and southern Harris counties carried the day and saved lives.

Galveston Island

Kemah

Tiki Island

Bayou Vista

Omega Bay in La Marque

Bolivar Peninsula

San Leon

Bacliff

Freddiesville

Some Chambers County residents

Some Brazoria County residents—excluding Pearland and Alvin

People in low-lying areas of Dickinson Bayou, Tropical Gardens, the country club area, Bayou Chantilly and any homes that front Dickinson Bayou

Harris County areas in ZIP code areas: 77058, 77059, 77062, 77520, 77546, 77571, 77586 and 77598

Matagorda County

Jackson County

Orange County

Parts of San Patricio County

Why in the name of all that’s holy, would you not evacuate all of Galveston County? Are they that confident that the island will protect the mainland portion?

10:40 Update

Some confusion (in comments here) on the Galveston info. US Census 2006 estimate for Galveston County is 283,000. However, Galveston Island is only one part of Galveston County. Galveston city is smaller still, and has a population of 57,523. Given the performance of our press, whether the comment was really supposed to be for the city, island, or county is anyone’s guess. Most or all of the city is covered by the seawall, at 17.5 feet in height. That will not stop water from coming around the back side, and if Ike holds the surge in the bay long enough that can happen.