GALVESTON: ten buildings burnt to the gound and seven collapsed due to ferocious winds, including two apartment blocks that have toppled over, it has been reported. Rescue teams have not yet gone into the worst affected area, as of Saturday night.
In Houston and some parts of Galveston 940 people have been rescued so far from the flood-hit region. However, only one-third of the Galveston area has been acessed as of last night with persons banned from entering Galveston Island except for authorised personnel involved in rescue operations and administration.
' rel="nofollow">http://www.chron.com/...ry.mpl/front/6000349.html"]The official insistence that it could have been much worse — Ike's late eastward drift lessened a storm surge that had been predicted as apocalyptic — was little consolation to residents whose homes were wrecked by water, falling trees and winds that gusted in places well in excess of 100 mph. Or even to those facing an indefinite stay in a hot, dark home that emerged unscathed.
The full extent of the property damage as well as the human toll was still coming into focus late Saturday. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff could not yet put a dollar amount on damage, except to say that it would likely rival some of the "legendary" damage figures of storms past.
"By any measure, it was a huge storm," Chertoff said.
While government officials did preliminary surveys from land and air to get a sense of what lies ahead, search-and-rescue crews immediately began to comb through inundated areas along the coast to find out what happened to the estimated 140,000 people who had defied mandatory evacuation orders and stayed home.
For all the misery — during the hurricane and after — Harris County Judge Ed Emmett said people should think of how bad it might have been.
"I cannot tell you how I feel our community has been blessed," Emmett said. "We have avoided a lot of the tragedies we have seen in other places."
In Galveston, ground zero for Ike's assault, the wreckage surpassed that of any storm in recent memory. Ten buildings burned to the ground, another seven collapsed because of wind — including two apartment buildings — and huge portions of the island remained under water and by Saturday evening had not been reached by emergency personnel.
--------------------------
A freelance reporter, Ron Jackson, speaking from the area for the BBC television, has predicted there is likely to be "a heavy death toll" when rescue operators go in to assess the damage.
Texas Governor. Rick Perry has said it will be, "the largest rescue operation in state history".
"Ike has not left the state yet," Perry said. "To all the Texans out there that are either in the path of this storm or situated in its deteriorating eye . . . keep your head down. If you're in an affected area, we are on our way to help you."
State officials said there are 57 helicopters in the air and 1,500 people on the ground involved in the operation. But there were scant details about the far-flung missions, which stretched from the Louisiana border to parts of Brazoria County.
Jack Colley, director of the governor's division of emergency management, said state authorities were ferrying storm victims to pre-arranged locations where transportation and medical attention can be provided.
"Where we see people we're picking them up," Colley said. "We pick them up and we're moving them to designated places." Officials did say they helped coordinate, with the U.S. Coast Guard, the rescue of four critically ill patient from a Galveston hospital.
Meanwhile, Perry said the state is working well with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. A FEMA spokesman, Mark Stone, said before Perry spoke that crews hadn't received any rescue calls by early Saturday afternoon. At a sports arena in Houston, tractor-trailers and large sport utility vehicles sat idle as the vast storm churned northward across the state. Stone said federal officials are now seeking to pinpoint the hardest-hit areas.
Speaking to reporters at the emergency operations center in Austin, Perry said state officials have been "working well with our federal counterparts, with our local counterparts." In the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, Perry issued blistering criticisms of the agency. But he said Saturday it would be premature to engage in any finger-pointing.
"If it's a perfect operation I'll be surprised," he said. "I think we've got a good operation to date." He said in advance of the storm the state had "prepositioned the largest search and rescue operation in the history of the state of Texas."
Perry also urged Texans who had evacuated to wait official word before returning home. He said residents who ignored warning to evacuate Galveston would be allowed to stay but could not return if they left. Authorities said they would only allow emergency personnel to go to the island.
7,500 members of the National Guard are being mobilised to check the safety of the tens of thousands who chose to ride the storm. "Some people did not evacuate when asked," said President Bush today.
Casualties are not expected to be as catastrophic as originally feared, as Hurricane Ike's landfall hit Galveston at Category 2 and diffused to Category One. Rescue teams are getting ready to move into the area to assess the damage.
HOUSTON - Hurricane Ike flooded thousands of homes, blew out countless high-rise windows and left millions without electricity Saturday as authorities launched a massive search-and-rescue effort for people stranded by the rising water.
Emergency officials were still trying to confirm any casualties, but it appeared widespread deaths were unlikely. The storm rumbled ashore slightly weaker than expected -- Ike was a Category 2 with 110 mph winds when its eye hit Galveston at 2:10 a.m. CDT -- and dumped steady rain over eastern Texas as it lost wind power.
The major concern focused on the tens of thousands who ignored mandatory evacuation orders from coastal areas.
"Some people didn't evacuate when asked," President Bush said Saturday from the White House. "The storm has yet to pass, and I know there are people concerned about their lives."
Texas Gov. Rick Perry mobilized 7,500 National Guard troops, and Houston Mayor Bill White said firefighters and police officers started responding to emergencies as soon as conditions became safe Saturday morning.
"The unfortunate truth is we're going to have to go in and put our people in the tough situation to save people who did not choose wisely," said Andrew Barlow, a spokesman for Perry. "We'll probably do the largest search and rescue operation that's ever been conducted in the state of Texas."
About 1 million people fled coastal communities before the storm made landfall, but at least 140,000 chose to ride out the hurricane at home.



Comments (0)