As the sun rose Saturday, Texans who rode out the most powerful hurricane to hit the United States in a decade ventured out to witness the full scale of damage as Hurricane Harvey lumbered on in what was “now turning into a deadly inland event.”
The storm, which blasted ashore as a Category 4 around 11 p.m. ET Friday, between Port Aransas and Port O’Connor, was a Category 1 by mid-morning Saturday, packing winds of 75 mph as it plodded northwest at 6 mph. Coastal areas remained in danger of a potentially deadly 13-foot storm surge, with places even far inland predicted to get as much as 40 inches of rain through Wednesday.
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 devastating and leave areas “uninhabitable for weeks or months.”
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 Wednesday, then weaken into a tropical depression, the weather service predicted.
— More than 300,000 customers on the Texas Gulf Coast had no power around 7:30 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.
— 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.
— Rockport’s mayor had advised residents who refused to evacuate to write their names and Social Security numbers on their forearms to “help out first responders should they find a body.”
Damage assessments underway
Firefighters who hunkered down in their station in Rockport as Harvey passed over the city of 9,000 residents were anxious early Saturday to survey the damage, though they knew it would be hours before they could safely venture outdoors.
“Right now, we haven’t been able to make any kind of assessment,” Steve Sims, chief of the Rockport Volunteer Fire Department, told CNN as dawn began to break. “We’ll be getting out here before too much longer and trying to see what we’ve got left.”
The wind was “howling,” through the night,” his assistant chief, Roy Laird, said. “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.
“We are very concerned to see what (Harvey) has been done when it lights out in the morning,” Hattman said.
Joey Walker, 25, rode out the storm from a house on Galveston Island. The Galveston Island Beach Patrol employee posted video of near-white out conditions overlooking Stewart Beach.
As rain bands reached Houston, Mayor Sylvester Turner urged drivers to stay off the roads.
“People need to know, this is not a one-, two-day event and done,” he said.
Parts of southeastern Texas remained under a flash flood watch through Tuesday evening, the National Weather Service office in Houston said.
“This thing is turning into quite the marathon,” Nick Gignac, of Corpus Christi, said. “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.”
Shelters and evacuations
In San Antonio, about 950 people took refuge in shelters, Woody Woodward, a spokesman for the city fire department, told CNN, adding that there’s 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.”