GALVESTON, Tex., Sept. 14, 2008

A Race Against Time For Stranded Texans

Search And Rescue Teams Canvass Neighborhoods In Wake Of Ike; Houston Posts 9 P.M. Curfew

  • Play CBS Video Video Houston Reels From Hurricane

    Houston officials are racing to assist residents who have been severely affected by the Hurricane Ike. As Hari Sreenivasan reports, some could be without electricity for the next month.

  • Video Galveston Faces Massive Damage

    Hurricane Ike has left a trail of destruction throughout the tourism-driven town of Galveston, Tex. "The Early Show" weather anchor Dave Price examines some of the hardest hit areas.

  • Video Ike's Aftermath Draws Concern

    The aftermath of Hurricane Ike has left many Texas residents worried over the massive damages which remain in many small town areas. Mark Strassman reports.

  • Dolores Gabrilles, 71, is lifted by rescuers into a boat after her home was flooded by Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Tex., Sept. 13.

    Dolores Gabrilles, 71, is lifted by rescuers into a boat after her home was flooded by Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Tex., Sept. 13.  (AP Photo/L.M. Otero)

  • Photo Essay Ike Pounds Texas

    A giant hurricane slammed Galveston and Houston, bringing horrendous winds and rain.

  • Interactive Hurricane Ike

    The gigantic storm pummeled the Texas Gulf Coast.

(CBS/AP)  Rescue crews canvassed neighborhoods inundated by Hurricane Ike's storm surge early Sunday morning, racing against time to save those who spent a second harrowing night trapped amid flattened houses, strewn debris and downed power lines.

One team of paramedics, rescue dogs and structural engineers fanned out under a nearly full moon on a finger of land in Galveston Bay. Authorities hoped to spare thousands of Texans - 140,000 by some estimates who ignored orders to flee ahead of Ike - from another night among the destruction. Some had been rescued, but unknown thousands remained stranded.

Only four deaths had been blamed on Ike so far: two in Texas and two in Louisiana.

Along the southeast Texas coast Sunday, the weather was not cooperating. Thunderstorms dropped more rain on areas already flooded by Ike.

In Houston, the fourth-largest U.S. city, a weeklong curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. was announced because most of the city was still without power.

"In the interest of safety, we're asking people to not be out in the streets in their vehicles or on foot," Chief Harold Hurtt said.

President George W. Bush planned to travel to Texas on Tuesday to express sympathy and lend support to the storm's victims. He asked people who evacuated before the hurricane to listen to local authorities before trying to return home.

Roads blocked by waist-deep water and downed trees kept many rescuers at bay as they struggled through the largest search-and-rescue effort in state history, just a day after the Category 2 storm crashed into Texas with 110 mph winds.

On one side of the Galveston peninsula, a couple of barges had broken loose and smashed into homes. Everything from red vinyl barstools to clay roof tiles littered the landscape. Some homes were "pancaked," the second floor sitting where the first had been before Ike's surge washed it out. Only the stud frames remained below the roofs of many houses, opening a clear view from front yard to back.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry's office said 940 people had been saved by nightfall Saturday, but that thousands had made distress calls the night before. Another 600 were rescued from flooding in neighboring Louisiana.

"What's really frustrating is that we can't get to them," Galveston police officer Tommie Mafrei said. "It's jeopardizing our safety when we try to tell them eight hours before to leave. They are naive about it, thinking it's not going to be that bad."

Big-wheeled dump trucks, boats and helicopters were at the ready to continue searching hard-hit Galveston and Orange County at daybreak Sunday.

Orange Mayor Brown Claybar estimated about a third of the city of 19,000 people was flooded, anywhere from six inches to six feet. He said about 375 people who stayed behind during the storm began to emerge, some needing food, water and medical care.

"These people got out with the wet shirts on their back," said Claybar, who had no idea of how many people were still stranded. Claybar was optimistic that the foot-and-a-half of water over the levee had receded overnight. If so, the city could begin pumping the water out, Claybar said. He did not know exactly how long it would take to drain the city.

"I would say at least a couple of days," Claybar said.

Some coastal residents waded through chest-deep water with their belongings and children in their arms to get to safety Saturday. Military helicopters loaded others carrying plastic bags and pets in their arms and brought them to dry ground.

Five-year-old Jack King escaped serious injury when the storm surge sent a rush of water that washed out the first floor of his family's Galveston home just two blocks from the bay.

"I falled in the attic," Jack told paramedic Stanley Hempstead of his 10-foot tumble through the attic and onto the garage floor. Jack and his family had taken refuge in the room, loaded with blankets and other supplies. As rescuers arrived, Jack gazed at a TV aglow with "The Simpsons." The only evidence of his fall was a Band-Aid plastered to his closely-cropped hair, covering a gash.

"We just didn't think it was going to come up like this," said the boy's father, Lee King. "I'm from New Orleans, I know better. I just didn't think it was going to happen."

The Kings had hoped that a family member would pick them up, but a paramedic told him the road inland would not be open for days. Lee King thought they could survive another night, but then their generator died. He ultimately decided the family was ready to leave.

Hempstead and other team members sailed through flooded streets Saturday, evoking thoughts of another disastrous storm that kept him working for 31 days three years ago.

"This brings back memories of Katrina - a lot of torn up homes and flooded stuff," he said of the hurricane that struck New Orleans three years ago.

In downtown Houston, winds shattered the windows of gleaming skyscrapers, sleeting glass onto the streets below. Police used bullhorns to order people back into their homes. Furniture littered the streets, and business documents stamped "classified" had been carried by the wind through shattered office windows.

The storm weakened to a tropical depression early Sunday morning, but was still packing winds up to 35 mph as it dumped rain over Arkansas and traveled across Missouri. Tornado warning sirens sounded Saturday in parts of Arkansas, and the still-potent storm downed trees and knocked out power to thousands there.

Ike was the first major storm to directly hit a major U.S. metropolitan area since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005.

More than 3 million were without power in Texas at the height of the storm, and it could be weeks before it is fully restored. Utilities made some progress by late Saturday, and lights returned to parts of Houston. In Louisiana, battered by both Ike and Hurricane Gustav on Sept. 1, 180,000 homes and businesses were without power.

Storm surge that crawled some 30 miles inland in Louisiana flooded tens of thousands of homes. A levee broke and some 13,000 buildings flooded in Terrebonne Parish, 200 miles from Texas. More than 160 people had to be saved from floodwaters near Lake Charles.

Though emergency crews were frustrated by those who stayed behind, weary residents of East Texas's swamplands and Big Piney Woods were beginning to feel that whatever decision they make about a Gulf hurricane is wrong.

In 2005, they were battered by Hurricane Rita, a September storm that ripped pine trees from their roots, smashed trailer- and wood-frame homes and left them in what has become a perpetual state of disrepair.

Last week, they listened when authorities told them to get out of Gustav's way. They spent days in north Texas shelters or paid for hotels and gas while their homes received nothing more than a mild shower. So when Ike approached, thousands ignored the mandatory evacuation order.


Bush To Visit Disaster Scene Tuesday

President Bush said Sunday he will visit Texas on Tuesday to express sympathy for victims of Hurricane Ike and lend support for recovery efforts.

"This is a tough storm and it's one that's going to require time for people to recover," the president said from the White House's Roosevelt Room after receiving an update from his disaster relief chief, the energy secretary and others.

Ike came ashore early Saturday at Galveston, Texas, as a strong Category 2 with 110 mph winds.

"Our first priority is search and rescue," Mr. Bush told reporters. He also mentioned restoring electricity, clearing debris and getting the Houston sewage plant running again.

He urged residents who had evacuated ahead of the storm to heed warnings from local authorities before trying to return home.

"It's very important for citizens, who I know are anxious to get home, to take your time and listen, take the advice of the local folks," the president said.

On his trip to Texas, Mr. Bush said he intends to express "the federal government's support - sympathy on the one hand and support on the other."

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff updated Mr. Bush by phone from Texas. Chertoff, who went to the region on Saturday, was in Austin, Texas, and planned to head to Houston later.

"This is all part of our efforts to help Texas and Louisiana with a focused, effective recovery effort," Mr. Bush said.

The eye of the hurricane missed the center of Houston, as well as the largest concentrations of oil and gas refineries. Still, retail gasoline prices have jumped based on Ike's landfall in the region, which accounts for about one-fifth of the nation's petroleum refining capacity. Refineries, even if they were not damaged, may remain shuttered for days, some because of power outages.

"The federal government, along with state governments, will be monitoring very carefully as to whether or not consumers are being mistreated at the pump - in other words, gouged," Mr. Bush said. "It's very important for our fellow citizens during this period of temporary disruption to be treated fairly."

Mr. Bush said the federal government is providing 1.5 million liters of water a day and 1 million meals a day to help the displaced.

© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by gonetosoon-2009 September 15, 2008 2:10 AM EDT
New Orleans was indeed flooded THREE DAYS AFTER, Katrina hit. And yes the Levees washed out underneath because the Piling was not driven deep enough when the
Levees were built. Another job done when the inspectors were looking the other way.

Posted by hbevis

Your facts are wrong.

Hurricane Katrina struck the New Orleans area early morning August 29, 2005. That night storm-surge flooding breached the city''s levee system, leaving eighty percent of the city submerged. (Source The Times Picayune)
Reply to this comment
by erasmus81 September 14, 2008 9:22 PM EDT
Posted by Credibility2 at 03:49 PM : Sep 14, 2008

You said it perfectly. Even if they weren''t told to evacuate, the fact that they have flooding there with minor storms tells you that when a hurricane is coming, there is going to be MAJOR flooding.

I do feel sorry for them, though, because it can''t be good not having a brain to think with.
Reply to this comment
by upto1947 September 14, 2008 8:27 PM EDT
They might be you brother and sister but they are not mine. Mine are that DUMB
Reply to this comment
by texannodnc September 14, 2008 8:21 PM EDT
Houston was not under an evacuation order. Nor was the majority of the Gulf Coast.

Those who stayed in Galveston or evacuation areas were most likely kids (young adults) so it''''s highly unlikely they have jobs or money (other than mommy or daddy''''s, who is probably a Repub).


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Posted by tuckerndfw at 02:54 PM : Sep 14, 2008

Actually the only one to stay in Surfside was a 67 year old man, whom they found drunk the next morning, kindof like you do every morning.
Reply to this comment
by mainemade September 14, 2008 7:02 PM EDT
Im sorry but these people were all warned way ahead of time..."Get out or face certain death". Did they listen? Some but the others who chose to stay did so knowing what was coming. So they chose to stay, then they expect to be "rescued"..I dont think so...your the idiot who stayed behind, deal with it, quietly. Dont whine to me or anyone else how bad Ike got, dont expect the world to save your sorry butt!
Reply to this comment
by hbevis September 14, 2008 6:50 PM EDT
New Orleans was not flooded due to the hurricane. New Orleans was flooded by the Mississippi river when the underfunded & poorly maintained levees collapsed.

There is no similarity between Katrina & Ike other than the media hype.

Nothing of significance was flooded by Ike and the winds were fairly minor for a hurricane.

This is just media hyperbole and sensationalism in action.

Posted by tuckerndfw at 02:58 PM : Sep 14, 2008

New Orleans was indeed flooded THREE DAYS AFTER, Katrina hit. And yes the Levees washed out underneath because the Piling was not driven deep enough when the
Levees were built. Another job done when the inspectors were looking the other way.

And it is wrong for some people to post hurtful things about other people getting caught in a storm. Even if they did not do enough to protect themselves.
Reply to this comment
by credibility2 September 14, 2008 6:49 PM EDT
These people chose to ignore and disobey the warnings and directives of the authorities. These belligerent individuals are selfish and only cared about themselves and are now thoughtlessly putting rescue personnel in harm''s way. They should be charged for the rescues and held accountable to their stupid indifference. None of these selfish thoughtless individuals needed to stay behind to ride the storm out. I don''t feel sorry for any of their suffering. They''re getting exactly what they deserve.
Reply to this comment
by petesis September 14, 2008 6:40 PM EDT
I am reading these disgraceful comments. These are our brother and sister Americans you people are disparaging. Just like in New Orleans! You all should be ashamed of yourselves. If these people need rescue, we will rescue them. All the rest of this is BS and shameful.
Reply to this comment
by puzzler125 September 14, 2008 5:48 PM EDT
Those who did not leave before the hurricane and possess the money, transportation, health and general ability to leave should be charged a fee for their "rescue."
Reply to this comment
by sjbj2322 September 14, 2008 5:45 PM EDT
''People who ignore the potential and place themselves in harms way only end up forcing others to risk their own lives to save them the from consequences of their own stupid decision.''

WHAT!! Based on that arguement, no one would get into their car and venture outside of their homes in the first place. The fact is that governement was created in part to protect and defend the rights and needs of those who either can''t or won''t do what is in their best interest. Moreover, no one is forced to do anything. People who choose careers as public servants in most cases feel compelled to do for others what they themselves can''t or won''t. Just part of my TEXAS civics class that I didn''t miss and that compels me to do what I can to help fellow Texans, as well as those in Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, and Florida through this crisis. Meanwhile others throw stones or pass judgement. Sure hope Pensecola is doing his or her civic best to make sure the issue of voter fraud doesn''t come back to bite the entire nation in the rear end in November the way they failed to do it in the past.
Reply to this comment
by no2zeebas September 14, 2008 5:35 PM EDT
"Race against time?"

Talk about extreme hyperbole and media sensationalism.

The vast majority of flooded areas are probably already back to normal by now other than wet ground.

I''''m not sure why anyone would be "racing against time," but if they are, they must have to go to the bathroom. . .

Posted by tuckerndfw at 02:11 PM : Sep 14, 2008

LOL...This is cbs...Home of dan blather and katie carwreck...
Reply to this comment
by vet_sk September 14, 2008 5:34 PM EDT
I watched yesterday how the person said that they had called at 11:00pm Friday night but exasperated say that it took them 10 hours to get to them.

You know rescuers are willing to take some risks to rescue people who put THEMSELVES in a bad situation but ....
Reply to this comment
by csmcmillion September 14, 2008 4:41 PM EDT
"People who ignore the potential and place themselves in harms way only end up forcing others to risk their own lives to save them the from consequences of their own stupid decision."

I agree, but why is it others are "forced" to rescue them?
Reply to this comment
by csmcmillion September 14, 2008 4:40 PM EDT
*** ''em. People that stupid are just fodder for Darwin.
Reply to this comment
by formrusmcsgt September 14, 2008 4:30 PM EDT
Having spent half my life between Puerto Rico and Houston, I learned that hurricanes are anything but predictable.

People who ignore the potential and place themselves in harms way only end up forcing others to risk their own lives to save them the from consequences of their own stupid decision.
Reply to this comment
by sunisue September 14, 2008 4:11 PM EDT
Those who stayed against a mandatory evacuation order should have to help foot the bill of the rescues. Saying they didn''t think it would get that bad just doesn''t cut it. They do not get my sympathy.
Reply to this comment
by csmcmillion September 14, 2008 4:05 PM EDT
*** ''em. The people who ignored the warnings are fodder for Darwin.
Reply to this comment
by csmcmillion September 14, 2008 4:04 PM EDT
*** ''em. The people who ignored the warnings are fodder for Darwin.
Reply to this comment
by pensacola98 September 14, 2008 4:04 PM EDT
If Civil Defense authorities beleive that a community won''t be deprived of basic services during or after a disaster, then no evacuation order will be issued.

BASIC SERVICES, include, Water, Sewerage, POLICE, FIRE, AMBULANCE, Electricity, Telephone and safe passable roads and bridges.

Civic education is something that hasn''t been valued very much in the past 20 years in Texas, and the results are clearly expresssing it with a poor attitude towards government and other ideal that establish a common good and defend it. Public Service would be a great place to begin learning about civic education.

There is hope that the loudest mouths about the poor performance of government will have a change of heart and answer the call to serve their community. You only get results when you personally invest something substantial, like your time and service to it. Government is a good place to work and serve your community.

The best schools have groups of students who are involved with their community. The best churches have parishoners doing the same thing. The best families and homes also have community spirit and serve. The rewards and fulfilment of community service can''t be replaced with anyting or taken away.

Reply to this comment
by scooterlibre September 14, 2008 4:01 PM EDT
The equation:
bUSh + Ira

1991 George HW bUSh invaded Iraq
1992 Hurricane Andrew.
2003-present George W bUSh invaded/occupied Iraq
2004 Charley, Frances, Ivan, Jeanne.
2005 Katrina, Rita.
2006 Alberto, Beryl, Chris, Florence.
2007 Dean, Erin.
2008 Fay, Gustav, Ike, %u2026
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