Ike Holdouts Will Be Forced From Home
Residents On Bolivar Peninsula Must Leave So Crews Can Begin Recovery Effort, Officials Say
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Ike Leaves Residents Spinning
In the wake of Hurricane Ike, President Bush toured Houston and Galveston, Texas where millions of residents are without power and in some cases without food. Mark Strassmann reports.
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Bush To Tour Ike Devastation
President Bush is back in his home state to take a tour of Hurricane Ike's devastation in Texas' coastal communities. Millions there are still without power. Hari Sreenivasan reports.
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Ike's Trail Of Misery
Hurricane Ike left a trail of misery from the Gulf Coast to the Midwest. At least 34 deaths are blamed on the storm and more than 3.8 million people remain without power. Mark Strassmann reports.
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A FEMA search and rescuer from Task Force Indiana walks through a gate after checking a house in downtown Galveston, Texas, Sept. 16, 2008. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
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Photo Essay
Ike Smashes Texas
Giant hurricane roars over Galveston, Houston
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Hurricane Ike
The gigantic storm pummeled the Texas Gulf Coast.
County Judge Jim Yarbrough, the top elected official in Galveston County, said those who defied warnings that they would be killed if they rode out the storm on the Bolivar Peninsula are a "hardy bunch" and there are some "old timers who aren't going to want to leave."
The Texas attorney general's office is trying to figure out how legally to force the holdouts to leave, Yarbrough said. Local authorities are prepared to do whatever it takes to get residents to a safer place.
The peninsula is too damaged for residents to stay, and with no gas, no power and no running water, there is also concern about spread of disease, officials said.
"I don't want to do it," Yarbrough said. "I'm doing it because it's in their best interests."
Speaking to reporters in Houston, President Bush also asked frustrated people who were displaced by the storm "to listen to state and local authorities before you come back." Many areas remain without power and are dangerous because of unstable buildings.
"It is their considered judgment which is important for you," said Bush.
Bush also urged Americans to donate money to help the recovery effort, warning against letting "disaster fatigue" set in and slow contributions.
Authorities may never know if people who tried to weather the storm were washed out to sea. So far, there are no confirmed fatalities, but Yarbrough and other officials said he didn't think that would hold.
"I'm not Pollyana. I think we will find some," he said.
A couple of the residents who rode out the storm told CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann that a rescue helicopter that was promised never came. For three days, those stranded lived like scavengers - eating leftover pizza and uncooked hot dogs.
Late Monday, rescuers finally removed 60 shell-shocked survivors. No one is sure who's still missing, reports Strassmann.
Ike's death toll officially stood at 48 Tuesday, with most of the deaths coming outside of Texas.
Authorities confirmed a total of nine deaths in the Houston metropolitan area, all from post-storm debris-clearing work, house fires or carbon monoxide poisoning by generator use. Dozens of others had been treated for carbon monoxide poisoning, health officials said.
The majority of Houston was still without power late Tuesday, with CenterPoint Energy projecting most would be without electricity for another week. Residents again waited in line for hours on end at the 22 supply distribution centers set up in Houston to hand out food, water and ice.
The mayor of the nation's fourth-largest city complained the Federal Emergency Management Agency wasn't bringing in the supplies fast enough. Mayor Bill White also asked that a federal supervisor at a distribution center be fired for telling the drivers of two trucks - one filled with ice and other with food - to turn around. The supervisor thought the site was stocked, but it wasn't.
"That is not going to happen again," White said, adding that other distribution centers were also not getting supplies quickly enough and most were running out of ice.
FEMA spokesman Marty Bahamonde said he was not aware of the situation White described, but said Judge Ed Emmett - the top elected official in Harris County - was now personally coordinating the efforts to hand out relief supplies.
You watch the TV and you listen to those guys getting mad up in Houston because they can't get water. Or they can't go to the grocery store shopping. They don't know what disaster is ... they ought to be here. They'd know what disaster is."
Willis Turner, Bolivar Peninsula residentWhite eased the city's curfew, now from midnight to 6 a.m., but urged motorists to stay off the streets after dark. So far, about 100 people have been cited for curfew violations and 94 arrested for looting, authorities said.
Rhonda Clayburn, who lives in a trailer park in the Houston suburb of Klein, said she's been told her water service could take up to six weeks to restore. Her family's been using an aquarium to flush the toilet.
"We have a lot of people in here. It's going to get nasty with no toilets," she said. "How do we live without a toilet for a month?"
Bahamonde said FEMA will begin paying for 30 days of hotel expenses for homeowners whose houses are uninhabitable. Information will be posted on the agency's Web site, and FEMA plans to reimburse the hotels directly.
There were still long lines snaking out of gas stations across the city. White said some stations were still without power, rendering their pumps useless. Others had electricity but were out of gas.
Some residents are hoarding gas - filling up their vehicles and portable cans - leaving little for the people behind them in line, White said.
Galveston Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas, under pressure from frustrated residents eager to check their homes, opened the island during daylight hours so residents can "look and leave." Security was tight, and checkpoints would block anyone but Galveston residents from coming in.
Hours later, Thomas suspended the "look and leave" policy altogether, after thousands of residents rushed to return - creating a traffic jam that stretched for miles.
Thomas also said officials want the estimated 15,000 people still living on Galveston Island to leave, since the city has only limited water and sewer service, and no electricity.
Dogs, cats and cattle were freely roaming Galveston's mostly deserted streets. Many of the elderly huddled in damaged houses, walking or using bikes when they had to leave because cars were destroyed or damaged. Some pushed salvaged shopping carts down Seawall Boulevard filled with crates of bottled water and plastic brown pouches holding MREs obtained from relief centers.
A lion was trapped in the sanctuary of a Baptist church in Crystal Beach, and a tiger was on the loose after getting free from an exotic pet sanctuary. An official with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service the tidal surge from Ike left a "sheen" of oil on the McFaddin National Wildlife Refuge, potentially endangering rare species of birds and other animals.
Shortages also were being felt in smaller communities. Hand-written cardboard signs warned travelers in a remote area near Webster "Help No Power" and "No Power, Water Well, And Septic is Down, Please Don't Forget."
York and Teresa Linebarger, who live near the signs, said a neighbor put them up to remind people about the three weeks the community endured without power after Hurricane Alicia in 1983.
"This area is so secluded, most people don't' even know it's here," said Teresa Linebarger, 60.
Her husband noted that compared to the people on the Bolivar Peninsula, "we're in pretty doggone good shape."
It's an opinion shared by Willis Turner, 58, who rode out the storm in Crystal Beach on Bolivar Peninsula.
"You watch the TV and you listen to those guys getting mad up in Houston because they can't get water. Or they can't go to the grocery store shopping," he said. "They don't know what disaster is ... they ought to be here. They'd know what disaster is."
Meanwhile, just a few months after near-record flooding in the Midwest, authorities in towns along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers fear a soggy repeat following heavy rain from the remnants of Ike.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



Were here from the Govarnment and were here ta hep ya''ll
How can one man decide what is in the "best interests" of another.
Isn''t that playing God?
Were they elected to play God?
Welcome to George Bush''s Amerika. Dubya''s people know what is best for us, whether it''s "just" spying on us or ordering us out of our homes.
They picked a bad place to try this, though. Texans are a stubborn lot. Maybe they''ll have guts enough to stand up for their rights.
Posted by creeper00 at 08:15 AM : Sep 17, 2008
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The people who are driving the forced evacuation are ***local*** authorities. The County Judge, Yarbrough, is a Democrat, not one of "Dubya''s people". President Bush is urging residents to listen to local authorities - you think that''s a bad thing?
Another example of BDR - Bush Derangement Syndrome.
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Posted by oldone60
LOL. People like creeper00 are obsessed with the current administration and I wonder what they will do after 2009?
Also find it funny that many people think these areas should not be rebuilt because it comes from their taxes - yet will still vote Democrats in either the congress or presidential elections.
Posted by creeper00
Well they can wait a few more days then Condem the entire area over health concerns and out you go. They are just writing up the paper work it takes a few days but the people will go make no mistake about that. And dont pull out the AK47 as they do it as they will drop you like a bad habit.
Posted by BlameGovt at 08:36 AM : Sep 17, 2008
Nice try at reading my mind.
I''m not obsessed by the current administration. I am obsessed by my rights and freedoms. You know those, don''t you? The ones spelled out in the Constitution? Like habeus corpus, the right to privacy, the right to free speech...all those rights the Cheney administration has been chipping away at for eight years.
If you think the police state isn''t here, think again. A fifty-nine-year-old nurse in my small town who was born and raised here and known to all local authorities found herself facing a gun and stop sticks last week when she refused to sign a bogus traffic ticket.
Our children will never know the freedoms we did. Their lives will be lived as the government sees fit, Republican or Democrat. The grand experiment is over and it failed.
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Posted by Bob5ford at 08:57 AM : Sep 17, 2008
I agree, and if they''re concerned with sanitation issues, they can always bring in port-a-pottys''.
But eitherway, if they survived the storm, they ceratinly can survive the aftermath.
Bob your being to optimistic. When a rescue team come and gets you your old high school photos are the last thing on their minds. Consider them dust in the wind. They want to come home alive to. Valuables? Most that had any were long gone. I don%u2019t think they are going to put a six pack of beer or a bottle of jack in an armored car waiting for a person to return. Given the temptures and water im sure the bugs are as big as small WW2 bombers by now.
Another example of BDR - Bush Derangement Syndrome.
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Posted by oldone60
I''m from the gov. I''m here to help you. LOL. The new world order is just around the corner! Be ready. No democrats or Republicans, only politicians that would pimp their mother for a euro, yen or dollar.
Posted by Bob5ford at 08:57 AM : Sep 17, 2008
Help how this has gone way above a few chain saws they are using bull dozers the size of houses to push everything out of the way.
Those people in Galveston who stayed regardless just **** me off!!! I''m sorry but I have NO PITY for these people who were told to leave or face almost certain death and chose to stay anyway. It''s not as if they weren''t given adequate warning, it''s not as if they weren''t provided with transportation out with areas to go to, and it''s not as if they weren''t told HOW severe this storm was going to be. The words "CERTAIN DEATH" are pretty damned clear.
They CHOSE to stay regardless, they should simply be glad to be alive...able to eat leftover pizza and uncooked hot dogs. They CHOSE to stay, knowing a catastrophic hurricane was on the way...and now they have the nerve to whine about a rescue helicopter not coming to save them!? As I recall prior to the storm residents of Galveston were told not to expect to be saved (I do remember a story on that, it was on the news...in the papers, on the internet etc.) The recovery/rescue efforts need to be concentrated on getting people back into their homes as quickly as possible, rebuilding, restoring electricity, providing food/water and supplies for areas who were not told to evacuate, for the people who DID evacuate and do as they were told...not taking care of selfish people who were warned ahead of time, very clearly...and who chose to ignore the warnings.
To THROW PEOPLE OUT OF THEIR HOMES!
I just can''t feel bad for people who choose to live in these statistically hazardous areas.
Posted by yongamerica
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The problem is that FEMA buys Poisoned Trailers with No Bid Contracts and gives them out. Bad Idea
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by nantx
September 19, 2008 2:58 PM PDT
- No transportation or gas? Transportation was offered and available. No money for hotel? Shelters were and are available- all paid for by tax dollars. Putting their lives and lives of rescuers at risk is stupid and being stubborn. Tax dollars can not give you back your life lost as you washed out to sea or had a building collapse or burned to the ground because there was no fire dept. These are individuals who either were ignorant, or believed in their own immortality or believed that someone, anyone, would come to their rescue under any circumstances. Foolishness and a severe lack of common sense is not Texan, being stubborn is not Texan. These are individuals who thought no farther than the moment they were in.
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