GALVESTON, Texas, Sept. 19, 2008

Texas Still A Grim Tableau In Ike's Wake

Nearly A Week After Hurricane, Galveston's Power, Water System In Dire Straits

    • A Texas Longhorn roams an area destroyed by Hurricane Ike in Crystal Beach, Texas, on the Bolivar Peninsula, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008.

      A Texas Longhorn roams an area destroyed by Hurricane Ike in Crystal Beach, Texas, on the Bolivar Peninsula, Thursday, Sept. 18, 2008.  (AP Photo/Eric Gay)

    • Michael Sims walks home after purchasing supplies from a Kroger supermarket in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Texas, Sept. 18, 2008.

      Michael Sims walks home after purchasing supplies from a Kroger supermarket in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Texas, Sept. 18, 2008.  (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

    • Debris litters part of the street as staff from Gaido's restaurant prepare tables for a free lunch for first responders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Texas, Sept. 18, 2008.

      Debris litters part of the street as staff from Gaido's restaurant prepare tables for a free lunch for first responders in the aftermath of Hurricane Ike, in Galveston, Texas, Sept. 18, 2008.  (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

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  • Play CBS Video Video Help Still Needed In Texas

    With thousands of Texans in shelters and others living in their cars, FEMA's aid efforts are being watched very closely. As Mark Strassmann reports, more still needs to be done.

  • Video Ike's Death Toll Rises

    At least 50 people are known dead in eleven states due to Hurricane Ike. But the worst destruction is along the Texas coast, and patience with FEMA is wearing thin. Mark Strassmann reports.

  • Video 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.

  • Photo Essay After Ike

    A look at what the killer hurricane left behind

  • Interactive Ike's Deadly Path

    Ike proved deadly for dozens of people as it roared across the middle of the U.S.

(CBS/AP)  It's been nearly a week since Hurricane Ike bulled ashore, and the images of once-bustling coastal Texas communities reduced to only a faint shadow of their old selves are no less staggering.

Survivors traipsing past debris piled higher than their heads. Loose livestock grazing beneath downed power lines. Before-and-after shots of whole neighborhoods washed away. Scores of people taking on the drudgery of making it all livable again for weary and anxious evacuees still waiting to come home.

"The city of Galveston is not in ruins," Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas said Thursday, striking a defiant tone.

Then she ceded the podium to city manager Steve LeBlanc, who said Galveston basically is on life support.

There's some power to the only hospital, but not enough. Cell phone service is improving, which helps repair crews coordinate, but coverage is still spotty. A single gas pump was working Friday in front of a supermarket. More water is flowing out of the city's pipes than is flowing in.

"Our water system is bleeding," LeBlanc said.

At the very least, the barrier island community isn't ready for the return of the 45,000 who heeded orders to flee, about three-fourths of the population. Officials pleaded with evacuees to sit tight to give workers time to stabilize basic services.

"By staying away and being patient, you are making it possible for us to get you home in a week or so, instead of the months it would take if the city's infrastructure were more overwhelmed at this point," Thomas said.

Galveston Island remained closed, as did the worse-off Bolivar Peninsula. Search teams pulled out of both areas this week after sweeping every house, authorities said.

Dr. James McCarthy of Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center in Houston said new victims have been those injured during the cleanup.

"Patients keep coming," he told CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann. "Falling off roofs, tree-cutting injuries, getting hit with branches. People who have no business operating a chain saw decided this was their time to learn and are injuring themselves."

To the northwest, life took more steps toward normalcy in Houston, where traffic picked up on the downtown streets. Flight control of the International Space Station was to return Friday to the Johnson Space Center, which shut down a few days before Ike's strike.

CenterPoint Energy said it had restored power to nearly 900,000 homes, and the utility was fast approaching the point where more people in the nation's fourth-largest city would be with electricity than without. About 1.5 million are still without power statewide.

More than 1 million people evacuated the Texas coast as Ike steamed across the Gulf of Mexico. Gov. Rick Perry said 20,500 people were still staying in 190 shelters Friday. Ike's death toll in the U.S. stood at 56, with 22 in Texas, though authorities cautioned that more victims could be found.

The Interior Department said Thursday that Ike destroyed at least 49 of the more than 3,800 offshore oil or natural gas production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, and some may not be rebuilt. The damaged platforms accounted for tiny percentages of the Gulf's daily output of oil and natural gas.

The federal relief effort has delivered hundreds of trucks of ice, water and food to more than 5 million people in the region. The Federal Emergency Management Agency said it had handed out 2.5 million liters of water, 2 million meals and 100,000 tarps.

Among those accepting a hand was Cheryl Harwell, who holed up in an empty hotel as Ike devastated the Bolivar Peninsula community of Crystal Beach. She ignored a mandatory evacuation order six days ago, and suggested she wouldn't be leaving anytime soon.

"I got everything I need here," said Harwell, 50, as she sat on the hotel's second-floor balcony with her husband and a friend.

Destruction surrounded them, but their second-floor abode was dry and tidy, complete with clean linen, bottled water and beer.

"We're happy here," said Harwell's husband, Armando Briones. "We've got plenty of cigarettes and plenty of food."

If they need something, they simply flag down the National Guard, which has been making daily checks.

Back on the mainland, the Red Cross began to close some shelters outside the greater Houston area, though it was still accepting evacuees closer to the most damaged spots, said Jana Sweeney, a spokeswoman for the agency.

"People will come home and realize that their home is not livable, and check back into the shelters," she said.

That's what happened to Virginia Collins, a nurse's assistant who left her home in Houston to stay with family in Denton during the storm. When the coast was clear, she went home to find her ceiling caved in, insulation spilling from the walls and black mold spreading around the house - a place she moved after Hurricane Rita destroyed her Port Arthur home three years ago.

With her Houston home uninhabitable, she was at the city's convention center looking for shelter Thursday.

"I was OK until I got back here," Collins said.


© 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 labourboss September 19, 2008 8:25 PM EDT
Mollydtt you need to run for office. That is the common sense approach to the situation. It is important to remember that a lot of people live in arms way because that is where the jobs are, especially those in the petro-chemical industry. For the record I have''had a home on Crystal Beach. these storms are getting bigger and meaner every year.
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by blackyowe September 19, 2008 7:57 PM EDT
Stop building on barrier islands and beaches. There are thousands of new homes that have gone up since 1983. I think if you build on or near a beach you are an idiot.` Time to stop bailing out people and businesses for making bad choices!
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by vranger September 19, 2008 7:13 PM EDT
"Just like Katrina, don''t count on FEMA and the Repiglicons.."

Just like Democratic Party parrots ... try to politicize people''s hardship. You guys had this tasteless, worn out mantra going before the hurrican even came ashore. You are comtemptible and disgusting. I''d tell you to be ashamed of yourselves, but you''ll never even understand the concept.
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by easeup-2009 September 19, 2008 6:52 PM EDT
Just like Katrina, don''''t count on FEMA and the Repiglicons..

Posted by zoe2006 at 01:43 PM : Sep 19, 2008

uhhhh....no one is complaining about the government in Texas.
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by bettyas-2009 September 19, 2008 3:59 PM EDT
Galveston has not faced devistation like this for a century. After that storm they built the seawall which protected most of Galveston this time. What needs to be done is to continue that sea wall.

Galveston has rebuilt before, I am sure they can do it again.
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by mollydtt September 19, 2008 3:31 PM EDT
For Bolivar Peninsula and much of Galveston----This tragedy will happen again, maybe sooner than anyone can tolerate. The government needs to help people move on and relocate. Not give them life support while fooling them into thinking they can rebuild. This is a barrier island. Not a place to rebuild. It should be a park. Residents will never be able to win against a hurricane, but they should receive compensation for their property. Let''s get it right this time. Matagorda Island and much of Padre Island were designated long ago as wetlands, for good reason.
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