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Keyword: ike

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  • Politicians, FEMA blame each other for relief missteps

    09/15/2008 12:47:42 AM PDT · by chessplayer · 17 replies · 349+ views
    It didn't take long for the finger-pointing to begin. The Federal Emergency Management Agency came under fire Sunday as emergency workers were left undernourished and dozens of trucks of water and food had yet to be set up at distribution centers around Houston and surrounding communities.
  • (Houston) Police Arrest 81 Looting Suspects After Ike

    09/16/2008 3:19:10 PM PDT · by dragnet2 · 36 replies · 631+ views
    MyFoxHouston ^ | 9/15/08 | My Fox Houston
    Police Arrest 81 Looting Suspects After Ike Houston Police Department FOX 26 News HOUSTON -- Many felt disgusted after witnessing looting in the city of New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina left thousands of people dead and victimized. Who would steal at a time like this? According to Houston Police Department officials, more than 75 Houstonians and counting. At least 81 people have been arrested for looting. The crimes have hit several areas of our city as Ike was making landfall and after the monster storm moved out. "It's very disheartening because there's enough tragedy to infrastructure,...to the act of a...
  • Goods stalled at Ship Channel's front door

    09/17/2008 11:58:14 AM PDT · by thackney · 18 replies · 270+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Sept. 16, 2008, 9:56PM | BILL HENSEL JR.
    More than 100 vessels are waiting to enter the Houston Ship Channel to deliver goods but can't, in part because Hurricane Ike destroyed or moved maritime navigational aids. Also, public terminals operated by the Port of Houston Authority remain closed because of cleanup efforts and no electricity. "A range of serious complications due to the lack of electricity prohibits the Port of Houston Authority from opening for business operations Wednesday," the port said in a prepared statement late Tuesday. The storm destroyed or blew away many navigational aids, and the Coast Guard has to sort things out before the Ship...
  • Metro light rail going back to normal Monday - But Houston will extend citywide curfew

    09/22/2008 9:54:40 AM PDT · by weegee · 8 replies · 248+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Sept. 21, 2008, 10:37PM | no byline
    Making another step forward in recovering from Hurricane Ike, Metro officials announced late Sunday that the light rail will run on a regular schedule Monday and that HOV lanes on I-45 North will be reopen in the morning. ... Meanwhile, power outages across much of the city prompted Houston police to extend the citywide curfew until further notice. Curfew hours are from midnight until 6 a.m. "The purpose of the curfew is to protect the lives and property of all residents as law enforcement and other officials respond to emergencies and engage in recovery activities related to this disaster," the...
  • Going Through A Hurricane (Vanity)

    09/19/2008 7:17:51 PM PDT · by Ptarmigan · 20 replies · 296+ views
    I have dreaded a monster hurricane coming to our area for years. I even said that last year. My fears came true last week at this time when Hurricane Ike came crashing in. Granted it was just a Category 2 hurricane at landfall with large areas of Category 1 winds. You can hear the loud howling winds and rain. Also, you can hear the debris hitting the ground and transformers exploding and creating bright flashes that look like lightning. Going through a hurricane is torture, like having a bunch of large needles inserted into you one at a time. I...
  • Storm frenzy overshadows girl's death, crime news (Houston citywide curfew and crime stats)

    09/22/2008 11:22:03 PM PDT · by weegee · 10 replies · 423+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Sept. 22, 2008, 10:22PM | MIKE GLENN
    Since Hurricane Ike struck — pitching much of the city into darkness — Houston police have made about 280 arrests every day. Most were for nonviolent offenses, including 388 for public intoxication and 335 for drug possession, police said. The totals actually show a decrease from pre-Ike levels, when Houston police were arresting about 370 people daily, according to department officials. "A lot of the credit goes to the visibility of the officers. We're trying to deter as much crime as we possibly can," said HPD spokesman John Cannon. Arrests for looting have dwindled. Of the 168 arrests made since...
  • Power restoration slow, but steady {From Ike - Houston}

    09/21/2008 1:48:03 PM PDT · by thackney · 8 replies · 387+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | Sept. 21, 2008 | LYNN COOK and BRETT CLANTON
    Power companies continued restoring electricity to customers in and around Houston Saturday, yet by the end of the day more than a million homes and businesses remained in the dark. Progress was slow as the companies began the tedious task of renewing power to one block or one house at a time after completing key infrastructure repairs in recent days. Even so, three of the four major power companies serving the area reported gains, while the other did not release updated figures Saturday. The word comes a full week after Hurricane Ike slammed into the Texas coast and cut a...
  • Texas a Grim Tableau Nearly a Week After Ike

    09/19/2008 4:28:16 PM PDT · by metmom · 35 replies · 81+ views
    FOXNews.com ^ | Friday, September 19, 2008 | Associated Press
    GALVESTON, Texas — 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.
  • Ike Uncovers Mystery Civil War-Era Shipwreck

    09/19/2008 4:23:26 PM PDT · by metmom · 32 replies · 404+ views
    FOXNews.com ^ | Friday, September 19, 2008 | Associated Press
    FORT MORGAN, Ala. , Texas — When the waves from Hurricane Ike receded, they left behind a mystery — a ragged shipwreck that archeologists say could be a two-masted Civil War schooner that ran aground in 1862 or another ship from some 70 years later. The wreck, about six miles from Fort Morgan, had already been partially uncovered when Hurricane Camille cleared away sand in 1969. Researchers at the time identified it as the Monticello, a battleship that partially burned when it crashed trying to get past the U.S. Navy and into Mobile Bay during the Civil War.
  • Hurricane Ike destroys 49 oil platforms in Gulf

    09/19/2008 7:56:01 AM PDT · by Tolerance Sucks Rocks · 14 replies · 586+ views
    GOPUSA ^ | September 19, 2008 | H. Josef Hebert (Associated Press)
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- At least 49 offshore oil platforms, all with production of less than 1,000 barrels a day, were destroyed by Hurricane Ike as it raced across the Gulf of Mexico, and some may not be rebuilt, the Interior Department said Thursday. It said in the latest hurricane damage assessment that the platforms altogether accounted for 13,000 barrels of oil and 84 million cubic feet of natural gas a day. There are more than 3,800 production platforms in the Gulf producing 1.3 million barrels of oil and 7 billion cubic feet of gas each day. Most remain shut down.
  • Major oil and gas companies regaining power

    09/19/2008 5:00:38 AM PDT · by topher · 7 replies · 154+ views
    Houston Chronicle ^ | September 19, 2008 | By JENNIFER RADCLIFFE and ERICKA MELLON
    Major oil companies are expecting to get back to normal in the Gulf Coast region following Hurricane Ike's fury as more gas stations open and the post-Ike demand starts to wane. ... Shell Oil Co. reported that 70 percent of its company-branded stations were open in Houston and Beaumont - more than 360 of the total. Valero Energy opened nearly 20 more for a total of 109 and more than 60 percent of the region's Chevron stations were back in business. `... Meanwhile, power was restored Thursday to several more of the 14 refineries that shut down before Ike slammed...
  • The short - but eventful - life of Ike

    09/18/2008 10:52:53 PM PDT · by brityank · 11 replies · 1,114+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | September 15, 2008 | News Stories in Photographs by Alan Taylor
    The short - but eventful - life of IkeIn its brief lifespan of only 13 days, Hurricane Ike wreaked great deal of havoc. Affecting several countries including Cuba, Haiti, and the United States, Ike is blamed for approximately 114 deaths (74 in Haiti alone), and damages that are still being tallied, with estimates topping $10 billion. Many shoreline communities of Galveston, Texas were wiped from the map by the winds, storm surge and the walls of debris pushed along by Ike - though Galveston was spared the level of disaster it suffered in 1900. (28 photos total)   Some amazing...
  • Some of Ike's missing may have washed away

    09/18/2008 3:20:37 PM PDT · by RDTF · 61 replies · 271+ views
    msnbc ^ | Sept 18, 2008 | AP
    With no idea of numbers, authorities say final accounting may take years GALVESTON, Texas - The death toll from Hurricane Ike is remarkably low so far, considering that legions of people stayed behind as the storm obliterated row after row of homes along the Texas coast. But officials suspect there are more victims out there and say some might simply have been swept out to sea. Exactly how many is anybody's guess, because authorities had no sure way to track those who defied evacuation orders. And the number of people reported missing after the storm, whose death toll stands at...
  • Some Ike victims may not be allowed to rebuild

    09/18/2008 6:14:06 PM PDT · by longtermmemmory · 41 replies · 317+ views
    Hundreds of people whose beachfront homes were wrecked by Hurricane Ike may be barred from rebuilding under a little-noticed Texas law. And even those whose houses were spared could end up seeing them condemned by the state. Now here's the saltwater in the wound: It could be a year before the state tells these homeowners what they mayormay not do. Worse, if these homeowners do lose their beachfront property, they may get nothing in compensation from the state. The reason: A 1959 law known as the Texas Open Beaches Act. Under the law, the strip of beach between the average...
  • Cuban Media: Intellectuals in 30 countries demand an end to the blockade on Cuba

    09/18/2008 5:57:22 PM PDT · by SilvieWaldorfMD · 34 replies · 192+ views
    Granma Internacional, Cuba ^ | 9/18/08 | Government of Cuba
    HAVANA, September 17 —In less than 24 hours more than 1,000 intellectuals from Latin America, the United States, Europe and Africa have signed an appeal circulated by their Cuban colleagues, expressing solidarity and demanding an end to the U.S. blockade of Cuba. The message, which is circulating on the Internet, notes that Cuba was dramatically impacted by two powerful hurricanes recently, and that its people are demanding an immediate halt to the odious blockade that has been maintained against Cuba by successive U.S. administrations for almost 50 years. The appeal to the world from a large group of Cuban artists...
  • Nearly 1.5 million still without power in Houston

    09/18/2008 5:29:07 AM PDT · by nospin2244 · 12 replies · 363+ views
    Chron.com ^ | 9-18-08 | LYNN COOK
    CenterPoint Energy executives issued a timeline for power restoration, indicating it will be after Monday before most lights shine in a huge swath of the Houston area from Spring to Pearland to Baytown. CenterPoint reported Wednesday it had restored power to 42 percent of its 2.2 million customers. Entergy, which serves areas in the northern and eastern portions of the region struck by Ike, had restored 18 percent of its 395,000 customers. And Texas-New Mexico Power Co., which serves coast communities including Angleton and Texas City, reported 58 percent of its 113,000 customers had power.
  • Galveston - Who's in charge?

    09/17/2008 2:50:38 PM PDT · by HAL9000 · 13 replies · 109+ views
    Galveston County Daily News (excerpt) ^ | September 17, 2008 | Dolph Tillotson
    Excerpt - A part of the current problems with recovery from the ravages of Hurricane Ike is that the city of Galveston’s part-time, unpaid mayor has virtually all the power in the city. The person who runs the city every other day, the city manager, is secondary. That’s backwards, and it gets in the way of effective government in the face of dangerous community crisis. The person in charge in an emergency should be the person who has hiring and firing authority over city department heads. That person is Galveston City Manager Steve LeBlanc, and Galveston would be better off...
  • Even dead seemed to try to flee Ike's wrath (Gatemouth Brown among those caskets that got unearthed)

    09/17/2008 11:16:24 AM PDT · by weegee · 8 replies · 272+ views
    AP ^ | Sep 15, 3:44 PM (ET) | By ALLEN G. BREED
    ORANGE, Texas (AP) - Hurricane Katrina chased bluesman Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown from his adopted home in New Orleans to his hometown here on the Texas Gulf Coast, where he died in exile. Now, another hurricane has disturbed his rest. The 1982 Grammy Award winner's casket was one of dozens belched up by the ground when gulf and rain waters from Hurricane Ike flooded Hollywood Cemetery, an all-black burial ground on the west side of this city on the Sabine River. ... The top of Brown's vault had popped off, and his bronze casket had floated away. But three jars of...
  • Employment difficult to find, (Ike) evacuees say

    09/17/2008 7:40:49 AM PDT · by mnehring · 27 replies · 184+ views
    Earnestine Maxie and Alicia Brown each worked multiple jobs back home near the Gulf Coast. Ricky Freeland and Jim Swift have jobs waiting on them, but neither has a car. They are among more than one dozen coastal residents who have camped out since Thursday at Mobberly Baptist Church. Many have learned that their homes are damaged and without power because of Hurricane Ike or that they're not being allowed back into their hometowns. Other than Brown, none of them have seen how much damage has been done to their homes. Finding local jobs is foremost on their minds, though...
  • Authorities vow to force holdouts off Texas coast

    09/17/2008 7:37:41 AM PDT · by woollyone · 42 replies · 164+ views
    AP via myway News ^ | 09-16-2008 | AP (JUAN A. LOZANO)
    GALVESTON, Texas (AP) - About 250 people who withstood Hurricane Ike on a coastal sliver of land will be forced off it so crews can begin the recovery effort, authorities said Tuesday, vowing to invoke emergency powers to make it happen. ~snip~ The Texas attorney general's office is trying to figure out how legally to force the holdouts to leave... ~snip~