Nearly a week after Hurricane Harvey slammed into the Texas coast, desperate residents remain stranded without food and water in the wake of unprecedented flooding.
Authorities are searching for survivors and have made helicopter rescues from rooftops as the death toll from Harvey climbed to at least 47, the CNN reported.
Thousands of emergency rescue teams officials are helping people affected by the deluge.
Brazoria County officials have warning that roughly 517 km of the county will be inundated with water from the Brazos River, which is projected to continue rising.
Yesterday, the Houston Fire Department had received 800 service calls, but only 22 were water-related, a spokesperson said.
Houston remained flooded, and police continued rescuing people as officials searched homes looking for trapped residents.
Beaumont city in southeastern Texas, home to more than 118,000 people, 145-km away from Houston, woke up without drinking water supplyyesterday.
"Due to the failure of the city's water pump, it is in the best interest of our current patients totransfer to other acute care facilities," Baptist Hospitals of Southeast Texas said in a statement yesterday.
"Due to the city-wide lack of services, we have no other alternative but to discontinue all services which will include emergency services. This is being done immediately. The hospital needs about 50,000 gallons of water a day to run," hospital medical director Ali Osman said.
In Harvey's aftermath, authorities confronted crises on several fronts. The remnants of Hurricane Harvey carried its wrath up the Mississippi Deltayesterday, but not before hammering the Gulf Coast with more punishing cloudbursts and growing threats that included reports of "pops" and "chemical reactions" at a crippled chemical plant and the collapse of the drinking water system in a Texas city.
In Crosby, Texas, about 48 km northeast of Houston, alarming reports emerged about the danger posed by a chemical plant after the French company operating the facility said explosions were possible.
The Neches River in east Texas surged far beyond its banks, into streets, houses and businesses in the city of almost 120,000 people 112 km east-northeast of Houston, reaching six feet above the previous record by afternoon, the National Weather Service reported.
This city of nearly 120,000 residents sits near the Texas Gulf Coast about 48 km west of the the Louisiana border.
The police department said it has to wait until water levels recede before it can determine the extent of the damage and make any needed repairs.
In other parts of the city, floodwaters receded, exposing countless losses and new hazards, like ruined and abandoned vehicles blocking roads, damaged electrical systems, and mold.
As residents of the region tried to assess the damage and some returned to their homes, weather forecasters said more rain are expected early next week.
The White House said President Donald Trump will donate USD 1 million of his personal money for flood relief operations in Texas and Louisiana.
Tom Bossert, the White House official who is spearheading the administration's storm response, estimated that 100,000 houses in Texas and Louisiana have been damaged or destroyed, and said Trump will seek billions in aid in the coming weeks.
More than 30,000 people remained in shelters in the region.
Houston fire officials said they would begin going door- to-door in search for victims, a process that could take up to two weeks.
FEMA reported that 95,745 people in Texas had been approved for emergency assistance, including rent, repairs and lost property. The agency has so far paid out about USD 57 million.
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