2024-07-09 21:40:02
HOUSTON – The sound of chainsaws and generators filled the air in communities across the Houston metro and East Texas one day after historic Hurricane Beryl made its third and final landfall, knocking out power to about 2.7 million utility customers and leaving at least eight people dead in the U.S.
Beryl roared ashore near the Texas city of Matagorda as a powerful Category 1 hurricane early Monday morning and pummeled the region with wind gusts higher than 90 mph, a 3-6 foot storm surge and torrential rain.
The storm also spawned numerous tornadoes in Texas, Louisiana and Arkansas as it continued to advance inland.
WATCH: BERYL’S HURRICANE-FORCE WINDS CAUSE WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES, FLASH FLOODING IN TEXAS
And the danger isn’t over in Texas.
Temperatures are expected to soar on Tuesday, with feels-like temperatures well above 100 degrees in many areas hit hard by the storm. The National Weather Service office in Houston issued a Heat Advisory for the region because of the widespread power outages and lack of air conditioning that will have people scrambling to find ways to stay cool.
PHOTOS: HURRICANE BERYL FLIPS SEMI-TRUCKS, KNOCKS OUT POWER AFTER TEXAS LANDFALL
The effects of Hurricane Beryl have left at least eight people dead in two states, bringing the total number of fatalities along the storm’s track from the Windward Islands to the U.S. to at least 19.
Seven of the deaths in the U.S. were in the greater Houston area.
Three of those deaths occurred due to fallen trees. Three people drowned, including a Houston Police Department information security officer, and FOX 26 Houston reports another person died in a fire that was believed to have ignited after lightning hit a home in Southeast Houston.
In Louisiana, officials said a woman was killed in the Benton area after a tree fell onto a woman’s home on Monday.
WATCH: MAN RESCUED AFTER STRANDED ON TOP OF TRUCK IN HOUSTON FLOODWATERS AS BERYL POUNDS TEXAS
Utility crews have been making progress in restoring power to the 2.7 million customers that were plunged into darkness during the storm, but there’s still a long way to go.
More than 2.2 million Texans are still without power, and CenterPoint Energy said it hopes to restore power to 1 million of those customers by the end of the day on Wednesday.
But power can’t be restored until debris is cleared and conditions are safe for crews.
FOX Weather Meteorologist Britta Merwin was in Surfside Beach as Hurricane Beryl was making landfall on Monday morning.
She returned to the area on Tuesday and said it was difficult to do so because of the extensive damage across the region.
“There are police escorts. There are police barricades,” she said. “And driving the streets on the barrier island is treacherous. I can’t tell you how many times we came in, we had to turn around, find another direction because there’s chunks of road that are missing – specifically up by the water because we’re about three blocks from the Gulf of Mexico.”
Merwin said she has seen massive boulders about two feet in diameter that were pushed 30 feet or more over the road and into homes in the area.
“I mean, that’s the power of the water,” she said.
Hurricane Beryl’s ferocious winds toppled trees across the region, with many falling onto homes and businesses and causing extensive damage, and many facilities will remain closed on Tuesday as damage is repaired and debris is cleared. College Station, Texas recorded a peak gust of 99 mph durign Beryl with multiple gusts over 80 mph clocked across the Houston area.
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Emergency officials also warned residents impacted by the storm to stay inside because of the dangerous conditions.
Schools, courthouses, all Port Houston terminals, and some medical facilities have also been closed across the area while cleanup continues.
In addition, METRO Houston said Park & Ride and METRORail service would remain suspended on Tuesday. However, several local bus routes would resume service early Tuesday morning.
As crews continue to spread out across the Houston area to clear debris and restore power, it’s bringing up memories of a similar event that occurred just two months ago.
In May, a line of severe thunderstorms swept across southeastern Texas and blasted the Houston area with destructive winds up to 100 mph that killed at least seven people and knocked out power to more than 1 million utility customers.
The National Weather Service called the event a derecho, which produces destructive winds for hundreds of miles.
During the derecho in Houston, winds blew out the windows of skyscrapers and sent shards of glass flying through the air and raining down on streets below, while people rushed inside to seek safety as roofs were ripped from buildings and trees were snapped like twigs.
The Texas coast felt the brunt of Hurricane Beryl as the deadly storm made landfall and pushed inland, including the popular travel destination Galveston.
At the height of Hurricane Beryl, Galveston saw a top wind gust of 86 mph and recorded three straight hours of 70 mph gusts.
Storm surge flooding was also a major concern.
Measurements at Morgan’s Point along the shores of Upper Galveston Bay reached 5.4 feet above the mean high water level, which is now the third-highest surge on record. It was also the highest storm surge since it reached 7.78 feet during Hurricane Ike in 2008.
HURRICANE BERYL LEAVES TRAIL OF DAMAGE, WIDESPREAD POWER OUTAGES IN GALVESTON
FOX Weather Correspondent Katie Byrne was in Galveston during the hurricane and saw extensive damage left behind when the storm moved out of the region.
She said she saw homes destroyed by Hurricane Beryl’s brutal winds as well as debris left scattered everywhere after floodwaters receded.
“There are pieces of house siding, overturned boats and debris scattered on roads nearby,” Byrne said. “While driving through Galveston Island, we saw dozens of downed power lines.”
The neighborhood Byrne was in had been placed under a voluntary evacuation order – meaning several residents decided to hunker down and ride out the storm rather than seek shelter inland.
“I just sat there and watched everything,” resident Larry Shivers said. “It pushed my golf cart up underneath the house and up against a palm tree. It knocked my windshield out, and I found it out in the water.”
But through it all, he said he wasn’t scared.
“This is the second time I’ve been through it,” he said.
Beryl’s third landfall in Texas culminated in a 10-day trek that began on June 29 in the Atlantic and spanned much of the Caribbean Sea, first smashing into the Windward Islands as a Category 4 hurricane.
It then swiped at Jamaica and the Cayman Islands as it crossed the Caribbean Sea and made a second landfall on Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula as a strong Category 2 hurricane.
The hurricane left at least 11 people dead across the region as it made its historic trek across the open waters of the Atlantic and Caribbean.
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