Trini in Houston ‘a little worried’
More than 6.5 million people call Houston home. Among them are Trinidadian national, Stacy Ann and Australian national, Nicole Flockton, both of whom spoke with Newsday yesterday about how their families have been coping.
Stacy Ann lives in Fulshear while Flockton’s home is located about half hour’s drive away in what’s known as the ‘Energy Corridor’ of Houston.
The streets in her neighbourhood hadn’t flooded as of yesterday afternoon but the retention ponds and lakes in the area were either full or overflowing.
“Rain has been steady since Friday night. Flooding will get worse over the next few days, as retention ponds are filled.” Asked if she was concerned about what might happen, given the forecast for more rain over the next few days, Stacy Ann said she was “a little worried.” “Our neighbourhood has lots of lakes, so we could take water but this is a lot and our lakes are filling up...If the rain doesn’t stop and let it drain off, we could see water coming up on our street and maybe even our driveway. Our house is high up on the street but if it rains for three more days, as predicted, anything is fair game.” Given that her daughter, Sophia, is five-years-old while her son, Adam, is two-years-old, Stacy Ann said her children have had different reactions to the change in routine; particularly the need to seek shelter during tornado warnings.
“Adam couldn’t care two hoots.
Sophia is more aware and just scared of the tornadoes. Tornadoes are scary. You can’t see them and the warnings are constant, so you don’t know where they’ll come from, it at all.” During the tornado warnings; one was issued shortly before 2 pm yesterday while Stacy Ann was talking to Newsday, the family has huddled together in a closet in a bedroom on the ground floor of their home.
“It’s small but the strongest part of the house, (so) that’s where we wait out the tornadoes.” Asked how she’s tried to keep Sophia calm, Stacy Ann told Newsday that because her daughter gets to sleep with mom and dad during Harvey’s passage, “She is in heaven right now.” Stacy Ann expressed sorrow that while her family is OK, so far, “Families in Simonton; a few miles from here, have to evacuate. What is sad is, some of them lost their homes two years ago and had just rebuilt. So sad.” Thankful for being spared, Stacy Ann said she and husband, Adam, “were planning to go help people in other neighbourhoods who need to pack up their stuff quickly” but by 4.30 pm yesterday, the rain was “pouring down” again and the roads leading out of their community had flooded. So the couple were forced to stay put.
Yesterday, many schools in Houston announced the cancellation of classes for all of this week.
The Katy Independent School District (KISD) was among the school systems which decided to do so.
Stacy Ann’s children go to schools within the KISD.
Referring to the announcement made early yesterday afternoon, she said, “I have a sitter lined up, so I can work from home or at the office if I need to go in.” Over in the ‘Energy Corridor’, Flockton expressed relief that her home and neighbourhood had been spared the worst, so far, from Harvey’s passage.
“We are in a good area, fortunately.
We also didn’t have tornadoes touch down near us,” Flockton told Newsday.
During a break in the rains yesterday morning, Flockton and her husband, Jason Flockton, donned boots and took a walk through their neighbourhood and out to Westheimer Road, a main eastwest road in Houston, Texas.
“Our street’s drainage is doing a brilliant job,” Flockton wrote on her Facebook page.
“When we started out the rain was heavy and there was pooling but the drains were gulping down the water. There was water up to the top on a couple of the drains but water was still flowing. The four-way intersection has puddles but was clear. As we headed down toward one of the main roads, Westheimer, there was puddling that got deeper as we walked toward the road.”
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"Trini in Houston ‘a little worried’"