News in English

Millions of Texans lose power in the aftermath of Beryl

Millions of Texans lose power in the aftermath of Beryl

Beryl made landfall Monday around 4 a.m. near Matagorda, Texas, as a Category 1 Hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph. Beryl was downgraded to a tropical storm around 10 a.m. Monday as it moved toward Houston.

AUSTIN (KXAN) — Three people in the Houston area died as Hurricane Beryl pushed through Texas on Monday, state leaders said at a press conference.

Authorities said two people died after trees fell on two, separate houses in Harris County. Acting Houston Police Chief Larry Satterwhite said on social media an HPD information security officer died after he was "caught in rising floodwaters" while he was on his way to work.

Beryl made landfall Monday around 4 a.m. near Matagorda, Texas, as a Category 1 Hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 80 mph. Beryl was downgraded to a tropical storm around 10 a.m. Monday as it moved toward Houston.

State leaders, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, held a press conference Monday afternoon with an update on the state's response to the now-tropical storm.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is overseas, leading an economic development mission in Taiwan, South Korea and Japan. Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is serving as acting governor while Abbott is out of the country.

The storm knocked out power for more than 2 million people around the Houston area. Beryl brought significant rain to southeast Texas causing flooding across Houston's roads and bayous.

Patrick said the timeline for restoring power is unclear, adding that the storm knocked down 10 transmission towers.

As of 1 p.m. Monday, Beryl was a tropical storm moving north to northwest of Houston with sustained winds around 60 mph.

  • State leaders, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and TDEM Chief Nim Kidd, held a press conference Monday afternoon with an update on the state’s response to Hurricane Beryl. (KXAN Photo/Frank Martinez)
  • State leaders, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and TDEM Chief Nim Kidd, held a press conference Monday afternoon with an update on the state’s response to Hurricane Beryl. (KXAN Photo/Frank Martinez)
  • State leaders, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and TDEM Chief Nim Kidd, held a press conference Monday afternoon with an update on the state’s response to Hurricane Beryl. (KXAN Photo/Frank Martinez)
  • State leaders, including Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and TDEM Chief Nim Kidd, held a press conference Monday afternoon with an update on the state’s response to Hurricane Beryl. (KXAN Photo/Frank Martinez)

Hundreds of disaster workers flocked to the Texas coast to join several emergency response vehicles, thousands of relief supplies and shelf-stable meals provided by the Red Cross, according to a Monday release.

Red Cross officials reported 125 people stayed in seven evacuation shelters.

Читайте на 123ru.net