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Sep 24, 2008 2:27 pm US/Central
Ike-Battered Galveston Allows Residents To Return
(AP)
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Residents returned to their Galveston properties to find much was destroyed when Hurricane Ike hit the state.
CBS
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Piles of rubble line this street in the historic part of Galveston on Sept. 24, 2008 -- the day residents were allowed to return to the city.
CBS
Thousands of Galveston residents streamed back into their island city early Wednesday, choosing home over stern warnings from local leaders that the city is "broken" and teeming with dangerous germs, rats and snakes.
The island was shut down after Hurricane Ike slammed ashore Sept. 13, but reopened Wednesday morning. Huge lines of traffic backed up on the one interstate leading into Galveston, but things appeared to go smoothly once the city of about 57,000 started letting people in about 6 a.m.
Ruben Rosas, 74, had evacuated to San Antonio and joined the line on Interstate 45 at about 3 a.m. Once he made his way to his first-floor apartment located on a bayou, he found the walls and nearly all his possessions were no longer there. He did find a large cross that had been on his father's coffin and a small "King of Dads" statue his kids gave him when they were young.
"This is just sad, but the good thing is, I'm still around," Rosas said. "I can recuperate these things sooner or later."
City officials had prepared residents for such scenes, painting a dreary picture about living conditions on the island since Ike's devastation.
"When you come back it's not going to be the same Galveston Island you left," Galveston Mayor Pro Tem Danny Weber said Tuesday. "It's been damaged. It's been broken."
Don't come back without tetanus shots and rat bait, Weber and others warned residents. Be ready for swarms of mosquitoes and lurking snakes. Residents were told to bring their own water and not to even consider turning on the gas or flipping an electrical switch until one of the island's three remaining electrical inspectors can inspect the property.
There is little drinkable water, limited food, sewer and medical facilities. A nightly curfew from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. is in effect.
"We do want to caution folks. There will be some struggles," FEMA spokesman Marty Bahamonde said.
Hurricane Ike, a Category 2 storm, battered Galveston with 110 mph winds and a 12-foot storm surge, flooding homes and destroying businesses, more than a week ago. At least 61 deaths, including 26 in Texas were attributed to Ike.
About 45,000 of the city's residents fled Galveston Island, about 50 miles southeast of Houston.
Residents of the island's west end, which was severely damaged by Ike, can visit their homes, but are not being allowed to stay in them.
City Manager Steve LeBlanc said more hotels in Galveston are reopening and will be available for residents who return and determine that their homes are uninhabitable.
But LeBlanc expects those rooms will go quickly. City officials are working on a plan to provide temporary shelters on the mainland for those who find homes they can't live in. But LeBlanc stressed the shelters would be available only for a short time.
City leaders also are looking at setting up a shuttle service to take residents from the temporary shelters to their houses during the day so they can make repairs and clean up.
While electricity and natural gas are being restored in Galveston, LeBlanc said those services in each home will have to be inspected by the city before being allowed to be turned on again.
But Galveston is slowly coming back to life with some stores and restaurants reopening while there are other signs throughout southeast Texas of recovery.
CenterPoint Energy Inc. reported on Tuesday that 73 percent of its 2.26 million customers now had electricity. Entergy Texas reported that 89 percent of its nearly 393,000 customers affected by Hurricane Ike had power again.
On Tuesday, Galveston Mayor Lyda Ann Thomas and other city leaders were in Washington, D.C., to ask lawmakers for nearly $2.5 billion in emergency funds.
The city tried before to allow residents back. It announced Sept. 16 that people could briefly return under a "look and leave" plan, causing evacuees all over the state to pack up and head for the coast. But hours later, it abruptly halted the policy.
Galveston leaders remain optimistic their city would bounce back after Ike.
"This is our island. We are going to rebuild it and we are going to rebuild it bigger and better than it was," Weber said.
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