When the lights come on this whole place gets ugly. But when they're out strangers fall in love
Thursday, September 29, 2005
We're Baaaaaacccccccckkk!!
Oh yeah we were a featured story on the local fox station. They interviewed us and everything. Huh Looks like Rita gave me my 15 mins of fame. The good news is we are back in our home safe and sound. Please excuse the bad writing and grammer, I am really worn out from the drive.
Saturday, September 24, 2005
High and Dry!
Wednesday, September 21, 2005
Her She Comes!!
Well we packed up last night. I went to Lowes and tried to get some plywood for the windows but they were out. I drove by this morning and there was a line from hell!! My wife and I discussed it and decide not to board up. Lets face it 144mph winds are going to ripe your house off the foundation anyway. So tomorrow morning my wife and my in-laws and I are getting the hell outta dodge. We are going to my sisters place in Dallas and will be back when it is safe. Say a prayer for the Space City!
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
FOR MY FAMILY AND FRIENDS, HURRICANE RITA
Monday, September 19, 2005
Hurricane Rita. Stay away Bitch!!
Oh crap here we go again. Well I have never experienced a Hurricane, just a tropical storm, and trust me I don't wanna be around to see one either. If it looks bad my wife and I are outta here. You can believe that!! I have never boarded up my windows though, that should be an adventure considering I am not good with tools, especially sharp ones!
Friday, September 16, 2005
California Power Devistation
By Joshua GatesActor, Photographer. Victim.
LOS ANGELES, CA, September 12, 2005 - Horror and disbelief swept through the greater Hollywood area this afternoon as a minor power-outage turned the city into a virtual war zone and local residents struggled to deal with the devastating aftermath. The outage struck at 1:35 PM, during L.A.'s busy afternoon coffee and Pilates rush hour. Traffic lights fell dark, local gyms and sushi restaurants were without power for nearly 30 minutes and many businesses were illuminated only by the light of the sun and its blistering 78 degree heat. "It was horrible," said out of work actor and voice-over artist Rick Shea. "I was in a Jamba Juice on Melrose when it hit and the blenders simply shut down. A woman lunged for my Berry Lime Sublime an after that, well, it got pretty ugly." In the ensuing panic, local radio stations broadcasted conflicting reports as to exactly which local businesses would be offering relief supplies. Almost 100 people flocked to the Starbucks at Santa Monica and La Brea only to find helpless baristas, no hot coffee and a totally meager selection of baked goods. "My mother is 83 years old and we heard on the radio that this Starbucks was going to be up and running. If she doesn't get a venti Arabian Mocha Sanani, I don't know what's going to happen to her, I really don't." said Lucinda Merino of Los Feliz. To make matters worse, those few people who did manage to get coffee were further thwarted by a total lack of artificial sweeteners on site. "Sugar in the Raw? Are you frigging kidding me?," sobbed avid salsa dancer, Enrique Santoro. "I'm on the South Beach Diet and my insulin levels are going to go crazy if I use this. Why isn't the rest of the country doing something?" Deteriorating conditions will force authorities to evacuate the thousands of people at local Quiznos, movie theaters and upscale shopping centers, including the The Beverly Center, where a policeman told CNN unrest was escalating. The officer expressed concern that the situation could worsen overnight after patrons defaced multiple "So You Think you Can Dance" posters, looted a Baby Gap and demanded free makeovers en masse at a MAC cosmetics store during the afternoon. At least 2,000 refugees, a majority of them beautiful, will travel in a bus convoy to Beverly Hills starting this evening and will be sheltered at the 8-year-old Spago on North Canon where soft omelettes with confit bacon and Hudson Valley foie gras was being airlifted in by The National Guard. Honorary Mayor of Hollywood Johnny Grant told a group of embedded reporters at a Koo Koo Roo Chicken restaurant on Larchmont that, "The scope and scale of this disaster is almost too much to comprehend. Local carwashes are at a stand-still, the tram tour at Universal Studios has been on hold for almost an hour now and I've been waiting for a rotisserie leg and thigh with a side of green beans for upwards of 15 minutes. This truly is our Tsunami." "We want to accommodate those people suffering in the Beverly Center as quickly as possible for the simple reason they have been through a horrible ordeal," Grant said. "We need water. We need edamame. We need low-carb bread," said Martha Owens, 49 who was one of the thousands trapped in the Beverly Center when the escalators stopped moving. "They need to start sending somebody through here." Along miles of coastline, the power simply surged, causing writers to lose upwards of a page of original screenplay material, causing Direct TV service to work only intermittently and forcing local residents to walk outside and look helplessly at the Pacific from their ocean view decks. "I can hardly begin to put this experience into words," said longtime Two and a Half Men writer John Edlestein. "I was just getting into my rhythm and making some real headway on a scene where Charlie Sheen parties with a busload of female volleyball players when my Power Book crapped out. I have nothing. Simply, nothing." Delivering his weekly radio address live from the White House, President Bush announced he was deploying more than 7,000 additional active-duty troops to the region. He comforted victims and praised relief workers. "But despite their best efforts, the magnitude of responding to a crisis over a disaster area this sunny and trendy has created tremendous problems," he said. "The result is that many of our citizens simply are not getting the help they need, especially in the Hollywood Hills, and that is unacceptable
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
WOW!!!
'Like a ghost,' man nearly left for dead opens his eyes BY KEITH SHARON The Orange County Register
HURRICANE KATRINA
NEW ORLEANS — This was just another body in the growing number of bodies that they encounter every day.
A human foot arching at an odd angle was visible through the front window of a locked and dark home.
The National Guard team of searchers was about to call in a "DB" (dead body) at 1927 Lopez St. in the Broadmoor district when Lt. Frederick Fell decided to investigate.
In the last few days, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has ordered searchers NOT to break into homes. They are supposed to look in through a window and knock on the door. If no one cries out for help, they are supposed to move on. If they see a body, they are supposed to log the address and move on. The morticians will remove the deceased later.
But Fell broke the rules and ordered his men to bash open the door, launching a series of events that would save a man's life and revitalize California Task Force 5 from Orange County, Calif. In the last two days, the 80-member task force had identified seven dead bodies in the same neighborhood, and they had rescued no one.
But Tuesday, 16 days after Hurricane Katrina smacked this aging community in the face, an unconscious and emaciated man identified as Edgar Hollingsworth, 74, was rescued. The man is expected to survive.
"I'm on cloud nine," said Task Force leader Marc Hawkins. "It was awesome to be a part of that."
Richard Ventura, a Task Force 5 logistics specialist who works as a paramedic for the Orange County Fire Authority, was on the scene trying to get an IV into Hollingsworth.
"I feel like my battery got recharged," Ventura said. "That's why we're here."
Medics from California Task Force 5, which had been searching in the same neighborhood, were eventually able to get intravenous fluids through a vein under the man's clavicle, an intricate curbside medical procedure that may have saved the man's life.
The man had been lying on the couch in his locked and sweltering home. Fell and Sgt. Jeremy Ridgeway, who also had been searching the neighborhood for survivors, peered through the front window at the home and saw Hollingsworth's foot extending over the edge of his couch.
When they crashed through the door, Hollingsworth didn't move. But he was breathing.
National Guard medics draped an IV bag over his ceiling fan, but his veins were too weak to support the needle. They pulled him out of the house and laid him on the sidewalk. He looked as if he weighed less than 80 pounds.
Task Force 5 sent a team that included Dr. Peter Czuleger, an emergency-room doctor at Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo, to the scene. Czuleger didn't have the proper equipment, so he improvised, using a short needle to pierce the vein under Hollingsworth's clavicle.
"It's like trying to climb into a third-story window with a stepladder," Czuleger said.
Once the IV was in place, medics were able to pump 2 liters of saline solution into the man.
The hospital attendants hadn't expected to see a survivor 16 days after the storm.
"They were surprised at the hospital that anyone in his condition would still be alive," Czuleger said. "In 24 hours, he would have been dead.
"I think the young Army guy that found him saved his life."
Afterward, the guardsmen, like the members of Task Force 5, were excited to have finally saved someone.
"Everyone's adrenaline was pumping, but they were professional about it," said National Guard officer-in-charge Bruce Gaffney said. "We're just happy we got this guy out. He needed to be saved yesterday."
Hollingsworth had been lying naked on his blue-green couch. It is unclear if he had eaten or drunk anything for several days. He was not surrounded by food or water containers. His house was still in disarray from the storm. A chair had landed on top of the kitchen table. Medical vials with the name Lillian Hollingsworth were lying on an easy chair on the other side of the room.
A pit bull puppy was also pulled from the house. It appeared to be healthy and was transported to the hospital along with Edgar Hollingsworth.
The rescue pumped up the spirits of Task Force 5, which has been mostly marking the locations of bodies for the last week. Earlier, they had been frustrated when FEMA delayed their deployment for four days, housing them in the Hyatt Regency in Dallas.
They were frustrated further when they were given the FEMA order that they weren't allowed to force their way into houses to search them. They hope Hollingsworth's rescue will coax FEMA to rethink its directive.
On Tuesday, they were congratulating each other. They celebrated that night by eating pizza in their base camp, ordered from a recently re-opened Domino's.
"You can feel the electricity around here," Ventura said.
Tuesday, September 13, 2005
Goodbye!! You sack of crap!
Monday, September 12, 2005
Those Damn Texans
Okay these guys are supposed to be professional football players right? Then why the hell do they make so many mistakes? Hey Carr, you play for the team that has bulls on the jersey, throw the ball to them not the other team. And can have the receivers and running backs out some damn glue on their fingers! Catch the ball don't drop it!! Damn it, it's like watching little league!
Friday, September 09, 2005
Thursday, September 08, 2005
HNT AND GAS PRICES
Now on to the gas prices that are sqeezing us like a bitch. I know I am feeling it simply on the fact that I have to drive 40 miles to and from work everyday. But I think this should be a signal for the american people to wake up and shout to the politicians to make a better mode of public transportation. Now cities like New York and Chicago, Boston and even San Francisco have great bus and rail lines. The rest of America needs to wake up!. I would gladly ride a train into work everyday. $1.00 to and fro is better than $50 worth of gas each week, and that's not counting my wife's car. I would car pool but no one here lives out by side of town. I think Americans need to put there personal pride aside and hop on the bus or train. Let someone else drive and hey maybe do a little walking. We would become healthier and save tons on cash.
Wednesday, September 07, 2005
FOOTBALL SEASON
So before I go back and root for the Cowboys I will give them one more chance. If they do not produce I think the head coach and quarterback should be replaced!
Saturday, September 03, 2005
Stories of survival.
Now you the how the rest of the story goes, my wife and I helped them out as much as we could. And yes the lady's parents were happily found. But I am not writing this to toot my own horn. I am writng this to remind you that all you have may be taken away in an instint. When you think the world has you at your wits end, think of this story. Think of the lady who stood in the lobby in mis-matched clothes and tattered flip flops with 20 homeless family members in an apt. with her parents missing and presumed dead saying "Put me to work, I'm ready".
Evacuees' sense of calm grows after thousands turn out to help
By JASON SPENCER
"They are less restless today than yesterday," said Harris County Tax Assessor Paul Bettencourt, who is acting as a spokesman for the operation. "It's a different mood in the hall."
Offiicals said they have room for about 8,000 more flood victims if necessary.
Nearly 10,000 volunteers — including more than 2,600 today — have reported for work at the Reliant complex since the first buses pulled into the Astrodome parking lot Thursday night.
"We have had an awful lot of volunteers come here," said Lt. Joe Leonard of the U.S. Coast Guard, who is overseeing the Reliant complex shelter operation. "It's almost overwhelming."
Dozens of volunteers lined up shoulder to shoulder guiding 2,000 evacuees who spent Friday night in the Astrodome's bleachers toward awaiting cots in Reliant Center.
So many doctors showed up that there wasn't enough work to go around, said Dr. Kenneth Mattox of the Harris County Hospital District.
"Despite rumors to the contrary, we are not short of doctors and nurses," he said. "At one point, we had four doctors for every patient."
Doctors evaluated 749 patients in one three-hour period, sending six of them to the hospital for further treatment. Five of them were children suffering from gastrointestinal symptoms, raising fears that illness might spread quickly among the tightly packed evacuees.
"We have been concerned about that since the beginning of the operation," Mattox said.
"Almost every institution in the Texas Medical Center responded," said Mike McKinney, head of the clinic at the shelter at the George R. Brown Convention Center, at a news conference today.
McKinney, of the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, said the onsite outpatient clinic has access to ambulances, specialists, nurses and mental health workers.
Meanwhile, the Red Cross set up a bank of computers at the Reliant complex so evacuees could register on the agency's family links site — www.redcross.org — said Dr. Chris Johnson, who is helping oversee the relief agency's Astrodome operation. About 1,000 registered on the site in the first three hours.
Local law enforcement agencies have assigned roughly 500 officers to the Reliant complex and surrounding neighborhoods, but they have made few arrests, said Assistant Chief Brian Lumpkin of the Houston Police Department. Police made six arrests in the area last night, including one for a felony assault. The rest were misdemeanors, he said.
Officers are also investigating a possible sexual assault of a child, Lumpkin said. No arrests had been made as of mid-afternoon.
Police also reported that crime is down city-wide this weekend, Bettencourt said.
The George R. Brown
It was dangerous to stand still in the volunteer area of the George R. Brown Convention Center this afternoon. Thousands of fast-moving volunteers were likely to run you down moving carts, boxes or trucks.
Volunteers of every age, size, skin color and attire worked briskly and surprisingly smoothly together, sorting, piling, arranging, while hundreds of others waited their turn and enthusiastically applauded.
The vast room set aside for donations and volunteers was already near capacity with shoes, toys, books, toiletries, shirts, children's clothing and all the things needed by people who suddenly have nothing. The arrivals at the Polk Street door of the center were non-stop: it took four people working full-time just to sort and fold towels.
Officials late today were unable to say how many volunteers had arrived to help at the convention center but there easily were thousands prepared to offer assistance.
``This effort has just exploded,'' said Keith Amos, a surgical fellow at M.D. Anderson Cancer who was volunteering a third night after working Thursday and Friday night at Reliant Center. ``The scene in here is just amazing. It makes you feel good.''
Elsewhere, volunteers who showed up to start the 1 p.m. shift at the Houston Food Bank on the Eastex Freeway at Cavalcade today were told about 1:30 to leave. The food bank had so much food they were having to take time to organize and stack it out of safety concerns. About 200 volunteers outside the food bank had traffic stacked up in that area.
Star of Hope shelter
At the Star of Hope shelter, 1811 Ruiz, the pantry is well-stocked with donated supplies but word has been slow to circulate to those in need, City Councilman Gordon Quan said today.
``It's wonderful that so many people have given clothing and other things but it's important that people know how to access the system to receive needed supplies,'' said Quan, who had been assisting the shelter earlier.
Volunteers who turned out today to help distribute supplies had little to do, he said.
"People have volunteered time and sorted through everything, but they're just sitting around,'' Quan said. ``It's frustrating that people have been so generous but no one's picking it up.''
Evacuees can pick up clothes from 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. seven days a week.
Meanwhile inside and outside the Astrodome today, there have been many people walking around with signs listing the loved ones they're trying to find. Loudspeaker announcements directed evacuees to designated areas to find relatives - half of the alphabet on even hours and the other on odd hours. There was also an announcement of free flights to Denver. And there was a man walking around with a sign offering a ride out of town.
Outside, a phalanx of hundreds of volunteers created a 200-yard-long pathway for a number of evacuees to transfer from the Astrodome to Reliant Center this afternoon. Volunteers were carrying evacuees' belongings for them and pushing them in wheelchairs across the pavement.
One of these evacuees, Arthur Combre, 79, said amid dozens of attentive volunteers, he was rescued off a rooftop in East New Orleans after three days, made it to a church shelter and finally was evacuated.
"Nobody in New Orleans was helping," he said. But "we haven't wanted for anything since we've been here."
Over at the George R. Brown, volunteers welcomed evacuees with applause as they got off the buses.
The Houston Fire Department has mandated a limit of approximately 7,000 people for the convention center. Currently, there are beds for about 2,000, mostly large inflated mattresses. More beds, including cots or sleeping pads, are needed.
"We have calls out to try to get those resources," said Rep. Rick Noriega, who is in charge of the effort at the center.
Admitting they grossly over-estimated the number of evacuees who can be sheltered safely at the Astrodome, local leaders agreed Friday to open the convention center and other Reliant facilities to Katrina victims and canceled upcoming events at some of the venues.
About 200 evacuees arrived at the convention center about 11:30 p.m. Friday, most of them in private automobiles from Baytown, where they had been temporarily sheltered after driving from New Orleans. A busload of evacuees arrived about 8 a.m. today, but it was not known where they came from.
Local officials were also stationing people on the road between Houston and Lafayette, La., to count the buses en route here and to evaluate passengers so more will be known about their needs once that arrive here.
"Our system has been tested and we are ready for the rest of the week," City Councilman Adrian Garcia said. "We are expecting from a couple of hundred to 5,000 more people (at the convention center)."
Aaron Bayles, a registered nurse who works at St. Luke's Hospital, brought his stethescope and blood pressure cuff to the Astrodome this morning after he heard there was a need for medical personnel, but officials there asked him to go to the convention center instead, where they said there was a need for registered nurses.
Officials postponed today's scheduled Labor Day Classic at Reliant Stadium between football rivals Texas Southern University and Prairie View A&M. And they canceled Fiestas Patrias, a Mexican independence day celebration that had been expected to draw up to 50,000 to Reliant Center on Sunday.
Mayor Bill White said the situation was so dire in Louisiana and elsewhere on the Gulf Coast that the Houston area needs to do what is necessary to aid that region's homeless."We're going to kick people out who were planning to do things. This is an emergency," he said. "If it entails somebody suing us, then OK."
Six Flags Astroworld, across the South Loop from Reliant Park, announced it will be closed today, Sunday and Monday to ensure traffic does not interfere with relief efforts.
During a visit to Reliant Park Friday, Texas Gov. Rick Perry said he would be sending 1,000 National Guard troops to Houston to help with security around shelters. Some may be arriving by Sunday, he said.
The Astrodome housed 15,000 evacuees Friday night, with 3,000 at Reliant Arena and 8,000 at Reliant Center, Red Cross spokeswoman Denise Bishop said.
Local officials had planned since early Wednesday to use the Dome as shelter for 25,000 evacuees from the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, which lacked electricity, air conditioning and working toilets.
The plan was based on the premise that a stadium that held 62,000 for football could comfortably house 25,000.
But late Thursday, officials at the Astrodome stopped taking evacuees when its population reached 12,000, and Mike Ivy, interim fire marshal for the Houston Fire Department, deemed it overcrowded.
Some evacuees were moved into Reliant Arena, while others remained on the buses.
Harris County Judge Robert Eckels said emergency planning coordinators in the county Homeland Security & Emergency Management division are learning on the fly what works and what doesn't.
"The plan is evolving, continuously changing," he said.
About 35,000 cots had been delivered to the Astrodome, but only a few thousand were set up on the Dome floor, and the fire marshal's office concluded more would be dangerous.
Evacuees slept Thursday night in Dome seats, on the floor and in the grass outside.
"Easily, 800 people were sleeping outside the Dome on the grass on cardboard boxes," said Tracy McGaugh, a South Texas College of Law assistant professor who worked an overnight shift as a Dome volunteer.
On Friday night, only 4,500 of the 15,000 evacuees in the Dome had cots, Bishop said.McGaugh and Kathy Bergin, a colleague from the law school who also volunteered, said security at the Dome seemed inadequate. Few officers were in sight, and groups of young men congregated in various places, making passers-by uneasy, McGaugh said.
Eckels said security has been added, along with an increased presence of volunteers among the evacuees.
White said Houstonians have nothing to fear of the recent arrivals. "I've met with some of the survivors," he said. "They are just people who are scared. They've been through hell and are thankful there's a city with a big heart to welcome them."
Eckels said he hoped to reduce the number of evacuees in the Dome from 15,000 to 12,000. Reliant Arena eventually will house 3,000, with another 8,000 in the large exhibition halls at Reliant Center. George R. Brown will take about 7,500, White said.
White's staff called an emergency City Council meeting for Monday to decide whether to set aside $10 million in a special fund to help with the evacuees.
Mayra Beltran / Chronicle Officials hope to reduce the number of evacuees at the Astrodome, currently 15,000, by opening other shelters. |
The money would pay for shelter, transportation, food vouchers and clothing. The city would seek reimbursement from the federal government.
Louisiana officials initially intended to send only Superdome evacuees to the Astrodome. That plan has changed. Evacuees from around Louisiana are now being bused to Houston, Eckels said.
Earlier Friday, a long line of cars formed on Kirby, waiting to turn into the Reliant Park complex or a makeshift donation site that has popped up nearby.
Gracie Conner of Sugar Land inched along in her SUV on a return trip to the site. Earlier, she had met evacuee Danielle Harper, who began crying, saying she couldn't find any clothes that fit her. Conner bought a load of clothes, gave some to Harper and dropped the rest off.
She invited Harper to stay with her and her husband, and Harper accepted.
"It hurts me. Can you imagine one day you wake up and you have no house, no car, no food? I am going to put people in my house," Conner said.
Volunteers from a number of churches may begin helping prepare meals for Reliant Park evacuees Tuesday or Wednesday, Eckels said. They would likely supplement the services of Aramark, which is providing food now.Aramark is not taking food donated by area restaurants and residents on the orders of city officials, said company spokeswoman Kathleen Keenan.
Friday, September 02, 2005
Cnn, Fox, Msnbc, and others
Thursday, September 01, 2005
Please help how ever you can!
• Adventist Community Services: 800-381-7171
• American Red Cross: 800-HELP NOW (435-7669) English, 800-257-7575 Spanish
• America's Second Harvest: 800-344-8070
• Catholic Charities, USA: 703-549-1390
• Christian Disaster Response: 941-956-5183 or 941-551-9554
• Christian Reformed World Relief Committee: 800-848-5818
• Church World Service: 800-297-1516
• Convoy of Hope: 417-823-8998
• Lutheran Disaster Response: 800-638-3522
• Mennonite Disaster Service: 717-859-2210
• Nazarene Disaster Response: 888-256-5886
• Operation Blessing: 800-436-6348
• Presbyterian Disaster Assistance: 800-872-3283
• Salvation Army: 1-800-SAL-ARMY (1-800-725-2769)
• Southern Baptist Convention -- Disaster Relief: 800-462-8657, ext. 6440
• United Jewish Communities: 800-554-8583
• United Methodist Committee on Relief: 800-554-8583
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