Austin, TX
“Hunting for warm places to go”: Austinites cope as outages linger
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AUSTIN — Haggard households in search of a distraction from still-dark properties discovered refuge Saturday morning on the Central Library downtown, the place Jennifer Parker and Justin Havird watched their two babies taking part in with Legos and crayons within the welcoming heat.
Arlo and Vernon, ages 5 and a pair of, had been with out electrical energy of their Austin residence for 3 days, leaving their frazzled dad and mom trying to find an escape.
“We awoke and began looking for heat locations to go,” Havird stated. The day began with a visit to Entire Meals for breakfast, then a playground cease to offer the youngsters some train time outdoors, and eventually a library go to for one more distraction.
Though crews had been steadily reconnecting clients Saturday, there have been nonetheless greater than 66,000 properties and companies with out energy by late afternoon after a midweek ice storm wrought chaos on town’s electrical system.
The unfortunate spent the day tossing out a whole lot of {dollars} of spoiled groceries, wishing for decent showers and even burying pet fish that perished. Parker and Havird, and different households with kids, had simply spent a lot of the week struggling to entertain children with colleges closed and restricted choices.
“Our home is kind of a wreck, there’s takeout containers in all places,” Parker stated, although for Arlo consuming takeout for the previous few days was the perfect a part of not having energy.
Although fatigued, Parker and Havird are veterans relating to surviving outages. When the 2021 freeze pressured the household from their residence, Vernon was an toddler as they sought shelter in Havird’s College of Texas workplace.
Breastfeeding with no working fridge added a stage of complexity that each dad and mom had been grateful to keep away from this time round.
Line crews grapple a heavy workload
Half of an oak tree, cleaved down the center, lay within the entrance yard of a ranch-style residence in a North Austin neighborhood as Austin Power employees in neon yellow security vests clearing branches and making ready to re-energize an influence line.
Saturday’s blue skies and delicate breeze belied the nasty winter situations that coated Austin’s hundreds of thousands of bushes in a thick coat of ice that introduced limbs down on energy strains, severing households from mild and warmth.
The burden of restoring electrical energy to a whole lot of hundreds of properties throughout town has fallen to crews working all through the night time to evaluate every outage and make the mandatory repairs. Realizing that households had spent as much as 4 days with out energy, crews labored as shortly as doable below the burden of neighborhood expectations.
Forrest Gifford, {an electrical} distribution crew chief with Austin Power, stated the ice storm produced essentially the most catastrophic injury he’d seen in his 15-year profession. Downed bushes, stay wires and different hazards made the work extraordinarily slow-going and tough, Gifford stated.
With the prospect of many extra miles of energy line to examine and restore, the lengthy hours had been taking a toll.
“We’re a tight-knit group of men, and ensuring we’re secure…” Gifford stated, his voice catching as he mirrored on the 16- to 18-hour days earlier than persevering with. “We attempt to handle one another on the job and off the job, and our households are necessary to us.”
Austinites have expressed rising frustration over town’s lack of communication and the tempo of energy restoration. Austin’s intensive tree cover, usually a supply of delight, turned towards owners when ice accumulation resulted in additional injury than the city-owned utility anticipated.
However the exasperation residents felt for town’s response didn’t lengthen to crew’s efforts Saturday.
Gifford and his fellow line employees had been greeted with donuts and thank-yous from grateful neighbors who stopped to observe the work.
Counting on the kindness of neighbors
P. D. Perry Jr., 79, reunited together with his niece on his entrance garden Saturday afternoon after virtually 4 days with out communication together with his household.
The retired custodian lives alone in South Austin and stated members of the family throughout the nation had been making an attempt to name since Wednesday, when his residence misplaced energy and his cellphone died. Lastly, they despatched Perry’s niece to examine on him.
Perry stated his neighbors have been ensuring he’s OK, distributing Jimmy John’s sandwiches to residents on the block and happening joint H-E-B runs to restock spoiled groceries.
Regardless of the generosity of his neighbors, Perry stated he’s been brief on meals the previous few days, relying primarily on chilly cuts. He stated he’s upset within the metropolis for letting energy outages final so lengthy.
“The one factor I’ve is water,” Perry stated. “Nobody ought to should undergo this.”
Fortunately, staying busy with out electrical energy hasn’t been an issue for Perry. He stated he’s been studying the newspaper each day and solely ran out of issues to do Wednesday, when the Austin American-Statesman wasn’t in a position to be delivered to his residence.
Stately bushes took the brunt of the ice storm
Blankets and sheets as soon as used to guard the Taylor household’s outside vegetation from the ice — to various levels of success — had been draped alongside their chain-link fence because the household of three wrapped up a day of yard work and tree cleanup.
Navvab Taylor stated it was heartbreaking to see the greater than 200-year-old bushes fall of their back and front yards.
“At night time when all the things is frozen you simply hear them like crash down,” she stated, taking a break from lining up tree limbs and branches alongside the curb.
Taylor stated she and her husband, Aaron, obtained artistic developing with methods to maintain their 11-year-old son, Leo, busy when college was canceled for a lot of the week. Their days consisted of practising ukulele, doing puzzles and visiting Navvab’s workplace to cost up their electronics.
“It’s thrilling to have at some point off of faculty,” Taylor stated. “However when it’s Thursday, Friday, and now we don’t know if there’s college on Monday, it begins to get tiring for everyone.”
Even so, the household feels fortunate to have been ready earlier than the storm began, Taylor stated. They stocked up on gallons of water, hand heaters and battery-powered studying lamps that additionally they shared with neighbors.
The storm, she stated, put issues into perspective for her household.
“You don’t understand how a lot you depend on energy and web till you don’t have it,” Taylor stated. “When you consider individuals in different elements of the world who’ve been with out warmth and energy for months, you understand, oh, that is nothing.”
Misplaced groceries means misplaced cash
Sitting within the chilly front room of his South Austin residence, Robert Louvet packed two coolers stuffed with perishable meals to take to his son’s residence earlier than it spoils. It was too late for different meals that went dangerous in his fridge after 4 days with out energy.
“Town’s not going to pay me for my groceries,” Louvet stated, pissed off. “That’s going to return out of my Social Safety.”
Louvet stated he and his spouse didn’t have hassle staying entertained all through the facility outage. Though their front room is lined with a whole lot of films on DVD — the gathering is rivaled solely by the couple’s residence library — they spent the week studying in the home they’ve owned for greater than 35 years.
The low temperatures didn’t faze them a lot, Louvet stated. “We’re used to it being a bit of bit nippy.” Their residence was in-built 1952, and though it lacks a number of the insulation of newer homes close by, Louvet stated they love their gas-powered, older residence, which stored them secure within the storm.
Disclosure: H-E-B and the College of Texas have been monetary supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan information group that’s funded partially by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Monetary supporters play no position within the Tribune’s journalism. Discover a full checklist of them right here.
Austin, TX
U.S. Supreme Court denies Rodney Reed's petition for a new trial
TEXAS — The U.S. Supreme Court has turned down death row inmate Rodney Reed’s most recent petition to review his claims of innocence.
On Nov. 22, 2023, Reed filed a petition for a writ of certiorari, which is a request that the Supreme Court order a lower court to send up the case for review. This came after a judge denied Reed a new trial in 2021. The presiding judge, State District Judge J.D. Langley, stated in his ruling that Reed had not proven he is innocent. The Supreme Court denied the writ of certiorari Tuesday.
With this latest development, it is now solely up to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to determine whether Reed will be granted a new trial.
Reed was sentenced to death for the 1996 killing of 19-year-old Stacey Stites. He was accused of raping and strangling Stites in Bastrop and leaving her by the road.
Reed claimed evidence in the 1998 trial was suppressed by prosecutors that would’ve exonerated him, including that Stites and Reed were having an affair. The death row inmate has long maintained that Stites’ fiance, former police officer Jimmy Fennell, was the actual killer and killed Stites because of the alleged affair.
Lawyers for Reed also said he wanted to DNA test crime-scene evidence he believed would have exonerated him. This includes the belt that was used to strangle the victim. The Supreme Court ruled in April that the DNA testing could still be considered.
Reed remains a death row inmate presently and it is unclear when a date for his execution will be set.
Austin, TX
Texas hiker dies on trail at Grand Canyon National Park; officials warn of extreme heat
A hiker collapsed and died on a trail in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona over the weekend, prompting parks officials to warn about the dangers of hiking in extreme heat.
Scott Sims, 69, of Austin, Texas, was attempting to reach Phantom Ranch via the South Kaibab Trail for an overnight stay when he was found semi-conscious around 7 p.m. Saturday, the National Parks Service (NPS) said in a statement on Monday.
Sims became unresponsive a short time later, and bystanders performed CPR until three NPS paramedics arrived, parks officials said. All attempts to resuscitate Sims were unsuccessful.
Sims collapsed on the River Trail, about halfway between the Silver Bridge and Black Bridge near Phantom Ranch, according to the NPS. Temperatures on exposed parts of the trail can reach 120 degrees in the shade, the agency said.
HIKER LOST FOR 10 DAYS FOUND ALIVE IN NORTHERN CALIFORNIA MOUNTAINS
“Park rangers strongly advise not hiking in the inner canyon during the heat of the day between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m.,” NPS said.
Officials said that its efforts to help hikers during the summer months may be delayed due to limited staff, an increased number of rescue calls, safety requirements for staff and helicopter usage being limited in extreme heat or periods of inclement weather.
COUPLE MISSING IN UTAH MAY HAVE BEEN SWEPT AWAY IN FLASH FLOOD WHILE EXPLORING TRAIL ON UTV
NPS and the Coconino Medical Examiner are investigating the death. No cause of death was immediately provided.
The death comes after a Salt Lake City fire captain died in a rafting accident at Dinosaur National Monument in Colorado.
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An NPS review of deaths in national parks between 2014 and 2019 found that hiking was the second-deadliest recreational activity behind driving, while drowning caused the second-highest number of unintentional deaths after motor vehicle crashes.
Austin, TX
Victim found dead in South Austin; APD investigating
AUSTIN, Texas – The Austin Police Department is investigating after a person was found dead in South Austin.
Austin police said on Monday, July 1, around 5:30 p.m., officers were called to investigate a homicide at an apartment complex in the 6700 block of Windrift Way.
When officers arrived, they found a victim who had penetrating injuries. The victim was pronounced dead on scene.
A person of interest and witnesses are being interviewed by detectives.
Police said this is believed to be an isolated incident.
This is a developing story, refresh for the latest updates
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