tv CBS Overnight News CBS August 28, 2017 2:05am-3:59am EDT
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such as, boats, rescue teams, other efforts, such as personnel, to make sure we would be able to respond to the challenges. in places that were hardest hit by the hurricane. such as the, near corpus christi, down by, port areas like that. people were able to evacuate and get to safe ground. as a result, it minimized any loss of life. >> did you make the call about evacuations? >> well, the evacuation calls of course, are up to local officials. and now is not the time to second guess the calls they made. what my job is to work with them to assist them in any way possible to make sure we save as many lives as we can. >> there have been reports of, of emergency responders having to prioritize life and death decisions. do you have the resources that you need in place? >> you know, what
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responders do on a daily basis, is have to make priorities based on life and death decisions. they know how to respond to these, challenges, and they're doing a tremendous job. >> governor, the country is watching and wishing you luck thank you for joining us. >> thank you. there were several dramatic rescues today about 30 miles south of here in dickinson, texas. demarco morgan was there. >> look at this coast guard helicopter. just one we have seen. a number out here in this area. but they're also making a rescues and whenever you see them hovering over an area that means a rescue is under way. you see these boat rescues. taking play right now. this boat right here looks like it is actually full. of people here. people have been going by, some of the folks who had to be rescued giving themz up. waving. very grateful for the people who have been helping them as well. and there they are, waving at us. they're very happy to be safe. the little boy is waving. happy for them as we
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who are unaccounted for, in this area. let's go ahead and talk to this family. family that was rescued, just not long ago. guys. thank you, glad you are safe. where are you coming from? what happened? >> we were in neighborhood, by chantilly, all the homes are flooded. we had to go upstairs in the, came by by boat. we flagged them. picked us up. bra. us to the church. >> describe your house, full of walter, where were you guys? >> we have a two-story home. on the first floor, it's up to here. and all of the furniture is just floating.
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this is the cbs "overnight news." jericka duncan's report took her to the great depths of greater heights, texas. >> reporter: you can see we are waist high in water. in the greater heights neighborhood near downtown houston. this area i'm told is normally a playground. right over here, a baseball field. but as the you can see, the water has taken over the floodwaters very serious. people in this neighborhood are not coming in here unless they have waders on. but for the most part it is really preventing people from getting from point a to point b. now i am also told there its a bayou nearby. and there are a lot of bayous in the area. that is also a big concern. with the amount of rain that its coming, those
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overflowing. coming into the neighborhoods, and as you can see this is just one example of just how dangerous these floodwaters are, and how significant the water levels are at this time. aside from seeing scenes like this, we have seen cars abandoned. we have seen people struggling. to get help in some instances. but all and all, people know that they need to stay inside, it its very dangerous out here. and of course, we already know that this is just the beginning, houston is expecked to receive even more rain. so we can imagine what this will look like, when it is all said and done. >> jericka, thanks. scott pagett, chief meteorologist at our cbs station in dallas fort worth. scott, we have a long way to go with this one. >> thanks, mark, we take a look, tropical storm harvey, winds at 40 miles per hour. what's interesting to me is, now starting to see a little dry air getting pulled in to this storm, still seeing these feeder bands
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my concern is though, overnight tonight into tomorrow morning, getting closer towards open water. and the latest forecast track has it back out over open water. strengthening a bit by late monday night into tuesday morning. then turning closer toward houston. wednesday, into thursday. as a tropical storm. downgrading to tropical depression into thursday, friday. into louisiana and arkansas. as you take a look over four hours, see the rain continuing to pile up in houston. now into parts of louisiana. those outer rain bands rotating their way on in. as you take a look, continuing to see the rain piling up. the estimated radar for the past 48 hours. look at this. anywhere between 20, 2 inches in parts of -- the legrange area. houston. 20, 25 inches. not done rit twith the rain yet. we will see 8, to a foot of rain. 15 inches of rain, by thursday, friday. this is already, a storm that is, in the r
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we might see the most rain ever from a tropical system, from tropical storm harvey. as we go through the next few days. mark? >> thank you, scott. american red cross volunteers from across the country are traveling here to provide food and shelter to storm victims. >> reporter: the floodwaters keep rising because of the nonstop rain. that's creating a problem for relief workers who are trying to set up new shelters. this caravan belongs to the american red cross. it is loaded with cots, blankets, even a blood supply that is in there. but, it's stranded here. they cannot move. they have to wait for the u.s. coast guard to escort them to make sure the supplies and the volunteers get to the shelters safely. food is also major need in the shelters. red cross workers have been loading snacks, walter and ready to eat meals for what its expected to be thousand of
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evacuees. the red cross has been working with local authorities, to find a safe, and dry path to the shelters. but it is such a volatile situation here that that changes every time it rains. going as short at four miles can take several hours. the main goal is to get there safely. mark. >> omar, thank you. a reporter with our houston cbs affiliate, khou may have saved a truck driver's life this morning. it played out on live tv. reporter, brandi smith notice aid driver trapped as his tractor-trailer was being swallowed by floodwaters. just then, a harris county sheriff's deputy drove by, towing an air boat. and not a moment too soon. >> here we go, we have a boat coming. a boat coming. i'm going to flag. flag these guys down. and see, see -- 6 hold on. just a second.
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are you guys, are you guys headed down to the truck right here? >> no. >> there is a truck driver stuck here in 10 feet of water. >> thank you. okay. these guys have a boat. got the harris county sheriff water rescue teams. an air boat here. hopefully we can get down to this guy. sir! they're putting the boat in just now. >> okay. >> they're on their way. >> all right. >> here we go. the air boat. for the harris county sheriff's office now approaching the semi. that has been stalled here, headed east, headed westbound in the eastbound lanes. i don't have any word on, on how long he has been there. or what kind of condition he is in. i am sure he is very, very wet, very cold. very frightened. i am terrified for him. and here he comes.
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i feel like i can finally breathe. kind of a sigh of relief. >> the truck driver named robert is okay. and as this played out, khou had to evacuate its studios because floodwaters were pouring in. the station is broadcasting again now, from higher ground. up next, how the president is responding to the first natural disaster of his administration.
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back from houston. harvey is an early test for the trump administration. the president keeping tabs of the storm. not all he had on his mind. >> reporter: out of sight for most of the weekend at camp david, president trump tweeted sever times about hurricane harvey. great coordination between agencies at all levels of government, he wrote. good news is that we have great talent on the ground. >> i would look to say president trump is extremely concerned. >> aide said mr. trump was briefed about the storm and cabinet members this morning. but the president has been weathering his own political storm since friday night. as harvey was making landfall he pardoned the controversial
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former arizona sheriff joe arpaio, convicted of unfairly targeted undocumented immigrants. it was a move his own legal team advised against. house speaker paul ryan was one of several republicans who criticized the decision. saying, law enforcement officials have a special responsibility to respect the rights of everyone in the united states. we should not allow anyone to believe that responsibility is diminished by this pardon. >> mr. trump's homeland security adviser, defended the president's action. >> just about every modern president ends up with controversial pardons. i think other presidents were clear on it. i certainly don't think it is fair to characterize him as not caring about the rule of law. >> the white house announced president trump will travel to damaged areas of texas tuesday. unclear which cities he will visit, the white house is wog rkinon logistics with local officials. >> thank you. still ahead, an army of
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your toilet is germ-ridden with mineral buildup. clorox toilet bowl cleaner with bleach is no match against limescale. but lysol power toilet bowl cleaner has 10x more cleaning power against limescale. so switch to lysol. what it takes to protect. roads turned to river in the town tough belaire outside houston. jamie yuccas shows us dangers in the streets. >> reporter: i'm standing on a side street here in belaire, ten miles southwest of houston. this just gets deeper as you go further down. point out, you can see the speed limit sign. get an idea of how deep the water can get. about cut in half. i can te
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just a few hours ago, the water had not gone over the median here. it is now, gone over the median. and it is kreecreeping towards homes. further down, a number of homes are flooded. there are apartment buildings people are parking their cars on fifth and sixth floor parking garages to get the cars out of harm's way, if that comes. you've talk to city officials. sounds like here in belaire, water is falling down in rain form, an inch an hour. they have gotten 15 inches of rain so far. more than a foot. since the storm started. we are expected to get another 10 inches today. i can tell you since we have been standing out here. we have gotten at least a cup more with how far the water has come up. that's the situation out here. people really being asked to just stay at home. and not get out on the roadways. especially around the city of houston. >> jamie. thanks. >> san antonio on the western edge of the storm is offering thousands of beds to those escaping
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mi mireya villarreal is there. >> reporter: rescue crews from around the country are converging here in san an toney at freeman coliseum. facility best known for hosting the city rodeo. more than 900 cots are set up behind me. for first responders. bus drivers for the military. they will come here. they will regroup. then they will head out to battle hurricane harvey. now more than 900 people from corpus christi bayside, rockport area evacuated to shelters in the san antonio area. many of them are getting word they may not have homes to return to. these are families told by authorities, it will be days before they can head back into town. now, right now we know that, behar county, san antonio, coordinating on every level. so far, 2,000 first responders have come through this facility. they are expecting more. they are also expecting about 200 buss to start here, and head to houston to pick up evacuees, bringing them back to the al
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back now in houston. hard to believe, but we may not have reached the halfway point in the slow-moving catastrophe. harvey, a tropical storm is expected to dump up to 6 inches of additional rain overnight. some place mas may get two feet friday. 1,000 water rescues were made. 250 highways in texas are closed. david begn alaud is in houston. this is denise and her baby, santiago. were you able to call for help? >> yes, we were. and my in-law and my brother-in-law. they were able to come and help us. our apartment got flooded by 3, 4 inches of water. >> where are you going to go? a place to go?
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>> my in-laws house. here. >> watch the water. watch the water. lift the baby. lift the baby. yeah, yeah, okay. what's happening. people are driving through like this. and, and, you start putting people like denise and her baby in danger. we have seen for the last hour, people bringing friends out on little rubber dinghies, rafts, bringing them to higher ground. it is still falling at a really heavy clip here. and if you look just in the distance here, you have a city bus stuck in the water. multiple vehicles. people tried to drive through it. and got stuck. back to you. >> thanks, david. if you want to help victims of harvey you can go to red cross.org. more storm coverage and local news of this cbs station, on our streaming channel, cbsn@cbsnews.com. and first thing tomorrow on "cbs this morning." i'm mark strassmann reporting from houston. thank you for joining us.
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the storm that won't quit. >> this is the worst i have ever seen it. >> after blasting the texas coast as a category four hurricane, harvey unleashes catastrophic flooding. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall if not an all-time record. >> this area i'm told normally a playground right over here a baseball field. >> rising waters left many scrambling for their lives. others waded in waist deep water at a nursing home. more than 1,000 rescues have been made. >> i have been stuck under this overpass all night. >> and a reporter saved a man's life on live tv. >> there is a truck driver struck here in 10 feet of water.
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and here he comes. i feel like i can finally breathe. ♪ >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." good evening. i'm mark strassmann reporting from houston, texas. harvey the most powerful hurricane to hit the state since john f. kennedy was president is now a massive tropical storm. it is expected to churn over southeast texas well into the week, dumping more than 4 feet of rain on areas including houston. in a tweet national weather service said the breadth and intense team of this rainfall are beyond anything experienced before. more than 1,000 people were rescued here today from flooded cars, homes, and businesses. many had to scramble to rooftops to escape. at least 2 people are confirmed dead, but officials fear that number will rise. harvey made landfall along the gulf coast of texas ay
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as a category 4 hurricane. with a tremendous surge of seawater and winds of 130 miles an hour. the coastal town of rockport took a direct hit, homes were blown apart. the monster storm roughly 600 miles wide, is also unleashing tornados. though officials say the biggest threat now is the catastrophic flooding. including here in the nation's fourth largest city. houston's water crisis ills spread so far so fast, emergency officials refused to pinpoint which neighborhood was hardest hit. harvey dumped 24 inches of rain in 20 hours here. floodwaters turned communities into islands overnight. and residents had to scramble for higher, dryer ground, any way they could. texas governor, greg about. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall, if not an all-time record. >> reporter: by noon today emergency boats made more than 1,000 high-water rescu
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including residents at la vita bela assisted living facility in dickinson. 15 people waded for help in waist deep water. families in some flooded neighborhoods boated to safety. neighbors pulled each other out of trouble or tried to. this boat flipped. the people who tumbled into the water were rescued. in downtown houston we watched the driver of this toyota tundra try to barrel through a flooded low spot along i-45. suddenly the pickup truck started to float in 10 feet of water and he was in trouble. >> yeah. >> got to get out. >> people urged him to get out worried he might drowned. he finally swam out. then he tried to climb back into his truck. he told me later to save his glasses. >> i that they was a couple of feet. i didn't thing it was that deep until it was too late.
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>> the 59-year-old driver said he was too embarrassed by his mistake to give us his name. houston opened its downtown convention center as a shelter for evacuees. by late afternoon the first several hundred people had arrived hoping for food and warmth. like, gillis leho who fled rising water in her home. >> it just was so real. had to bust a window when they told us the current was getting high. we had to bust a window to get out. >> texas governor greg about joins us now from houston. governor you declared 50 counties disasters what's the state of things right now. >> the state of things obviously a rescue is under way. you see the boat rescues. taking place right now. this boat right here looks lieks its actually full, of people here. people have been going by, some of the folks had to be rescued. giving thumbs up. waving. are very grateful for the people who are helping them as well. there they are waving at us. very happy to be safe. yeah, a little boy
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happy for them as well. we still have a lot of people, who are unaccounted for, in this area. let's go ahead and talk to this family. family that was rescued, just not lon ago. guys. thank you, glad you are safe. where are you coming from? what happened? >> we were in neighborhood, by chantilly, all the homes are flooded. we had to go upstairs in the, came by by boat. we flagged them. picked us up. bra. >> describe your house, full of water, where were you guys? >> we have a two-story home. on the first floor, it's up to here. and all of the furniture is just floating. >> a reporter with our affiliate may have saved a truck driver's life this morning. it played out on live tv. brandi smith noticed a driver trapped as his tractor-trailer was swallowed by floodwaters. a sheriff's deputy drove b
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towing an air boat. not a moment too soon. >> here we go. we have a bet coming. we have a boat coming. i am going to flag these guys down. and see -- just a second. are you guys, are you guys headed down to the truck right here? >> no. >> there is a truck driver stuck here in 10 feet of water. >> thank you. okay. these guys have a boat. got the harris county sheriff water rescue teams. an air boat here. hopefully we can get down to this guy. sir! they're putting the boat in just now. >> okay. >> they're on their way. >> all right. >> here we go. the air boat. for the harris county sheriff's office now approaching the semi. that has been stalled here, headed east, headed westbound in
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the eastbound lanes. i don't have any word on, on how long he has been there. or what kind of condition he is in. i am sure he is very, very wet, very cold. very frightened. i am terrified for him. and here he comes. i feel like i can finally breathe. kind of a sigh of relief. >> the truck driver named robert is okay. and as this played out, khou had to evacuate its studios because floodwaters were pouring in. the station is broadcasting again now, from higher ground.
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massive search-and-rescue around houston. the storm is not expected to leave the region for several days. when it does it could leave behind up to 50 inches of rain. that would be a record. travel is all most impossible. 250 highways and roads are closed. both houston air ports have been shuttered. entire neighborhoods are underwater. as the the floodwater rises more people are fleeing their homes. some making their way to shelters. others waiting for the national guard.
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coast guard vice admiral charm schultz described the operation. >> the coast guard has been actively closely engaged with hurricane, hurricane harvey. and now, tropical storm harvey. we removed our assets from the area. survive any initial damages. prepositioning, response capabilities throughout south texas into louisiana. we have resources from the entire coast guard. from california, main, eastern seaboard. gulf states. support the state and fema. eight helicopters that are out flying this morning with eight flying into the area, rescuing citizens from the, from the immediate region here. down. still remain in corpus christi. pushing boats on the water from all parts of the country. the customs. border protection, air marine have resources in the fight to support state of texas with full efforts of the
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couple messages as maritime guy up here. this is a very, very dangerous storm. at str catastrophic. a sustained challenge for the coming days. many times folks wrongly presume the event will be the most challenging. over the course of my career. water event in for a significant water event in the coming days. heed the word of emergency managers to citizens out there. self rescuing helping folks with their bets. we are going to need that capability. the response lines, eoc numbers. coast guard numbers overwhelmed right now. trying to attenuate the asks. flag helicopters. very serious rain bands in and around them. the boats on the water dealing with challenges. understand patience is important. you are united states coast guard. part of the dhs federal team. all in on this. and, stand by. governor for any questions at the end. >> one pressing question tha
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has the not been answered. why wasn't there an evacuation order or at lest an advisory for people of houston. texas governor greg about discussed this and issues with major garrett on face the nation. >> the worst or one of the worst floods. measuring not in inches but in feet. as you have probably seen. there are countless water rescues. our first, foremost focus at this particular time is saving lives. so, we are working on, as many water rescues as we possibly can. and trying to find ways to get people out of harm's way. >> do you have a sense governor of the population that is in distress and how many boats, how many helicopters, how many resources you are going to need to move how many people to higher ground and safer terrain. >> i saw one report i cannot confirm. there may be as many as 10 million people under flash flood warnings. who could be, in, harm's way.
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is concerned is that beth harris county and houston, have multiple assets that are being used. the state of texas overnight. has provided high profile military vehicles. that will be manned by national guard. we are, are also providing -- water rescue boats, as well as helicopters. both the state and local, agencies, are providing every resource possible. to make sure that we can rescue everybody in need. >> will this be an all of texas effort? governor? meaning, resources from all over the state and other states brought to bear? >> yes. this is an all in, all, resources, across the statement of texas. moments ago. spoke with, harris county judge who is the chief administrator for harris county. talking more assets. state of texas can be providing. proud to say that we have been receiving so many offers of help from all of our neighboring states. new mexico, oklahoma, louisiana. as far away as governor
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new york. is providing resources for us. we are appreciative of our fell lope stat fellow states. the trump administration has provided us everything that we need. >> i used to live in houston. i know that the bayous, once they're filled with water there is nowhere for the water to go. that's the situation houston finds itself in right now. you have a rescue operation that its mandatory, crucial. but you are going to have a sheltering operation soon. do you have capacity to shelter all the people you fear you might need to take a higher ground, governor. >> the bayous rise up. because of the ongoing rain and the coming days. that may be a challenge that will go unabated for a while. you are correct. there will be, enormous needs. for sheltering of people. and, so we appreciate all of the help that is coming in. people want to help out by doing things like donating the best thing they can do. call
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go to red cross.org. working asellabling shelters for people, people who can go to them who need them. >> do you foresee a need possibly to bring in stadium like settings for those? or arena like settings for those who may need shelter for a prolonged period of time. >> missed what you said a reena or stadiyedium type? >> we have multiple shelter locations. and in fact we have had shelter locations. preprepared in advance of this. arrayed, multiple regions across the state of texas. i visited some. in san antonio. austin. other places. so we believe that because of our preparedness for this, a week in advance that. we will have, adequate sheltering. and, and, we are just asking for, for as many resources as we can get. we are very appreciative to heb, wal-mart for what they have been providing to p
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texas. this is typical texas. challenged all the time. texans come to gooits support fellow texans. we are resilient. overcome this t it will take a few days to overcome it. after katrina, the u.s. military came in. brought substantial logistics supply movement and order do you foresee any circumstance, governor where you might request that kind of effort to assist you. >> have to wait and see. the collaboration of the professionals in houston. harris county. combine with the asseted of the, the state is providing. have it cover for now. we will have to see where it goes from here. there are different weather predictions. one is, that this storm could hover. over the houston area for a couple days. if so, this, this could get even worse. but we will take it step by step. but also, remember this. let's not forget what we are doing act the same time. and let's not forget the people who were in harm's way. a
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where the hurricane hit. and we are involved in search-and-rescue missions along the, the coastline. places like, rockport. corpus christi. so we are doing two things at once. but right now. we are capable of, of, of achieving all of that. >> before i let you go. what are the casualty totals you have been made aware of. how are the first hit areas on the coast doing? >> right. i have seen reports of, of some casualties, only one, report that i heard of. in the gulf coast where the hurricane hit. i have seen reports. i am not capable of confirming reports and casualties as a result of the storms. we will just need to wait and see. we are focused on right now is reports like that. but we are doing everything we can, to save every life we can. >> governor greg about of texas. thank you for your time. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back.
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clearasil rapid action begins working fast for clearly visible results in as little as 12 hours. but can ot fix this teens skateboarding mishap? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. the gulf coast of texas swamped by the remnants of hurricane harvey. when all its said and done, up to 50 inches of rain expected to have fallen. that would be the most that one storm has ever dumps anywhere in texas. so what causes storms like harvey to form in the first place. cbs news science contributor, discussed the birth of
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saturday. >> let's talk about the science behind hurricanes. how actually do they form? >> well, believe it or not. hurricane is sort of like, a bowling ball. they form off the coast of africa, a small breeze. then they gather energy as they go towards warm walter across the atlantic. then if it comes in just right it will get a strike. it will go into the gulf of mexico, get energized by the warm water or be a gutter ball and simply veer off in the direction of wrong direction. this hurricane went right through into the gulf. gottener jazzed by the, by the warm water, and now -- >> fuel, fuel of the warm water. what about the speed. moving faster and slow down? what's the impact there? >> well, when it hits landfall you have friction. plus no longer energized by the warm water beneath it. so, velocity drops and goes from category 4 to category 1 within a matter of hours after it hits landfall. watch out if it goes back into
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get re-energized, the nightmare starts all over again. >> because we are, still experienced even in a category 1, still dealing with flooding and storm surges yes? >> that's right. just remember the gulf of mexico is two degrees warmer than normal. that has set off alarm bells in washington. just last month the government issued a warning, stating that because of the warm waters of the gulf of mexico, this, this hurricane season which goes on until the end of november, could be one of the worst in memory. so watch out. there could be more monster hurricanes to come. >> that's the theory that climate change is impacting all of this. >> we are not sure. however. there is no smoking gun. it is consistent with the fact that the gulf is warming up. that is the energy that is driving these monster hurricanes. according to the government. this hurricane season, watch out. >> right. >> we have been talking storm surges all morning. what exactly caused a storm surge? >> well, storm
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12, 13 feet tall. as the the waves that are whipped around, 130 miles an hour, hit landfall. some times they get bunched up. they go towards land. that's when you get the huge monster waves hitting the coast. coming in at 130 miles an hour. >> i feel like we have talked about some of the different storms that hit. some of it is comparison. take something like super storm sandy in comparison to harvey or katrina. can you make a comparison with those? >> yeah, sandy caused, about $70 billion in property damage. only a category 3. but it went right up the northeast. causing tremendous funding and flooding damage in heavily populated, very densely populated area. and, katrina was category 5. it had property damage of $100 b and it actually, created, created, cracks in the levees, which then flooded new orleans. it is stationary right now. it can cause tremendous amount of flooding, blackouts.
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with the massive storm over houston. a phenomenon is fading from memory. last week's eclipse. fading for most people. not steve hartman. he got to experience the eclipse with an expert on the road. >> under that wonderful, waning, midday sun. >> i think it started. >> i think so. >> a 9-year-old boy about to have the great kpes peest exper. a kid so into astronomy the he takes his planet book to swimming lessons. dressed up as the solar system for halloween and made the third grade resolution to got a shrewd idea of how the multiverse could be real. >> basically a theory about having not one, but infinite number of universes. >> you would look to understand
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>> this is george. my son. >> can you explain it to me someday. >> i will. >> and that's his little brother, about. who would much rather be discussing anything else. >> it just, getting tiring for the whole life to be space. >> for emit and hartmans it is like living in an astro physics lecture hall. >> matter holding them together. >> okay, i am out of here. >> we all laugh about it. but a marvel to witness. see, george is autistic. and one of the many blessings of his autism its this ability, shared by many like him, to find overwhelming joy in the most underwhelming minutia. >> by strange coincidence the moon is 400 times smaller than the sun but 400 times closer to the earth. >> given all of that -- we made a road trip this week to central nebraska. found a nice lady who let us use her farm and
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locals. >> is this everything you ever dreamed? >> it was the perfect setting. >> not me. >> perfect at least for most of us. >> and as the moon made its way to stardom, i saw something truly marvelous. >> dad, it is so cool. >> so much of parenting is saying no and forcing vegetables. but on rare occasion, the heaven as line and you're in the perfect position to feed a passion. >> 1% left. >> oh, my god, it is so dark. >> a lot of people looked up and saw something remarkable this week. but for mothers and fathers like me, the more beautiful sight was looking over at the reaction of our precious earthlings. >> oh, boy. >> steve hartman, on the road, in litchfield, nebraska. >> let's go! >> that's the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for the morning news and "cbs this morning." from the broadca
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york city, i'm elaine quijano. the storm that won't quit. >> this is the worst i have ever seen it. >> after blasting the texas coast as a category four hurricane, harvey unleashes catastrophic flooding. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall if not an all-time record. >> this area i'm told normally a playground right over here a baseball field. >> rising waters left many scrambling for their lives. otadrs wed in waist deep water at a nursing home. more than 1,000 rescues have been made. >> i have been stuck under this overpass all night. >> and a reporter saved a man's life on live tv. >> there is a k
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i feel like i can finally breathe. ♪ >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." good evening. i'm mark strassmann reporting from houston, texas. harvey the most powerful hurricane to hit the state since john f. kennedy was president is now a massive tropical storm. it is expected to churn over southeast texas well into the week, dumping more than 4 feet of rain on areas including houston. in a tweet national weather service said the breadth and intense team of this rainfall are beyond anything experienced before. more than 1,000 people were rescued here today from flooded cars, homes, and businesses. many had to scramble to rooftops to escape. at least 2 people are confirmed dead, but officials fear that number will rise. harvey made landfall along the gulf coast of texas friday night as a category 4 hurricane. with a tremendous suof
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seawater and winds of 130 miles an hour. the coastal town of rockport took a direct hit, homes were blown apart. the monster storm roughly 600 miles wide, is also unleashing tornados. though officials say the biggest threat now is the catastrophic flooding. including here in the nation's fourth largest city. houston's water crisis ills spread so far so fast, emergency officials refused to pinpoint which neighborhood was hardest hit. harvey dumped 24 inches of rain in 20 hours here. floodwaters turned communities into islands overnight. and residents had to scramble for higher, dryer ground, any way they could. texas governor, greg about. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall, if not an all-time record. >> reporter: by noon today emergency boats made more than 1,000 high-water rescues including residents at la vita bela assisted living facility in
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15 people waded for help in waist deep water. families in some flooded neighborhoods boated to safety. neighbors pulled each other out of trouble or tried to. this boat flipped. the people who tumbled into the water were rescued. in downtown houston we watched the driver of this toyota tundra try to barrel through a flooded low spot along i-45. suddenly the pickup truck started to float in 10 feet of water and he was in trouble. >> yeah. >> got to get out. >> people urged him to get out worried he might drowned. he finally swam out. then he tried to climb back into his truck. he told me later to save his glasses. >> i that they was a couple of feet. i didn't thing it was that deep until it was too late. and i couldn't do nothing. >> the 59-year-old driver said he was too embarrassed by his mistake to give us his name. houston opened its downtown convention center as a shelter for evacuees.
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by late afternoon the first several hundred people had arrived hoping for food and warmth. like, gillis leho who fled rising water in her home. >> it just was so real. had to bust a window when they told us the current was getting high. we had to bust a window to get out. >> texas governor greg about joins us now from houston. governor you declared 50 counties disasters what's the state of things right now. >> the state of things obviously state of emergency where we are responding to the needs of the people. in houston as well around the entire state of texas. by making that disaster declaration what that does is triggers resources from fema. in constant contact with fema officials. the full force and reap sources of fema are coming to texas to assist both with responding to the challenges on tv today but also with regard to the challenges we are going to have
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entire coastal region. >> if there is any luck in this, you have had some time to prepare for this. have there been surprises? >> we were able to place assets such as, boats, rescue teams, other efforts, such as personnel, to make sure we would be able to respond to the challenges. in places that were hardest hit by the hurricane. such as the, near corpus christi, down by, port areas like that. people were able to evacuate and get to safe ground. as a result, it minimized any loss of life. >> did you make the call about evacuations? >> well, the evacuation calls of course, are up to local officials. and now is not the time to second guess the calls they made. what my job is to work with them to assist them in any way possible to make sure we save as many lives as we can. >> there have been
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of emergency responders having to prioritize life and death decisions. do you have the resources that you need in place? >> you know, what, first responders do on a daily basis, is have to make priorities based on life and death decisions. they know how to respond to these, challenges, and they're doing a tremendous job. >> governor, the country is watching and wishing you luck thank you for joining us. >> thank you. there were several dramatic rescues today about 30 miles south of here in dickinson, texas. demarco morgan was there. >> look at this coast guard helicopter. just one we have seen. a number out here in this area. but they're also making a rescues and whenever you see them hovering over an area that means a rescue is under way. you see these boat rescues. taking play right now. this boat right here looks like it is actually full. of people here. people have been going by, some of the folks who had to be rescued giving themz up. waving. very grateful for the people who have been helping them as well. and there they are, waving at us. they're very happy to be safe. the little boy is waving.
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happy for them as well. we still have a lot of people, who are unaccounted for, in this area. let's go ahead and talk to this family. family that was rescued, just not long ago. guys. thank you, glad you are safe. where are you coming from? what happened? >> we were in neighborhood, by chantilly, all the homes are flooded. we had to go upstairs in the, came by by boat. we flagged them. picked us up. bra. us to the church. >> describe your house, full of walter, where were you guys? >> we have a two-story home. on the first floor, it's up to here. and all of the furniture is just floating.
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people take action against housing discrimination? my co-worker was pressured by her landlord to pay her rent with sexual favors. my neighbor was told she needs to get rid of her dog, even though he's an assistance animal. housing discrimination is illegal. if you think you've been a victim, report it to hud. like we did. narrator: they all reported discrimination and were able to secure their fair housing rights under the law. visit hud.gov/fairhousing or call the hud hotline.
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this is the cbs "overnight news." jericka duncan's report took her to the great depths of greater heights, texas. >> reporter: you can see we are waist high in water. in the greater heights neighborhood near downtown houston. this area i'm told is normally a playground. right over here, a baseball field. but as the you can see, the water has taken over the floodwaters very serious. people in this neighborhood are not coming in here unless they have waders on.
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but for the most part it is really preventing people from getting from point a to point b. now i am also told there its a bayou nearby. and there are a lot of bayous in the area. that is also a big concern. with the amount of rain that its coming, those bayous, overflowing. coming into the neighborhoods, and as you can see this is just one example of just how dangerous these floodwaters are, and how significant the water levels are at this time. aside from seeing scenes like this, we have seen cars abandoned. we have seen people struggling. to get help in some instances. but all and all, people know that they need to stay inside, it its very dangerous out here. and of course, we already know that this is just the beginning, houston is expecked to receive even more rain. so we can imagine what this will look like, when it is all said and done. >> jericka, thanks. scott pagett, chief meteorologist at our cbs station in dallas fort worth. scott, we have a long way to go with this one. >> thanks, mark, we take a look, tropical storm harvey, winds at 40 miles per hour. what's interesting to me is, now starting to see a little dry air getting pulled in to this storm, still seeing these feeder bands
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rotating their way on in. my concern is though, overnight tonight into tomorrow morning, getting closer towards open water. and the latest forecast track has it back out over open water. strengthening a bit by late monday night into tuesday morning. then turning closer toward houston. wednesday, into thursday. as a tropical storm. downgrading to tropical depression into thursday, friday. into louisiana and arkansas. as you take a look over four hours, see the rain continuing to pile up in houston. now into parts of louisiana. those outer rain bands rotating their way on in. as you take a look, continuing to see the rain piling up. the estimated radar for the past 48 hours. look at this. anywhere between 20, 2 inches in parts of -- the legrange area. houston.
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20, 25 inches. not done with the rain yet. we will see 8, to a foot of rain. 15 inches of rain, by thursday, friday. this is already, a storm that is, in the record books. we might see the most rain ever from a tropical system, from tropical storm harvey. as we go through the next few days. mark? >> thank you, scott. american red cross volunteers from across the country are traveling here to provide food and shelter to storm victims. >> reporter: the floodwaters keep rising because of the nonstop rain. that's creating a problem for relief workers who are trying to set up new shelters. this caravan belongs to the american red cross. it is loaded with cots, blankets, even a blood supply that is in there. but, it's stranded here. they cannot move. they have to wait for the u.s. coast guard to escort them to make sure the supplies and the volunteers get to the shelters
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safely. food is also major need in the shelters. red cross workers have been loading snacks, walter and ready to eat meals for what its expected to be thousand of evacuees. the red cross has been working with local authorities, to find a safe, and dry path to the shelters. but it is such a volatile situation here that that changes every time it rains. going as short at four miles can ta sev the main goal is to get there safely. mark. >> omar, thank you. a reporter with our houston cbs affiliate, khou may have saved a truck driver's life this morning. it played out on live tv. reporter, brandi smith notice aid driver trapped as his tractor-trailer was being swallowed by floodwaters. just then, a harris county sheriff's deputy drove by, towing an air boat. and not a moment too soon. >> here we go, we have a boat coming. a boat coming. i'm going to flag. flag these guys down. and see, see -- 6 hold on. just a second. are you guys, are you guys headed down to the truck right here?
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>> there is a truck driver stuck here in 10 feet of water. >> thank you. okay. these guys have a boat. got the harris county sheriff water rescue teams. an air boat here. hopefully we can get down to this guy. sir! they're putting the boat in just now. >> okay. >> they're on their way. >> all right. >> here we go. the air boat. for the harris county sheriff's office now approaching the semi. that has been stalled here, headed east, headed westbound in the eastbound lanes. i don't have any word on, on how long he has been there. or what kind of condition he is in. i am sure he is very, very wet, very cold. very frightened. i am terrified for him. and here he comes. i feel like i can fina
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breathe. kind of a sigh of relief. >> the truck driver named robert is okay. and as this played out, khou had to evacuate its studios because floodwaters were pouring in. the station is broadcasting again now, from higher ground. up next, how the president is responding to the first natural disaster of his administration.
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it says you apply the blue one ok, letto me. this. here? no. have a little fun together, or a lot. k-y yours and mine. two sensations that work together, so you can play together. that had built his house once thout of straw.tle pig one day a big bad wolf huffed and he puffed and blew the house down. luckily the geico insurance agency had helped the pig with homeowners insurance. he had replacement cost coverage, so his house was rebuilt, good as new. the big bad wolf now has a job on a wind farm.
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call geico and see how easy it is to switch and save on homeowners insurance. back from houston. harvey is an early test for the trump administration. the president keeping tabs of the storm. not all he had on his mind. >> reporter: out of sight for most of the weekend at camp david, president trump tweeted sever times about hurricane harvey. great coordination between agencies at all levels of government, he wrote. good news is that we have great talent on the ground. >> i would look to say president trump is extremely concerned. >> aide said mr. trump was briefed about the storm and cabinet members this morning. but the president has been weathering his own political storm since friday night. as harvey was making landfall he pardoned the controversial formerzo
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arpaio, convicted of unfairly targeted undocumented immigrants. >> sheriff joe scan -- can feel good. it was a move his own legal team advised against. house speaker paul ryan was one of several republicans who criticized the decision. saying, law enforcement officials have a special responsibility to respect the rights of everyone in the united states. we should not allow anyone to believe that responsibility is diminished by this pardon. >> mr. trump's homeland security adviser, defended the president's action. >> just about every modern president ends up with controversial pardons. i think other presidents were clear on it. i certainly don't think it is fair to characterize him as not caring about the rule of law. >> the white house announced president trump will travel to damaged areas of texas tuesday. unclear which cities he will visit, the white house is working on logistics with local officials. >> thank you. still ahead, an army of
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but will it stop this teen from being embarassed by her parents? nope. so let's be clear: clearasil works fast on teen acne, not so much on other teen things. roads turned to river in the town tough belaire outside houston. jamie yuccas shows us dangers in the streets. >> reporter: i'm standing on a side street here in belaire, ten miles southwest of houston. this just gets deeper as you go further down. point out, you can see the speed limit sign.
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water can get. about cut in half. i can tell you when we got here, just a few hours ago, the water had not gone over the median here. it is now, gone over the median. and it is creeping towards the homes. further down, a number of homes are flooded. there are apartment buildings people are parking their cars on fifth and sixth floor parking garages to get the cars out of harm's way, if that comes. you've talk to city officials. sounds like here in belaire, water is falling down in rain form, an inch an hour. they have gotten 15 inches of rain so far. more than a foot. since the storm started. we are expected to get another 10 inches today. i can tell you since we have been standing out here. we have gotten at least a cup more with how far the water has come up. that's the situation out here. people really being asked to just stay at home. and not get out on the roadways. especially around the city of houston. >> jamie. thanks. >> san antonio on the western edge of the storm is offering thousands of beds to those
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escaping harvey. mireya villarreal is there. >> reporter: rescue crews from around the country are here in san antonio, at freeman coliseum. facility best known for hosting the city rodeo. more than 900 cots are set up behind me. for first responders. bus drivers for the military. they will come here. they will regroup. then they will head out to battle hurricane harvey. now more than 900 people from corpus christi bayside, rockport area evacuated to shelters in the san antonio area. many of them are getting word they may not have homes to return to. these are families told by authorities, it will be days before they can head back into town. now, right now we know that, behar county, san antonio, coordinating on every level. so far, 2,000 first responders have come through this facility. they are expecting more. they are also expecting about 200 buss to start here, and head to houston to pick up evacuees, bringing them back to the alamo city for safety. mark.
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expected to dump up to 6 inches of additional rain overnight. some places may get two feet by back now in houston. hard to believe, but we may not have reached the halfway point in the slow-moving catastrophe. harvey, a tropical storm is expected to dump up to 6 inches of additional rain overnight. some places may get two feet by friday. 1,000 water rescues were made. 250 highways in texas are closed. david begnaud is in houston. this is denise and her baby, santiago. were you able to call for help? >> yes, we were. and my in-law and my brother-in-law. they were able to come and help us. our apartment got flooded by 3, 4 inches of water.
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>> where are you going to go? a place to go? >> my in-laws house. here. >> watch the water. watch the water. lift the baby. lift the baby. yeah, yeah, okay. what's happening. people are driving through like this. and, and, you start putting people like denise and her baby in danger. we have seen for the last hour, people bringing friends out on little rubber dinghies, rafts, bringing them to higher ground. it is still falling at a really heavy clip here. and if you look just in the distance here, you have a city bus stuck in the water. multiple vehicles. people tried to drive through it. and got stuck. back to you. >> thanks, david. if you want to help victims of harvey you can go to red cross.org. more storm coverage and local news of this cbs station, on our streaming channel, cbsn@cbsnews.com. and first thing tomorrow on "cbs this morning." i'm mark strassmann reporting from houston. thank you for joining us. good night.
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>> this is the worst i have ever seen it. >> after blasting the texas coast as a category four hurricane, harvey unleashes catastrophic flooding. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall if not an all-time record. >> this area i'm told normally a playground right over here a baseball field. >> rising waters left many scrambling for their lives. others waded in waist deep water at a nursing home. tmore1,han re000 s scuehave been made. >> i have been stuck under this overpass all night. >> and a reporter saved a man's life on live tv. er stere is a trucivk dr hruckere in 10 feet of water. and here he comes. i feel like i can finally breathe. ♪
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>> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." good evening. i'm mark strassmann reporting from houston, texas. harvey the most powerful hurricane to hit the state since john f. kennedy was president is now a massive tropical storm. it is expected to churn over southeast texas well into the week, dumping more than 4 feet of rain on areas including houston. in a tweet national weather service said the breadth and intense team of this rainfall are beyond anything experienced before. more than 1,000 people were rescued here today from flooded cars, homes, and businesses. many had to scramble to rooftops to escape. at least 2 people are confirmed dead, but officials fear that number will rise. harvey made landfall along the gulf coast of texas friday night as a category 4 hurricane. with a tremendous surge of seawater and winds of 130 miles an hour. the coastal town of rockport took a direct hit, homes were
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blown apart. the monster storm roughly 600 miles wide, is also unleashing tornados. though officials say the biggest threat now is the catastrophic flooding. including here in the nation's fourth largest city. houston's water crisis ills spread so far so fast, emergency officials refused to pinpoint which neighborhood was hardest hit. harvey dumped 24 inches of rain in 20 hours here. floodwaters turned communities into islands overnight. and residents had to scramble for higher, dryer ground, any way they could. texas governor, greg about. >> this likely is going to be an historic rainfall, if not an all-time record. >> reporter: by noon today emergency boats made more than 1,000 high-water rescues including residents at la vita bela assisted living facility in dickinson. 15 people waded for help in waist deep water. families in somelo
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neighborhoods boated to safety. neighbors pulled each other out of trouble or tried to. this boat flipped. the people who tumbled into the water were rescued. in downtown houston we watched the driver of this toyota tundra try to barrel through a flooded low spot along i-45. suddenly the pickup truck started to float in 10 feet of water and he was in trouble. >> yeah. >> got to get out. >> people urged him to get out worried he might drowned. he finally swam out. then he tried to climb back into his truck. he told me later to save his glasses. >> i that they was a couple of feet. i didn't thing it was that deep until it was too late. and i couldn't do nothing. >> the 59-year-old driver said he was too embarrassed by his mistake to give us his name. houston opened its downtown convention center as a shelter for evacuees. by late afternoon the first several hundred people had arrived hoping for food and
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like, gillis leho who fled rising water in her home. >> it just was so real. had to bust a window when they told us the current was getting high. we had to bust a window to get out. >> there were several dramatic rescues today in dickinson, texas. demarco morgan was there. >> when you see them hovering over an area. that means a rescue is under way. you see the boat rescues. taking place right now. this boat right here looks lieks its actually full, of people here. people have been going by, some of the folks had to be rescued. giving thumbs up. waving. are very grateful for the people who are helping them as well. there they are waving at us. very happy to be safe. yeah, a little boy is waving. happy for them as well.
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who are unaccounted for, in this area. let's go ahead and talk to this family. family that was rescued, just not long ago. guys. thank you, glad you are safe. where are you coming from? what happened? >> we were in neighborhood, by chantilly, all the homes are flooded. we had to go upstairs in the, came by by boat. we flagged them. picked us up. >> describe your house, full of water, where were you guys? >> we have a two-story home. on the first floor, it's up to here. and all of the furniture is just floating. >> a reporter with our affiliate may have saved a truck driver's life this morning. it played out on live tv. brandi smith noticed a driver trapped as his tractor-trailer was swallowed by floodwaters. a sheriff's deputy drove by towing an air boat. not a moment too soon. >> here we go. we have a boat coming.
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i am going to flag these guys down. and see -- just a second. are you guys, are you guys headed down to the truck right here? >> no. >> there is a truck driver stuck here in 10 feet of water. >> thank you. okay. these guys have a boat. got the harris county sheriff water rescue teams. an air boat here. hopefully we can get down to this guy. sir! they're putting the boat in just now. >> okay. >> they're on their way. >> all right. >> here we go. the air boat. for the harris county sheriff's office now approaching the semi. that has been stalled here, headed east, headed westbound in the eastbound lanes. i don't have any word on, on how long he has been there. or what kind of condition hes
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in. i am sure he is very, very wet, very cold. very frightened. i am terrified for him. and here he comes. i feel like i can finally breathe. kind of a sigh of relief. >> the truck driver named robert is okay. and as this played out, khou had to evacuate its studios because floodwaters were pouring in. the station is broadcasting again now, from higher ground.
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massive search-and-rescue around houston. the storm is not expected to leave the region for several days. when it does it could leave behind up to 50 inches of rain. that would be a record. travel is all most impossible. 250 highways and roads are closed. both houston air ports have been shuttered. entire neighborhoods are underwater. as the the floodwater rises more people are fleeing their homes.
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shelters. others waiting for the national guard. dozens of helicopters. coast guard vice admiral charm schultz described the operation. >> the coast guard has been actively closely engaged with hurricane, hurricane harvey. and now, tropical storm harvey. we removed our assets from the area. survive any initial damages. prepositioning, response capabilities throughout south texas into louisiana. we have resources from the entire coast guard. from california, main, eastern seaboard. gulf states. support the state and fema. eight helicopters that are out flying this morning with eight flying into the area, rescuing citizens from the, from the immediate region here. down.
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still remain in corpus christi. pushing boats on the water from all parts of the country. the customs. border protection, air marine have resources in the fight to support state of texas with full efforts of the coast guard. couple messages as maritime guy up here. this is a very, very dangerous storm. catastrophic. a sustained challenge for the coming days. many times folks wrongly presume the event will be the most challenging. over the course of my career. water event in for a significant water event in the coming days. heed the word of emergency managers to citizens out there. self rescuing helping folks with their bets. we are going to need that capability. the response lines, eoc numbers. coast guard numbers overwhelmed right now. trying to attenuate the asks. flag helicopters. very serious rain bands in and around them. the boats on the water dealing with challenges. understand patience is important. you are united states coast guard. part of the dhs federal team. all in on this. and, stand by. governor f
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the end. >> one pressing question that has the not been answered. why wasn't there an evacuation order or at lest an advisory for people of houston. texas governor greg about discussed this and issues with major garrett on face the nation. >> the worst or one of the worst floods. measuring not in inches but in feet. as you have probably seen. there are countless water rescues. our first, foremost focus at this particular time is saving lives. so, we are working on, as many water rescues as we possibly can. and trying to find ways to get people out of harm's way. >> do you have a sense governor of the population that is in distress and how many boats, how many helicopters, how many resources you are going to need to move how many people to higher ground and safer terrain. >> i saw one report i cannot confirm. there may be as many as 10 million pe u
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what i do know as far as rescue is concerned is that beth harris county and houston, have multiple assets that are being used. the state of texas overnight. has provided high profile military vehicles. that will be manned by national guard. we are, are also providing -- water rescue boats, as well as helicopters. both the state and local, agencies, are providing every resource possible. to make sure that we can rescue everybody in need. >> will this be an all of texas effort? governor? meaning, resources from all over the state and other states brought to bear? >> yes. this is an all in, all, resources, across the statement of texas. moments ago. spoke with, harris county judge who is the chief administrator for harris county. talking more assets. state of texas can be providing. proud to say that we have been receiving so many offers of help from all of our neighboring
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new mexico, oklahoma, louisiana. as far away as governor cuomo in new york. is providing resources for us. we are appreciative of our fell fellow states. the trump administration has provided us everything that we need. >> i used to live in houston. i know that the bayous, once they're filled with water there is nowhere for the water to go. that's the situation houston finds itself in right now. you have a rescue operation that its mandatory, crucial. but you are going to have a sheltering operation soon. do you have capacity to shelter all the people you fear you might need to take a higher ground, governor. >> the bayous rise up. because of the ongoing rain and the coming days. that may be a challenge that will go unabated for a while. you are correct. there will be, enormous needs. for sheltering of people. and, so we appreciate all of the help that is coming in. people want to help out by doing things like donating the best thing they can do. call 1-800-red cross. go to red cross.
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them who need them. >> do you foresee a need possibly to bring in stadium like settings for those? or arena like settings for those who may need shelter for a prolonged period of time. >> missed what you said a reena or stadium type? >> we have multiple shelter locations. and in fact we have had shelter locations. preprepared in advance of this. arrayed, multiple regions across the state of texas. i visited some. in san antonio. austin. other places. so we believe that because of our preparedness for this, a week in advance that. we will have, adequate sheltering. and, and, we are just asking for, for as many resources as we can get. we are very appreciative to heb, wal-mart for what they have been providing to people here in texas. this is typical texas. challenged all the time.
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fellow texans. we are resilient. overcome this t it will take a few days to overcome it. after katrina, the u.s. military came in. brought substantial logistics supply movement and order do you foresee any circumstance, governor where you might request that kind of effort to assist you. >> have to wait and see. the collaboration of the professionals in houston. harris county. combine with the asseted of the, the state is providing. have it cover for now. we will have to see where it goes from here. there are different weather predictions. one is, that this storm could hover. over the houston area for a couple days. if so, this, this could get even worse. but we will take it step by step. but also, remember this. let's not forget what we are doing act the same time. and let's not forget the people who were in harm's way. just a couple days ago. where the hurricane hit. and we are involved in search-and-rescue miss
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the, the coastline. places like, rockport. corpus christi. so we are doing two things at once. but right now. we are capable of, of, of achieving all of that. >> before i let you go. what are the casualty totals you have been made aware of. how are the first hit areas on the coast doing? >> right. i have seen reports of, of some casualties, only one, report that i heard of. in the gulf coast where the hurricane hit. i have seen reports. i am not capable of confirming reports and casualties as a result of the storms. we will just need to wait and see. we are focused on right now is reports like that. but we are doing everything we can, to save every life we can. >> governor greg about of texas. thank you for your time. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be right back.
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discussed the birth of hurricanes, on cbs this morning, saturday. >> let's talk about the science behind hurricanes. how actually do they form? >> well, believe it or not. hurricane is sort of like, a bowling ball. they form off the coast of africa, a small breeze. then they gather energy as they go towards warm walter across the atlantic. then if it comes in just right it will get a strike. it will go into the gulf of mexico, get energized by the warm water or be a gutter ball and simply veer off in the direction of wrong direction. this hurricane went right through into the gulf.jazzed -- jazzed by the, by the water and now -- >> fuel, fuel of the warm water. what about the speed. moving faster and slow down? what's the impact there? >> well, when it hits landfall you have friction. plus no longer energized by the warm water beneath it. so, velocity drops and goes from category 4 to category 1 within a matter of hours after it hits landfall. watch out if it goes back into the water. get re-energized, the nightmare starts all over again.
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>> because we are, still experienced even in a category 1, still dealing with flooding and storm surges yes? >> that's right. just remember the gulf of mexico is two degrees warmer than normal. that has set off alarm bells in washington. just last month the government issued a warning, stating that because of the warm waters of the gulf of mexico, this, this hurricane season which goes on until the end of november, could be one of the worst in memory. so watch out. there could be more monster hurricanes to come. >> that's the theory that climate change is impacting all of this. >> we are not sure. however. there is no smoking gun. it is consistent with the fact that the gulf is warming up. that is the energy that is driving these monster hurricanes. according to the government. this hurricane season, watch out. >> right.
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what exactly caused a storm surge? >> well, storm surges could be, 12, 13 feet tall. as the the waves that are whipped around, 130 miles an hour, hit landfall. some times they get bunched up. they go towards land. that's when you get the huge monster waves hitting the coast. coming in at 130 miles an hour. >> i feel like we have talked about some of the different storms that hit. some of it is comparison. take something like super storm sandy in comparison to harvey or katrina. can you make a comparison with those? >> yeah, sandy caused, about $70 billion in property damage. only a category 3. but it went right up the northeast. causing tremendous funding and flooding damage in heavily populated, very densely populated area. and, katrina was category 5. it had property damage of $100 b and it actually, created, created, cracks in the levees, which then flooded new orleans. it is stationary right now. it can cause tremendous amount
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and it can get re-energized again. so we are just seeing the beginning of the agony. >> the cbs "overnight news" will be rig [male narrator] did you know, one in six americans get sick every year from food poisoning. to reduce your risk, follow these four simple steps one: wash your hands and preparation surfaces. two: separate raw meat, poultry, seafood and eggs from ready to eat foods. three: cook foods to the proper temperatures. four: refrigerate perishable foods properly at 40 degrees fahrenheit or below. for more tips to avoid food poisoning, visit home food safety dot org
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, august 28th, 2017. this is the "cbs morning news." >> got to be a 500 year flood or thousand year flood, something ridiculous. >> harvey flooding disaster. rain continues to pound parts of texas as floodwaters rise. thousands of people are evacuated, and rescue crews go into overdrive. and a television reporter becomes the news as she jumps into action to save a truck driver trapped by floodwaters. good morningm
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