“(Ava) is down to half a can of formula,” Shelley said. “Stores are out if not extremely low on food. Most of our food in the refrigerator is spoiled. Freezer food is close to thawed but we have no way to heat it up.”
Among those hard-hit in the state are hospitals. President and CEO of Houston Methodist Dr. Marc Bloom, who is in charge of seven hospitals in the Houston area, says two of his facilities
were completely without water for days. One of the hospitals collected rainwater to flush toilets, he said.
“It’s frustrating,” he told CNN. “I’m just glad that we were able to respond, that we were able to manage.”
Nearly half of the state’s population continues to face disruptions in water service due to burst or frozen pipes, many of who remain under boil-water advisories. About 190,000 homes and businesses are still without power.
In Austin alone, the state capital’s water supply lost 325 million gallons due to burst pipes, Austin Water Director Greg Meszaros said in a Thursday news conference.
“The fire department indicated they have responded to thousands upon thousands of burst pipes,” Meszaros said.
Austin resident Jenn Studebaker’s home has power, but no water. She told CNN that all week, her family slept around the fireplace and burned chairs and bookshelves to keep warm before scavenging for more wood.
Now without water, they’re melting snow and storing it in their bathtub.
“It’s been constant,” she told CNN. “We’re exhausted, honestly.”

Charles Andrews walks home through his neighborhood in Waco, Texas on February 17, 2021
Saturday
About 85,000 households across Texas remain
left in the dark. President Joe Biden
approves a major disaster declaration for Texas, unlocking more federal resources to assist the state.
Water disruptions and a depleting pile of supplies are still a concern in homes, businesses, and hospitals.
“This was a sprawling natural disaster that hit us statewide and arrived on top of the pandemic,” Texas Hospital Association spokeswoman Carrie Williams said.
By Saturday morning, more than 15 million people had been impacted by water disruptions statewide, one official told CNN.
As parts of the state begin the slow process toward recovery, more details are unveiled about the devastation of the past week.

People wait for the Sam’s Club store to open as they look to purchase essentials on Saturday, February 20, in Austin.
Marty Miles, the general manager of a hotel group in Galveston, said the demand was overwhelming as residents tried to find a warm place to stay. Miles said that for several days their only power came from an emergency generator, and they had no water for a little more than two days.
“The hardest part is that you don’t know when it’s going to stop,” Miles said. “Because of the rolling blackouts and not knowing when the water would be back, it was a complete stop and go, stop and go. … So every time we thought we were in the clear, two hours later, it started over.”
While thousands remain in the dark, officials have also now began investigating outrageous hikes in some customers’ energy bills as a result of the storm.
“It is unacceptable for Texans who suffered through days in the freezing cold without electricity or heat to now be hit with skyrocketing energy costs,” the governor said in a statement, adding he was working with other state leaders to find solutions and “ensure that Texans are not on the hook for unreasonable spikes in their energy bills.”

Marie Maybou melts snow on the kitchen stove on February 19 in Austin. Ms. Maybou was using the water to flush the toilets in her home after the city water stopped running.
CNN’s Brandon Miller, Mallika Kallingal, Chuck Johnston, Travis Caldwell, Adrienne Vogt, Haley Brink, Eric Levenson, Madeline Holcombe, Keith Allen, Konstantin Toropin and Artemis Moshtaghian contributed to this report.
Source: https://www.cnn.com/2021/02/21/weather/texas-winter-storm-timeline/index.html
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