2,000 Down, 138,000 to Go: Authorities Aid Those Who Stayed Behind

Responders try to rescue an estimated 140,000 Texans who ignored orders to flee.

ByABC News via logo
September 14, 2008, 3:23 PM

Sept. 14, 2008 — -- The boats scattered inland and flooded roads of Texas aren't the biggest concerns for rescuers after Hurricane Ike. The most urgent project facing rescue crews is to try to reach people who remain stuck in their homes thanks to flooding that accompanied the storm.

In a Sunday afternoon news conference, authorities said 1,984 people had been rescued so far, including 394 by air.

In hard-hit Galveston, where Ike came ashore early Saturday, a door-to-door search continues. The only roadway to the island, Interstate 45, is closed to all but emergency vehicles and is blocked in areas by debris, including boats.

Officials had to use the opposite side of the highway to get to Galveston. It could take up to a month to restore power in Galveston, they say, and roads are still flooded.

In Houston, authorities imposed a curfew from 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. because of downed power lines, water pooling in roadways and darkened streetlights making it too difficult to navigate at night.

"In the interest of safety, we're asking people to not be out in the streets, in their vehicles or on foot," Police Chief Harold Hurtt said.

Officials warned it could be weeks before the nation's fourth-largest city is fully functional again.

"It's going to have to be a lot of neighbor helping neighbor, because people aren't used to living without power," said Houston Mayor Bill White on "Good Morning America Weekend Edition" today. "We will bring this city back up and it will be stronger than ever before we know it."

White said the city likely will have damages in the billions, but was pleased that the majority of residents asked to evacuate did so.

"All of our fire and EMS crews in a city of 2.2 million didn't get a single call for a hurricane-related fatality," he said.

Authorities have attributed eight deaths to the storm, including one in Arkansas when a tree fell on a man's mobile home as the remnants of the storm swept through. Five deaths occurred in Texas and two in Louisiana, although authorities said the toll could rise. Residents who tried to return home found that flooded roads and debris-blocked streets prevented them from doing so, and Texas Gov. Rick Perry urged people not to try to return just yet.