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Volunteers and First Responders help flood victims evacuate to shelters in Houston, Texas. SIPA USA/PA Images

President Trump prepares to visit Texas as Houston death toll rises

Houston’s Mayor has defended the decision not to evacuate the city.

RESCUE TEAMS IN boats, trucks and helicopters scrambled yesterday to reach hundreds of Texans marooned on flooded streets in and around the city of Houston before monster storm Harvey returns.

US President Donald Trump promised that the federal government would be on hand to help Texas along the “long and difficult road to recovery” from the historic storm.

The medical examiner’s office for Harris County, which includes the city of Houston, confirmed six deaths since Sunday “potentially tied to Hurricane Harvey.” Three people were previously known to have died as a result of the storm.

However some media outlets are reporting that at least nine people have died in the aftermath of the storm.

Harvey AP / PA Images AP / PA Images / PA Images

The White House released details of the president’s visit to the region this morning.

As is conventional with such visits, Trump will not visit the most stricken areas, including Houston, as it could interfere with rescue and relief efforts.

Instead the president, along with first lady Melania Trump, will visit Corpus Christi, Texas, where they will receive a briefing on the relief operation.

They will also visit Austin where they will tour the emergency operations centre.

Officials have warned that the danger has not yet passed, with more families still stranded or packed into emergency shelters and the tropical storm once more gathering strength on the Gulf coast.

News: Hurricane Harvey SIPA USA / PA Images SIPA USA / PA Images / PA Images

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner said more than 8,000 people had been brought, soaking and desperate, to shelters in America’s fourth largest city, and defended the decision not to evacuate before Harvey struck over the weekend.

“Search and rescue, that’s the number one emphasis, the number one priority for the rest of the day,” he said, recalling that around 100 people had died the last time officials tried to empty the city of more than six million.

The 911 emergency line has received more than 75,000 calls, but city officials urged residents facing life-threatening storm water floods to remain on the line and trust that help will come.

Houston fire chief Samuel Pena urged patience, promising: “We fully recognise there are many other people out there in distress situations and we intend to get to every one of them.”

Coast Guard commander Vice Admiral Karl Shultz told CNN that he had 18 helicopters in Houston, and weather permitting about 12 in the air at any one time, alongside those of the National Guard.

If you can get to your roof, wave a towel. Leave a marking on the roof so helicopter crews can see you.

Shultz described the volume of emergency calls as “staggering.”

Dams opened

Harvey hit Texas on Friday as a Category Four hurricane, tearing down homes and businesses on the Gulf Coast before dumping an “unprecedented” nine trillion gallons of rainfall inland.

“It’s the biggest ever, they are saying it is the biggest, it’s historic,” Trump told reporters at the White house. He is due to visit Texas on today to survey rescue efforts and may return to Texas and Louisiana at the end of the week.

The Texas bayou and coastal prairie rapidly flooded, but the region’s sprawling cities – where drainage is slower – were worst hit.

Highways were swamped and street after street of housing rapidly rendered uninhabitable, with power lines cut and dams overflowing.

Hurricane Harvey Aftermath - Texas Corpus Christi Caller-Times / TNS/ABACA Corpus Christi Caller-Times / TNS/ABACA / TNS/ABACA

The US Army Corps of Engineers began to open the Addicks and Barker dams – under pressure from what the agency has dubbed a “thousand-year flood event” – to prevent a catastrophe on the outskirts of Houston.

Latitia Rodriguez was rescued along with her husband, children and grandchildren by the Williamson County police department, negotiating the flooded Route 90 in boats.

“We have to evacuate. We have too many kids. So we had to save our babies,” she told AFP.

There’s a lot of people over there. We would like to help everybody but we can’t. We have our own kids.

Meanwhile, the disaster is far from over: Harvey has turned back on itself and is hovering on the Gulf Coast, sucking up more rain and threatening a new landfall tomorrow. And after the storm will come clean-up and recovery.

“We actually anticipate that as many as a half a million people in Texas will be eligible for and applying for financial disaster assistance,” Vice President Mike Pence told KHOU Radio in Houston.

“We know it’s far from over.”

Trump – facing the first major natural disaster of his presidency – has also declared a state of emergency in neighbouring Louisiana, next in line for a downpour.

Roads completely submerged

Rescue efforts on the outskirts of town appeared to be disjointed.

In Williamstown County, a police boat sitting on a flooded highway on Route 90 tried to rescue people but had nowhere to take them because no emergency vehicles could come get them at a drop-off location.

Roughly 50 people needed rescuing, 12 of whom had non-life-threatening medical conditions. Rescuers had to leave them there despite multiple requests for emergency vehicles that never came.

News: Hurricane Harvey SIPA USA / PA Images SIPA USA / PA Images / PA Images

Many people living in smaller communities by the coast were also driven from their homes.

Robert Frazier, a 54-year-old foreman mechanic, left his home in La Porte, south of Houston, with his wife Judy on Sunday morning and made it as far as a motel in Hankamer on the road towards Louisiana still in Harvey’s path.

“We’re trapped,” Frazier said, speaking to AFP after he had tried to return home for some of his abandoned possessions, but finding the highway cut.

I haven’t been through nothing like this.

His wife Judy said she could only pray the rain would stop, after leaving home with just two sets of clothes, their medicine and their dog.

Beyond anything experienced

The National Weather Service said that between June 1 and Sunday, Houston had received 117 centimeters of rain – almost as much as it would expect in a year.

“The breadth and intensity of this rainfall are beyond anything experienced before,” it said.

- With reporting from Céimin Burke

READ: PICTURES: The devastation wrought by Hurricane Harvey on Texas>

READ: Trump declares state of emergency in Louisiana as US braces for return of Hurricane Harvey>

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