Emergency shelters in The Woodlands need bedding

shelter1.jpgThree emergency shelters have been established in The Woodlands to care for evacuees who got caught up in the bottleneck on I-45 leading out of Houston. The shelters are at The Woodlands High School at 6101 Research Forest Drive in The Woodlands 77381-4902, The Woodlands College Park High School at 3701 College Park Dr. in The Woodlands 77384, and The Woodlands McCullough Junior High School at 3800 South Panther Creek in The Woodlands 77381-2799. The Reverend Howard Huhn, the Minister of Outreach at The Woodlands United Methodist Church has sent out this email requesting the following:

Dear Friends,
Because of the traffic associated with Hurricane Rita, our local high schools (McCullough, TWHS, College Park) have opened as shelters. They are in need of bedding. If you have bedding available, please drop it off directly at the schools.
Thank you for being Christ to others.
Howard Huhn
Minister of Outreach
The Woodlands United Methodist Church

A hopeful sign for Houston and Galveston

rita 3D2.jpgJeff Master’s latest update of just a few minutes ago indicates that experts are increasingly forming a consensus that Houston and Galveston will avoid a direct hit from Hurricane Rita:

The latest computer models are tightly clustered around a landfall point just west of the Texas/Louisiana border. Confidence is high in this forecast. Houston and Galveston should escape major wind and storm surge damage, and only experience maximum sustained winds of 60 mph with gusts to 85 mph. It is still too early to tell what will happen after landfall, as the models all take Rita different ways. A major rainwater flooding problem will ensue after Rita’s landfall, with 10 – 30 inches of rain falling over a large area of Texas and Louisiana.

For the first time since Hurricane Rita entered the Gulf earlier in the week, the cone of uncertainty that shows the range where the hurricane force winds will hit does not include a substantial portion of the Houston area, essentially that part west of I-45.

Here comes Rita

rita 3D.jpgHouston awakens this morning to the news that the two most likely locations for landfall are Port Arthur and Galveston. The cone of uncertainty extends from southwestern Louisiana on the east to the entire Houston metro area on the west. The National Hurricane Center is currently predicting landfall to occur in Jefferson County near Port Arthur, while local experts are predicting landfall slightly west in Chambers County nearer Galveston Bay (county map here). As Rita continues to move slowly with its eye about 260 miles southeast of Galveston, a consensus has developed that the storm will move into northeast Texas after landfall and then stall on Sunday and Monday, potentially causing huge amounts of rainfall of the type that flooded the Houston area during Tropical Storm Allison in 2001. Landfall is expected at this point sometime in the early morning hours of Saturday, probably between 5 a.m. to 8 a.m., although heavy rainfall and strong winds throughout the Houston area will be experienced well before then.
Houston, get ready to rumble.

“Houston to Coach Briles, are you with us?”

For the sake of the University of Houston football program, I am hoping that head football coach Art Briles had his tongue placed squarely in his cheek during his weekly radio show Wednesday described by Chronicle sportswriter Richard Justice:

“OK, there’s no requirement that your local college football coach has to read the New York Times Book Review.
But shouldn’t he know something.
UH’s Art Briles went on the radio Wednesday and just about made a fool out of himself.
When he was asked if this week’s game with Southern Miss would be cancelled, he said he hadn’t heard anything about it. He also said he hadn’t heard anything about a hurricane.
If I’m the president or athletics director at UH, I’m wondering if this guy might have a little too much tunnel vision.”