Live Updates: Texans face drinking water shortage

FAN Editor
  19m ago

Texas was “seconds and minutes” away from having blackouts for months

The top official at Texas’ power grid said the system was “seconds and minutes” away from leaving residents without power for months.

The Electric Reliability Council of Texas received intense criticism for leaving some 4 million customers without power this week. Bill Magness, the president and CEO of the council, told the Texas Tribune on Wednesday that it could have all been much worse.

Magness told the outlet that grid operators acted quickly to cut the amount of power distributed on Monday – and if they had not, Texas could have suffered blackouts that “could have occurred for months” and left the state in an “indeterminately long” crisis.

“It needed to be addressed immediately,” said Magness. “It was seconds and minutes [from possible failure] given the amount of generation that was coming off the system.”

Read more here.

  57m ago

Frozen fire hydrants hamper firefighters

Firefighters in San Antonio battled a massive blaze at an apartment complex without the help of hydrants Thursday night. Crews had to bring water to the scene, where fire hydrants were frozen shut.

CBS affiliate KENS-TV showed footage of a fire truck dumping water into a makeshift pool in a parking lot. A different truck would pump water from the pool into hoses.

“There’s a hydrant right in front of the building, it’s frozen stiff and none of the hydrants out here work, and they’re all frozen,” Bexar-Bulverde Volunteer Fire Department Chief Jerry Bialick told WOAI-TV.

Bialick told the station firefighters would use thousands of gallons of water in a matter of minutes.

Neighbors told KENS-TV the building’s 130 residents made it out safely.

  12:31 PM

Biden says he plans to visit Texas and declare major disaster

President Biden says he is making a major disaster declaration for Texas that will clear the way for more federal resources, and he plans to visit the state at a time when he won’t be interfering with the disaster response.

The disaster declaration will unlock more Federal Emergency Management Agency resources for Texas. The president said he’ll sign the declaration Friday, after he signed an emergency declaration for the state five days ago.

The president also said he plans to visit Texas but wants to wait until his presence won’t be a burden or hinder the disaster relief response.

Read more here.

  Updated 12:36 PM

Texas grid operators say electrical system back to normal

Texas’ grid operators said Friday that the electrical system has returned to normal.

Smaller outages still remained Friday. But Bill Magness, president of the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, says the grid again has enough capacity to provide power throughout the entire system.

  Updated 12:25 PM

Federal official worried about people staying warm

FEMA leader on Texas weather crisis 02:42

The acting head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency said he’s worried about people staying warm in Texas. With subfreezing temperatures expected Friday night, acting Administrator Bob Fenton urged people to go to shelters or warming stations if they still don’t have heat.

“If you’re cold, don’t stay in your house, go to one of the warming stations,” Fenton said on “CBS This Morning.”

Fenton said his agency was in the state providing supplies like blankets, fuel, meals and water.

Fenton encouraged people whose property was damaged in the severe weather to go through their insurance provider first before seeking assistance from the federal government. Texans could receive assistance from the government if President Biden issues a major disaster declaration for the state.

  Updated 11:05 AM

Some Texans facing high electric bills

As power returns, Texans face new challenges 03:50

Some Texans are going to be dealing with surprisingly high electric bills.

Most residents enter into one of two types of contracts with energy providers: a higher fixed rate or variable. With variable, customers take the chance and can pay low rates when demand is low and higher rates when demand rises.

Houston resident Meghan O’Neill paid over $2,000 in two days. Her February bill is now more than $3,000.

“It’s like, OK, do I feed my family or do I run the heat, which one do I do?” O’Neill said.

Joshua Rhodes, an energy expert at the University of Texas, said that those with fixed rates could also pay more in the future.

“That effect will take later as, you know, utilities and the like assess, you know, how much money that they need to recoup,” Rhodes said. “… Eventually the customer always pays, you know, kind of at the end of this.”

  Updated 10:47 AM

San Antonio to open water distribution stations

The San Antonio Water System announced Thursday that it will begin providing water distribution at seven pump locations around the city. Residents will receive up to five gallons per person and are advised to boil the water they receive as a precautionary measure.

The City of San Antonio and the San Antonio Food Bank will also provide bottled water distribution at sites around the city.

San Antonio has experienced water outages due to the winter weather emergency, and the San Antonio Water System on Wednesday issued a boil water advisory for customers who still have access to water.

  Updated 10:28 AM

Winter storms disrupt COVID vaccine effort as variants fuel new fears

As Americans yearn for their pre-pandemic lives, the distribution of coronavirus vaccines is hitting delays as winter storms pummel the U.S. The disease has not only impacted how Americans live, but how long. Jonathan Vigliotti reports for “CBS Evening News.” 

Storms disrupt vaccine effort amid new varian… 02:28
  Updated 9:49 AM

34 deaths tied to the winter storm

As of Friday moring, 34 deaths were linked to the severe winter weather across seven states. 

The most deaths were recorded in Texas, with 20 residents dying from storm-related incidents. Here’s where they occurred: Houston (7), Taylor County (6), Sugarland (4), Galveston County (2) and San Antonio (1).

Earlier this week, a grandmother and three children were killed in a house fire in Sugarland. City officials said the neighborhood had been without power. The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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