A strong line of thunderstorms with high winds, torrential rains and possible tornadoes swept through the Lake Houston area this afternoon. It left widespread power outages, snarled traffic, flooded streets, and swollen creeks and ditches. People still suffering PTSD from Harvey were re-traumatized by the sound of news helicopters and water creeping up their front steps. More heavy rains tonight will add to the area’s woes, even as people are still cleaning up from this afternoon’s flooding.
Examples of Damage Reported
Among the damage reported:
Several flooded homes in Bear Branch and Woodland Hills near creeks or ditches
Flooded locker rooms at Kingwood High School
Trees down and blocking Kingwood Drive at rush hour
Power lines down on Kingwood Drive
Knee-high water on Kingwood Drive at Town Center
Kingwood Drive traffic rerouted up Valley Manor
New pad sites for the retail expansion of the HEB center under water
Street flooding from one end of Kingwood to the other
Streets Designed as Part of Flood Retention System
Note: the streets in Kingwood are DESIGNED as part of the flood retention system. When rainfall rates exceed what creeks, ditches and bayous can handle, water backs up into streets. and drainage swales.
The amount of rain we received today was not great. But the intensity was off the charts. In about a half hour at my house, we received almost two inches. That’s between 3 and 4 inches per hour. Here’s an example: the swale beside my house.
Valley Manor just north of Kingwood Drive at 4PM on 5.3.19. Two neighbors across the street reports water on their front steps. One said water started to come through her front door. The family is still repairing from Harvey. Her entire family is traumatized.This is the ditch adjacent to the retail expansion of the H-E-B center. Photo courtesy of Mark Micheletti.Kingwood Drive west of Town Center. Photo courtesy of Clay Crawford.Kingwood Drive at Town Center.Photo courtesy of Clay Crawford.I heard that the entrance to Fosters Mill was also under water.Video of street in Riverchase by John Knoerzer.
Rainfall Totals for Friday Storm
Rainfall totals for last 24 hours as of 10PM 5.3.19. Note higher totals upstream from Lake Houston area.
River Report: Minor Flooding Possible on West Fork
Harris County Flood Warning System’s Real Time Inundation Mapping shows most streams within their banks. But note the warning for Humble at US59. While the river is 2 feet below the top of bank as of 10PM, it could easily go out of bank tonight.
More Storms on Way
As of 9PM a severe thunderstorm watch is still in effect for much of southeast Texas until 3PM Saturday..A large line of strong to severe thunderstorms has developed from E of Austin to NW of San Antonio and is moving ESE/SE at 15-20mph. Expect an average 1-2 inches with the line passage. Isolated total up to 3 inches be common. Creeks and bayous should be able to handle that amount of rainfall, according to Jeff Lindner of Harris County Flood Control.
NOAA forecast clearly shows the line of strong thunderstorms that should hit us overnight.
Here is an updated radar image as of 12:01 AM Saturday morning.
Image courtesy of RadarScope, an amazing app!
Expect minor flooding at 59 and River Grove Park, that could be exacerbated by the mouth bar and other sediment still in the river.
This does not account for any local effects to the mouth bar.
Hoping you stay dry!
Posted by Bob Rehak on 5/3/19 around midnight
613 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/KWD-TC.jpg?fit=1500%2C1125&ssl=111251500adminadmin2019-05-03 23:19:552019-05-04 00:47:07Overnight Rains Could Add to This Afternoon’s Woes
Jeff Lindner, Director of Hydrologic Operations and Division Meterologist for Harris County Flood Control, just issued this warning”
“Multiple rounds of thunderstorms with heavy rainfall and some severe weather likely today into tonight.”
“Large cluster of thunderstorms with heavy rainfall extends from near Sealy to College Station and is moving eastward and will overspread much of the region N of I-10 over the next several hours. A second…powerful…bow echo with 70-80mph is rapidly approaching Corpus Christi and the coastal bend and may impact the Matagorda Bay area later this morning.”
“Active pattern will remain in place as several disturbances and a weak cold front move across the area today and tonight and into Saturday. Rounds of thunderstorms will produce heavy rainfall and isolated severe weather. Main severe threats today will be mainly west of I-45 and some of the storms this morning over south-central TX have shown some weak rotation.”
“Expect the current round of storms to move across the area between now and 1-2pm followed by a brief break and then another…potentially stronger round this evening into the overnight period.”
“Rainfall amounts of 1-3 inches will be possible today into early Saturday with isolated higher totals. In fact some of the higher resolution models are showing isolated amounts up to 4-5 inches under training bands today and tonight. Air mass is certainly moist and will be able to support some 1-2 inch per hour rainfall rates which will lead to street flooding.”
River Forecast
“Area rivers are responding to the recent heavy rainfall and will remain elevated and in flood (Trinity). Additional rains today and tonight and then again next week will only increase rises. The area river and hydro situation is starting to become worrisome given the potential for this pattern to maintain for the next 1-2 weeks.”
Posted by Bob Rehak on April 3, 2019
612 Days since Hurricane Harvey
00adminadmin2019-05-03 09:41:282019-05-03 09:41:53Possible Street Flooding Today
If they kept world records for flooding, surely Tammy Gunnels would have the gold medal. Her home flooded 10 times in 10 years, once due to Hurricane Harvey and the other times due to inadequate or damaged storm drains on her street. The lady, who works as a maid and has scrubbed toilets for 33 years, has sought help from Montgomery County, the State of Texas, and FEMA – all to no avail. But rather than walk away from her mortgage, she and her husband have spent a quarter of a million dollars on flood mitigation for an $80,000 house. This family not only slipped between the cracks, it got swallowed by them. Learn how two people’s lives changed forever when they bought a house from an unscrupulous seller who hid past flooding problems. I interviewed Tammy in her modest home in a modest neighborhood called River Club Estates. The neighborhood is between Sorters Road and the West Fork of the San Jacinto in Montgomery County.
Tammy Gunnels baking Christmas cookies in her kitchen with her son Justin Davis and husband Ronnie Gunnels.
Rehak: When did you buy this house?
Gunnels: In December of ’08, exactly ten years ago.
A low lot and inadequate drainage: a bad combination for the Gunnels family.
Rehak: When did you first flood?
Gunnels: Four months later, in April, ’09. We’ve flooded nine more times since. If the forecast calls for 2 to 5 inches, we have to prep for flooding. Before we built a concrete berm that runs 8 inches below and 8 inches above ground around the house, a heavy rain would flood us in half an hour. Now, it takes about two hours of heavy rain. It all depends on how fast it comes down.
Rehak: How do you prep for a flood?
Gunnels: We put all of our furniture up on wooden blocks that we store out in the garage. The only carpets we have now are area rugs, so we roll those up and put them up on couches or tables.
Extensive Flood Mitigation Efforts
Rehak: What else have you tried to mitigate flooding?
Gunnels: Everything anyone has ever suggested. The first thing to go was carpets. For a while, we tried indoor/outdoor carpets. A contractor told us we could just suck up the water after a flood with a shop vac and then dry it out with fans. But that theory only lasted until the septic backed up. So we ripped everything out and then painted the concrete. But floods make the paint bubble up. We repainted a couple times and spot painted for four years. Then after Harvey, we realized “NO MORE.” I wanted something that I never had to mess with again. So, we went to stained concrete.
Rehak: It’s beautiful. How do you like it?
Gunnels: When we get water, my husband shop-vacs it up and we’re good.
Rehak: What else have you done?
Gunnels: We have three-inch plastic baseboards instead of wood. They never rot. They are clipped into place so we can remove them before water starts coming in.
Removable kick plate conceals flood space under elevated cabinets.
We raised all the cabinets and sinks up off the floor, like in a motel. Some of those have removable plastic kick plates, too.
Because we usually only get a couple inches in the house, our sheetrock no longer goes all the way to the floor. It stops 2 inches short. We’ve installed pre-treated studs everywhere, even on the inside of the house. We use green board, which is made out of cement, instead of normal wall board which soaks up water. We’ve installed gutters and downspouts to carry the water away from the house. And we’ve put in French drains for the same reason. We’ve even elevated appliances like the water heater.
Wallboard stops above floor. All studs made from pre-treated timber, even in interior of house.
Rehak: How much water did you have in the house during Harvey.
Gunnels: Over 4 feet. That was from the river, not the street.
Source of Problems
Rehak: Do other people in the neighborhood have the same problems?
Gunnels: Since we’ve been here, aside from Harvey and the Tax Day Flood, no one else has flooded except for us and the house next door. When it starts to rain, water is supposed to drain out through the neighborhood. But there’s not enough slope or capacity to carry it away. We’re at a low point, in a little bowl.
First time we flooded was from a flash flood. We got 4 or 5 inches. Nobody in the whole, entire neighborhood flooded but us.
Insurance approved repairs up to two feet. Once we cut into the walls, we saw water marks three feet up on the studs. The people we bought the house from only disclosed two floods, neither more than a couple inches, and said it was because of the lack of maintenance from the county. We found evidence of other floods that were much worse when we started to investigate.
From Misrepresentation to Mitigation
Rehak: How did that affect your insurance?
Gunnels: When we bought the house, we were in the 500-year flood zone. So, our insurance was only $285.
After our very first flood, State Farm said you’ll have to go direct to FEMA; you’re high risk. That’s when we learned how bad the problem was. FEMA told us the house had flooded FIVE times. The sellers only disclosed two and said water had never gotten over the baseboards. That was an outright lie from the water marks under the wall board.
Once we found out all that, our contractor recommended that we build a concrete berm 8 inches below and 8 inches above ground around the house. So, we sunk money into that. We were good for a couple years. We later realized that our “good luck” was the drought. The following year, we flooded three times in a seven-week period. As soon as we got sheet rock cut, it would flood again. It just would not stop!
Don’t forget to step up when you leave through the front door!
When State Farm sent us to FEMA, FEMA wanted $2,000 per year. After constructing the berm, gutters, French drains, and more, my husband and I felt we would be OK without the insurance.
Hit Five Times in One Year Without Insurance
Then we got hit five times in one year. When I tried to get insurance, they now wanted $3,000 a year. But we hadn’t made any claims except for that one in ’09.
Not even a concrete wall around the exterior of the house was enough to stop the flooding. Gunnels tries to sop up the leakage with extra sheets.
We had done everything anyone had told us to do. Except for elevating the house. We got three different estimates for that. Not including electrical, plumbing or anything else, the lowest was over $100,000. That just wasn’t feasible for us.
Not Enough Claims Means No Buyout
At this point we were up to six or seven floods. Then the Tax Day flood happened. That’s when Montgomery County stepped in. They said, “We’re going to start offering buyouts. We asked for one, but they said, “You don’t qualify because you haven’t maintained insurance.”
I said, “Because I didn’t file claims, you won’t offer a buyout?” He said, “Unfortunately, that’s the way the system works.
So, we bit the bullet and got insurance in 2015. In our bathrooms, our vanities and everything are elevated. There’s nothing touching the floor.
Example of elevating cabinets to reduce flood damage.
I had my kitchen cabinets specially built. The kick plates are removable. They’re made out of plastic and clipped on. In a flood, I can pull off those kickplates and let the water go under. Usually, we only get a couple inches.
Rehak: But in Harvey the whole neighborhood flooded?
Gunnels: Pretty much. Just a few homes that sit up higher did not flood.
Advice For Others
Rehak: Knowing what you know now, what advice would you give homebuyers to avoid the situation you’re in?
Gunnels: Buy flood insurance and file a claim every time it floods.
Also, I didn’t know you could get a history. Of course, sellers should disclose. But sometimes they conceal things. Don’t take the seller’s word for it. Get a print out from FEMA. They’ll give you a history on any property that’s had a flood claim on it. Also, talk to neighbors. It’s very important to talk to the neighbors because we flooded without insurance, so it’s not on record. But our neighbors know.
FEMA had paid out a total of a quarter million dollars on this property BEFORE our claims. We’ve now made three.
Rehak: FEMA paid $250K. You put another $250K into it. So you have half a million dollars into a house that cost $80K.
Gunnels: (Laughs.) Yeah, pretty much. In a home built in 1967. It makes absolutely no sense.
Search for Help from Officials
I clean homes for a living. One of my clients is a lawyer. After Harvey, she sent some letters for me, trying to get a buyout. But the answer we got was, “No funds available, Montgomery County is no longer doing buyouts.”
I don’t know who to contact at this point. I contacted county commissioners Jim Clark and Ed Rinehart. I’ve contacted Cecil Bell, our state representative. I have already made plans to call the new county commissioner James Metz. He starts in January. We’ve talked to FEMA numerous times.
The county engineers came out and explained how the drainage works.
They said we need a wide drain that goes from Sorters Road to Lana Lane. We said, “Well, build it.” They said, “We can’t. It’s on private property.”
When the property owners gave them permission, they said, “Oh no, we can’t. It’s too much of a liability. We can’t do that.”
My neighbor uncovered some emails saying they were going to do it, and then somehow, the money wasn’t there for them anymore.
Emotional Losses Compound Financial Losses
Rehak: Financially, the floods have been devastating for you. How have you survived emotionally?
Gunnels: In every flood, I’ve lost something. I inherited things from my great grandmother, grandmother and mother. Slowly but surely, over nine or ten floods, I have lost everything they gave me. After each flood, I told myself that “It’s just stuff.” But at a certain point, I said, “It’s my stuff.”
The hundred-year-old family bible Gunnels inherited from her mother: an irreplaceable loss to flooding.
Everything that you look at in this house is brand new. Everything. From the lamps to the tables. To the throw rugs. I have lost everything. But with Harvey. This was lost. (She plops a swollen book on the table; at first I don’t recognize what it is.) This is my mother’s family bible from 1918. I can’t turn the pages because they are stuck together. (She breaks down crying.) That is what it does to me.
Gunnels’ husband and son return from an errand.
No Way Out
Rehak: What would you like to do now if you could do anything?
Gunnels: Get bought out. Give me anything. A FEMA trailer and a piece of land. I’ll be happy.
My grandkids who visit every two weeks religiously have their own room here and they have lost everything, too. They can’t keep toys or a doll house or anything here. In EVERY flood, we lose something..
The first thing people say when they hear about our situation is, “Well, just move.” “Really? Where are we going to move to?” We’ve even looked into walking away from this house and letting it go into foreclosure. But that ruins our credit. We wouldn’t even qualify to rent a plastic shed from Home Depot.”
“We also looked into buying another house while we still owned this one. But the bank wanted to see a year of payments made on two places before loaning the money.” There’s just nothing that anyone can suggest that we haven’t looked into.
Fighting a Tax Increase
Rehak: So, I’m guessing that if you’re running Tammy’s Maid Service and you’ve sunk a quarter million dollars into this place, you’re not a shirker.”
Gunnels: Right! (Laughs.) I’m not high educated, but I’ve scrubbed toilets for 33 years. We’ve worked for what we have.
The Montgomery County Appraisal District wanted to raise our taxes one year. “Oh ho ho,” I said. “You want to raise my taxes on thisplace? They tried to come at me with, “The home over here is worth this and the home over there is worth that.”
I said, “Look at the pictures. You got raw sewage in the ditch. I flooded this many times.” They dropped our valuation down to $60-something thousand dollars. At first, they tried to argue with us. But the board voted unanimously to lower our appraisal.
Montgomery County wanted to increase the appraisal on Gunnels’ flood-prone property, but ultimately backed down.
If this house didn’t flood, it would be worth about $160,000 with all the improvements we made. We upgraded everything. We even replaced all the wiring in the house. Replaced aluminum with copper. Put in smoke detectors. A new breaker box. The works.
I’m not asking for anything more than what I have. I’ll even take smaller. As long as it doesn’t flood.
Gunnel’s Husband: My family all lives near here. So it’s important to us that we stay in the neighborhood.
Impact on Retirement and Savings
Rehak: What next for the Gunnels family?
Gunnels: Every single time a claim is paid out on this house now, it’s taxpayer money. We waste taxes on this.
Rehak: How much have you received in flood insurance claim reimbursements?
Gunnels: About $180,000.
Home Wet Home! No way to live with it and no way to leave it.
Rehak: What has happened to your savings?
Gunnels: We’ve burned through his 401K and every bit of savings we had. DONE! He is 53. I will be 49 next month. To our name, we have about four grand in savings.
Gunnels’ Husband: I didn’t know we had that much!
All: (Belly laughs.)
Gunnels: He’s got a little bit left in his 401K. Maybe 20 grand.
Rehak: That’s not going to last very long in retirement.
Gunnels: One year. Maybe. Everybody I talked to has empathy, but apparently there is no sympathy … because “Here we are.”
This was going to be our retirement home. When we moved here, we still had two kids left in school between us. Now they’ve moved on and we have grandkids. This was going to be our last home ever. We were fixing to die in this home. And we probably WILL.
Everyone: (More belly laughs.)
Posted by Bob Rehak on December 28, 2018
486 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Gunnels_01_01.jpg?fit=1500%2C844&ssl=18441500adminadmin2018-12-27 18:00:012018-12-27 21:14:49Tammy Gunnels Flooding Story: Ten Times in Ten Years
As of Saturday, Dec. 22, 2018, at 10:15 a.m., the Porter Dam had turned into the Porter Trench. Excavation of the undersized culvert continued.
Hopefully, their removal, will eliminate flooding like you see below after the 4.5 inch rain we had on Dec. 7.
Flooding on East Knox in Porter near Loop 494 after a 4.5″ rain on December 7th. Caused by an undersized culvert that backed water up for blocks. Photo courtesy of Mike Eberle.
Mike Eberle of Mike’s Hobby Shop on East Knox sent me these pics at the end of Saturday. They show the progress that the crew made during the day.
Downstream trench at end of Saturday. Photo courtesy of Mike Eberle. Mid-trench at end of Saturday. Photo courtesy of Mike Eberle.Upstream end of trench at end of day on Saturday. Photo courtesy of Mike Eberle.
It’s unclear at this time whether workers will install a larger culvert or just eliminate the Road to Nowhere altogether. I will continue to follow the story.
Street flooding, such as this blockage caused, can devastate homes and businesses every bit as much as river flooding. It only takes an inch of water to cause months worth of repair work.
This morning I learned of several more instances of tragic street flooding in Porter near Sorters Road. Apparently a broken or collapsed storm drain flooded the homes below repeatedly. Montgomery County has not fixed the drain despite repeated pleas from homeowners.
One home owner, a retired Marine, flooded five times in five years. His neighbors, a middle aged couple, flooded ten times in ten years.
Street flooding caused by another bad culvert. Photo courtesy of Tammy Gunnels.
The couple invested more than a quarter million dollars trying to flood-proof their home and virtually wiped out their life savings.
Let’s hope Montgomery County fixes that drain soon…as fast as TexDoT jumped on the Porter Dam problem.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 12/22, 2018
480 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Porter-DamPorterDam_1_01.jpg?fit=1500%2C1000&ssl=110001500adminadmin2018-12-22 14:43:412024-09-07 15:52:21Porter Dam Rapidly Becoming Porter Trench
Mike Eberle, a local entrepreneur owns Lakeside Plumbing, Gulf Coast Raceway and Mike’s Hobby Shop in Porter just off 494 on Knox. He arrived at work on December 8th to find his plumbing business flooded and his other two businesses surrounded by water.
Ditch Backing Up
This time, the culprit wasn’t Harvey or the San Jacinto River; Eberle’s businesses lie more than 3.5 miles from the river. It was someone who built a needless road over a drainage ditch. Because the capacity of the culvert under the road did not match the capacity of culverts farther up the ditch, water backed up for blocks. It flooded surrounding properties including homes, businesses and a church.
Properties flooded by constriction of drainage ditch. Photo by Mike Eberle. Flooded lot at Gulf Coast Raceway. Mike’s Hobby Shop and Lakeview Plumbing are on same property in background. Photo by Mike Eberle. Nearly submerged mailboxes show depth of flooding. Photo by Mike Eberle.
The Ditch Constriction
According to Eberle’s son, TexDoT permitted the Road to Nowhere (see below), which Eberle dubbed “The Porter Dam.” Eberle’s son says TexDoT told him that the permit should never have been issued. Supposedly, TexDoT will rip the road out on Friday, December 21. This should make an early and welcome Christmas gift to the neighbors up-ditch who flooded.
The Road to Nowhere crosses a ditch only to end at a detention pond. Photo taken after flood.
On the Road to Nowhere, Eberle looked up the ditch toward his property during the flood. Below is what he saw – water everywhere.
Above the ditch, water backed up for blocks.
Below the ditch…he saw a much different story.
Below the ditch, looking south, the water level was much lower, proving that construction constricted the flow.
Several days after the floodwater receded, you could see why, Note the size of the culverts above the road. In contrast, here’s what the culvert under the Road to Nowhere looks like.
The new culvert has much less capacity.
Property Owner
According to the Montgomery County Appraisal District, the Road to Nowhere is on property owned by Randal A Tr Hendricks, 400 Randal Way in Spring. Hendricks Interests, LLC, also at that address, promotes itself as a developer of residential and commercial properties and has been doing business since 1978. Hendricks currently lists eleven pad sites for sale in the Kroger Center at North Park and 59, slightly south of the Road to Nowhere.
One can only speculate why someone would build a useless road that backed water up onto neighbor’s property.
Posted by Bob Rehak on 12/20/2018
478 Days since Hurricane Harvey
https://i0.wp.com/reduceflooding.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/Eberle-Flood.jpg?fit=1500%2C1125&ssl=111251500adminadmin2018-12-20 16:26:312018-12-20 17:06:05The Porter Dam: Road to Nowhere (Except Flooding)