The government wants to buy their flood
Time:2024-05-21 08:33:33 Source:styleViews(143)
HOUSTON (AP) — After the floodwaters earlier this month just about swallowed two of the six homes that 60-year-old Tom Madigan owns on the San Jacinto River, he didn’t think twice about whether to fix them. He hired people to help, and they got to work stripping the walls, pulling up flooring and throwing out water-logged furniture.
What Madigan didn’t know: The Harris County Flood Control District wants to buy his properties as part of an effort to get people out of dangerously flood-prone areas.
Back-to-back storms drenched southeast Texas in late April and early May, causing flash flooding and pushing rivers out of their banks and into low-lying neighborhoods. Officials across the region urged people in vulnerable areas to evacuate.
Like Madigan’s, some places that were inundated along the San Jacinto in Harris County have flooded repeatedly. And for nearly 30 years, the flood control district has been trying to clear out homes around the river by paying property owners to move, then returning the lots to nature.
You may also like
- Kristin Cavallari, 37, ignores critics of her age
- Xi Focus: Xi Steers Import Expo into Global Platform for Sharing Chinese Opportunities
- China Focus: China Releases Measures to Optimize COVID
- Federation Cultivates 'Legal Docents' to Help Protect Women's Rights
- Brazil replaces injured goalkeeper Ederson in Copa America squad
- Xiplomacy: China's Vision of Global Governance for Addressing Common Challenges
- Xi Meets Argentine President Fernandez
- Man Who Cares for the World
- Kristin Cavallari, 37, ignores critics of her age