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Meal Service after Hurricane Beryl Batters Houston and SE Texas

Dallas, Texas (July 9, 2024) – Hurricane Beryl made landfall as a Category 1 storm on the Texas Gulf Coast early Monday morning near the city of Matagorda, only 85 miles from Houston, and caused widespread flooding and left more than 2 million customers without power in Houston and Southeast Texas. The Salvation Army has moved quickly to establish command post locations for feeding operations that should begin on Tuesday in affected communities.

Beryl, which weakened to a tropical storm soon after making landfall, is the earliest hurricane on record to reach Category 5 and is only the 10th July hurricane to strike Texas since records began in 1851. The storm continues to move in a northeast direction, with damaging winds and heavy rainfall falling over areas of east Texas that have already experienced catastrophic flooding in 2024.

“The Salvation Army Incident Management Team, responsible to lead response efforts, will be based at our Disaster Warehouse in Houston, with a second operation established in Wharton, Texas. A Southern Baptist Texas Convention (SBTC) Disaster Response kitchen will handle the preparation and cooking of all meals in both locations,” said Alvin Migues, Emergency Disaster Services Director for The Salvation Army in Texas. “We expect to have our mobile feeding units serving meals in impacted communities by Tuesday afternoon.”

Salvation Army mobile kitchens and trained disaster teams from San Antonio, New Braunfels, Victoria, Kerrville, Granbury, Bryan/College Station, Conroe and Freeport have been deployed to Houston and the impacted area. Additional mobile kitchens remain on standby. Feeding operations will begin on Tuesday in the following locations:

Link to serving locations: Beryl – SAL Serving Locations Day 1 (batchgeo.com)

“Damage assessment will continue over the next few days and the situation remains fluid as is always the case in any disaster,” said Migues. “The Salvation Army team is working closely with both local and state agencies and will adjust our response efforts as necessary in order to effectively meet the needs of those impacted by the storm.”

 

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