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  • ABC13 Houston

    Houston family says damage is too extensive for crews to restore power at NE-area home post-Beryl

    2 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3X0Z7I_0uX8Y3Ex00

    Friday marks 12 days that a family in northeast Houston has gone without power after Hurricane Beryl made landfall.

    Three trees in their backyard fell, knocking out the power, gas, and sewage lines, and another is on the verge of falling.

    RELATED: Airbnb.org to provide free temporary housing for Houstonians displaced by Hurricane Beryl

    "I went the day before yesterday and got all my hair cut off because my nerves were bad," Carolyn Ann Bennett said. "CenterPoint tells us there's nothing they can do for us now. We're caught between a rock and a hard place."

    The damage to their home on Harmon Street is so extensive that utility workers cannot turn on the power.

    CenterPoint officials sent ABC13 this statement:

    "We can confirm that 6331 Harmon has meter loop damage. We cannot safely restore service to the home until they have a licensed electrician make the necessary repairs."

    Kenneth, Carolyn's husband, who is disabled, says that since no trees physically hit their homes, their insurance claims were denied.

    He and his wife take care of four grandchildren.

    "It's really dangerous to be in this house. I pay all my bills, then I try to get help from people, and they give me the runaround," he said.

    The damaged power lines also knocked out the power to Dorothy Horton's home, next door to the Bennetts.

    RELATED: How effective are buried power lines in preventing widespread power outages in cases like Beryl?

    "Never in my life. Never. This is the worst I've been through," Horton said.

    Safely clearing out the yard is going to be difficult and expensive.

    The Bennetts have been sleeping on couches and sleeping bags, huddling together in the one room cooled by a donated generator.

    WATCH: This Week in Texas: Lasting effects of Hurricane Beryl on statewide infrastructure and politics

    On an all-new episode of This Week in Texas, the state is recovering from the lasting impact of Hurricane Beryl.

    Local volunteer groups are working to bring in licensed crews for help.

    They're all praying the tree leaning over their backyard doesn't fall before workers can safely cut it down.

    "If it weren't for the man upstairs, my God, I don't know what we would do," Kenneth said.

    For more on this story, follow Pooja Lodhia on Facebook , X and Instagram .

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