HOUSTON — Eboni Davis was at home Sunday night when she got a text saying she wouldn’t have work the following day at Yates High School because of a boil water notice in the nation’s fourth-most-populous city.
“I was like, ‘That’s crazy. How did they even let this happen?’” Davis said Monday afternoon, as she pushed a shopping cart carrying cases of water in the parking lot of an H-E-B grocery store, where there was a limit of two cases per customer. “There should be stuff in place so stuff like this wouldn’t happen, you would think, especially since the city has been established for a long time.”
Millions of residents in this city, vulnerable to natural disasters every hurricane season, shared the same apparent confusion as Davis hours after Mayor Sylvester Turner issued the notice to boil water before consumption, prompted by a power failure at a water treatment center.
Like Davis, many said they learned of the notice only when schools closed for more than 300,000 schoolchildren attending four different districts across the region. Others were furious they had not learned about the situation from their government but instead from friends and neighbors who have kids in school, in some instances hours after the problem had occurred.
The city ended the notice early Tuesday, after Houstonians spent more than a day buying up bottled water or making due with boiling tap water.
By Monday afternoon, coffee shops sold what they could. Grocery store employees tried to restock empty shelves in water aisles. About 15 colonoscopies at a Harris Health System hospital had already been rescheduled “due to longer equipment cleaning times between procedures.”
Meanwhile, parents anxiously waited to hear whether their child would return to school Tuesday after the Thanksgiving break — or not, which was the case for some roughly 195,000 students enrolled in Houston ISD, the state’s largest school district that again canceled classes Tuesday because of the notice.
The Sunday night alert from Houston ISD about canceled Monday classes went out at approximately 9:34 p.m. via text and phone calls, with a subsequent blast five minutes later.
Turner said notification of the notice had been sent to the public at 6:44 p.m. via a news release and social media channels. It was not clear, however, who received the information that early. The city said it would review how it handled communications.
A gas station clerk in the city’s Montrose neighborhood, apparently unaware of the notice, asked a Texas Tribune reporter Monday morning if something had happened to the city’s water because customers kept buying all the bottled water he had stocked.
Other residents, like Adela Coreas, a 60-year-old security officer with two jobs, found the communication method “very irresponsible.”
Coreas said she also learned of the notice Monday morning while listening to a Spanish talk radio show. She stopped at the gas station where she buys coffee every morning, but there was no coffee to buy. Having just finished her overnight job, she headed to her second gig, which she starts at 7 a.m., and made instant coffee.
“The same way they send out alerts about kids who are missing and other matters, they should have sent one that was a priority,” Coreas said, loading cases of water into the bed of her truck at Fiesta supermarket.
Instead, with two pups, she spent $21.90 on water bottles. Her husband spent money on more bottles, too.
U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Houston, added bottled water to a free flu vaccine drive that was already scheduled to occur in the afternoon. Even before a box truck loaded with 200 cases of water arrived, there was a tiny line of cars forming. Turner was expected to later join the event.
“As a member that represents a sizable part of Houston, we wanted to make sure that as people came that we’d be able to provide them with water,” Jackson Lee told reporters. She said she had reached out to the Environmental Protection Agency, although it was not involved yet.
Deloyd Parker, the executive director of SHAPE Community Center, said he had fielded some calls seeking water. He told his staff of about eight to work from home and double checked a doctor’s appointment was still on.
“I had to make some adjustments,” Parker said. “It was not convenient but life is not convenient.”
Many others found themselves making adjustments as well.
Nurbanu Serikbayeva, a mother of two — one already in school — shared her reaction Sunday night upon learning there would be no class.
“I’m gonna have kids at home, which is something fun on Monday,” she said.
At Campesino Coffee House, general manager Gabriel Urquizo helped fill orders, which were all in to-go cups. They sold pastries but not their usual food. They served cold drinks, but without ice and likely until the refrigerated pitchers of cold brew, which they typically dilute with filtered water, ran out.
“No ice,” Urquizo, 47, told a customer who wanted an iced latte. “It’s so weird.”
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