Historic Winter Storms Cause Frozen and Burst Pipes in Southern U.S.
Disaster Alert
February 25, 2021
Source: USA Today
Additional Resources:
KATV ABC 7 (Arkansas Homeowners See Burst Pipes and Flooded Homes from Winter Season)
KFOR NBC 4 (Hundreds of Oklahomans Working to Clean Water Damage from Burst Pipes)
WMBF (‘We Need Some Help:’ Flooding in Bucksport Community Forces Residents Out of Their Homes)
FEMA Winter Storm Declarations (2021):
Louisiana Severe Winter Storm (EM-3556)
Oklahoma Severe Winter Storm (EM-3555)
Oklahoma Severe Winter Storms (DR-4587)
Texas Severe Winter Storm (EM-5554)
Texas Severe Winter Storms (DR-4586)
Approximate locations (according to media outlets) sustaining structural damage/flooding:
*To view associated ZIP codes, click here.
Arkansas
– Jacksonville (Pulaski County)
Oklahoma
– Guthrie (Logan County)
– Oklahoma City (Oklahoma County)
Texas
– Abilene (Taylor, Jones Counties)
– Austin (Travis, Hays, Williamson Counties)
– Dallas (Dallas, Collin, Denton, Kaufman, Rockwall Counties)
– El Paso (El Paso County)
– Houston (Harris, Fort Bend, Montgomery Counties)
– Killeen (Bell County)
– San Marcos (Hays County)
– Tyler (Smith County)
South Carolina
– Bucksport (Horry County)
A historic cold snap in Texas left millions of residents without power in freezing weather, many of whom will soon face costly flood damage, even as rising temperatures offer a respite from the cold.
Reports of frozen and burst water pipes in Texas homes and businesses are widespread, and the upcoming thaw may further open the floodgates – quite literally, experts said.
“It is going to be crazy for a little while down there,” said Paul Abrams, director of public relations at Roto-Rooter Plumbing and Water Cleanup. “I would bet it’s pretty similar to the effects of a hurricane.”
In parts of the country that typically get freezing temperatures, walls are built thicker and with more insulation, and pipes may be several feet underground or run up through a basement to protect them, Abrams said. In Texas, where pipes are typically weatherized to handle the summer heat, more are on exterior walls or in attics.
For full report, please click the source link above.