Thứ Sáu, 1 tháng 6, 2018

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Texas 'hero' eyes Harvey's devastation, awaits new hurricane season

Dearing, a 30-year-old harbor worker and aspiring screenwriter, was trapped in a local storm shelter during Harvey last August and was later hailed as a hero for leading care for about 120 people.

Dearing still has the Texas state flag that flew at the Capitol given to him by lawmakers in appreciation.

He and his neighbors also still bear the psychological scars from the Category 4 storm that leveled the city of about 10,000 people and killed two residents during what ultimately became the most destructive U.S.

hurricane season on record.

You look around Rockport, obviously we are still in recovery, we are still rebuilding.

But emotionally, the storm is not over for a lot of us, he said.

With this years hurricane season beginning on Friday, people like Dearing are bracing for another round.

During Harvey, Dearing evacuated to a shelter at local elementary school, where he found vulnerable citizens unwilling or unable to leave the area and no supplies or management to help them.

Dearing responded by building a team of younger volunteers who cared for the evacuees, including six people on oxygen and about 20 elderly in wheelchairs.

They collected leaking water in containers they found and used them to refill the few operational toilets, pooled food and even braved the high winds to find a car they could use to recharge a portable oxygen machine.

Rockports pain last year was just the start, however.

In addition to Texas, hurricanes walloped such places as Florida and Puerto Rico, causing scores of deaths, hundreds of billions of dollars in damage, massive power outages and devastation to hundreds of thousands of structures.

Brock Long, an administrator for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, said on Wednesday at the National Hurricane Center in Miami that the fallout from last year is still being felt.

Weve helped more people in the past six months than the agency has dealt with over the last decade, he told reporters of the about five million people who registered for FEMA benefits.

U.S.

forecasters expect the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season will be near- to above-normal in number and intensity of storms, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations (NOAA) Climate Prediction Center said in May.

It has been almost nine months since Harvey dumped nearly a trillion gallons (3.8 trillion liters) of water on the U.S.

Gulf Coast, killing 68 people and causing an estimated $125 billion in property damage.

About 18,000 people in Texas remain in temporary housing a year after the storm, down from some 61,000, John Sharp, the head of the commission to rebuild Texas told state lawmakers this month.

After Harvey, Houston passed an ordinance requiring certain dwellings to be raised to the floodplain for the highest flood levels in 500 years to plus two feet (61 cm) as Harvey was the citys fifth 500-year flood since 2010.

Previously, the rule was new homes only had to start one foot (30 cm) above the 100-year level.

While most of Harveys damage in Texas in dollar terms was in the Houston area, the impact of the devastation was far more concentrated in Rockport, about 180 miles (290 km) to the southwest.

Hundreds of Rockport buildings are still in disrepair, including City Hall, which is boarded up from the damage, with city officials now working out of a separate municipal structure that survived.

Rockport Mayor Patrick Rios said the top priority now is bringing back affordable housing for residents, many of whom lost their homes after the hurricane pounded the city with winds of about 130 miles per hour (210 kph) and storm surges of up to 13 feet (4 meters).

For Dearing, the flag and a plaque were given in recognition for his heroism, and he met all five living former U.S.

presidents at a subsequent hurricane relief concert.

He also learned about himself during Harvey.

I learned I can carry a lot of weight, a lot more weight than I thought.

If you have to find it, you always have a little bit more in you than you think you do, he said, from Rockport where he remains in the Aransas County Navigation District job he had before the hurricane.

Crystal Whitehead, one of the people who survived in the shelter, praised Dearings efforts after she lost her house and suffered broken ribs in the storm.

I am thankful for what Zach did for Rockport.

He was there for all of us, she said.

As for lessons Dearing can apply in this years hurricane season, he said he will encourage people to get out of town fast and far when they hear a storm is coming.

You need to get to know your neighbors.

In a time of crisis, youre going to come to rely on one another, he said.

Everyone has a role to play..

For more infomation >> Texas 'hero' eyes Harvey's devastation, awaits new hurricane season - Duration: 7:49.

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Texas Today Talker May 31st - Duration: 3:14.

For more infomation >> Texas Today Talker May 31st - Duration: 3:14.

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See why Carly Pearce is the Best in Texas - Duration: 3:43.

Song

Song

I come from a family who loved classic country and love bluegrass and it was always playing in a home, and I've

always loved just that

rootsy acoustic, real singer, real songwriting, real lyrics, just that mountain

side of bluegrass and country music that always has been my favorite.

I moved to Nashville after working a couple years at Dollywood and went from being a very

big fish in a small pond to a tiny tiny fish in a huge pond in Nashville

I got a record deal and

lost it just as quickly as I got it and I had to pay my rent and pay my bills and survive

and so I took a job cleaning Airbnb. That was how I paid my rent for a really long time as me

people know me as getting my start with the Josh Abbott Band and that allowed me to

get to go out and tour in Texas a lot with them

he Josh and his band were so kind to let me open a lot of shows for him and

ride his tour bus when I didn't have any money and so I was exposed very early on to the Texas music scene

Which is amazing and they love

songs and they love songwriting and they loved real artists and they really loved country music and I think that you get something out of

Texas Krauts that you don't really get anywhere else

the only car that I've ever driven in my whole life is Ford and

I don't know that I would ever drive another one. So it feels

so awesome to really love

Ford it as much as I do. They've been a huge part of even my story of

wanting a Ford truck when I was 16 years old and my dad and my grandfather

surprising me with it in the driveway and then buying my first car which was a Ford and

running that thing completely into the ground traveling around from city to city playing

every gig and bar that I could while packing my band in the back seats to

having my first single go number one and getting to buy a brand new Ford

so it's a huge honor to be a part of it

There are videos of me saying to my parents that I was going to move to Nashville and

singing at the Grand Ole Opry one day and so when I finally got to step on that Opry stage in 2015

It was a dream come true one of the most surreal moments of my life

I've played over 50 times now and just consider all of them family.

I've been very honest about how much I've struggled in the nine years that I've been here and I think that so many people

are quick to not want to share the struggle when they see success and

I've been told no by

every single person in Nashville and told

to move home to find something else to do your music isn't isn't good enough all these different things that I think that

what I want people to see out of my story and out of just my vulnerability is that

if you work hard and you believe and you

won't take no for an answer and you go and do everything that you can to make you as an artist the best

representation that it can be you can do it

For more infomation >> See why Carly Pearce is the Best in Texas - Duration: 3:43.

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Texas teen, wife accused of hiring hitman to kill his jeweler father - Duration: 10:13.

AUSTIN, Texas — An Austin-area teen and his wife are charged with hiring someone to kill his father, a prominent jeweler who was gunned down in March during a home break-in, authorities said Wednesday

Nicolas Patrick Shaughnessy and Jaclyn Alexa Edison, who are 19 years old and live together in College Station, were arrested Tuesday on a count of criminal solicitation to commit capital murder, Travis County sheriff's officials said

 They remained in jail Wednesday, with Shaughnessy's bond set at a $3 million and Edison's at $1 million

Neither had an attorney listed in online jail records.According to investigators, Shaughnessy's mother, Corey Shaughnessy, called 911 in the early morning hours of March 2 to report an intruder in the home where she lived with her husband, Theodore Shaughnessy

Deputies sent to the home found Theodore Shaughnessy dead of multiple gunshot wounds

A family dog was also killed. Authorities say the plot called for Corey Shaughnessy to be killed as well, but she was physically unharmed

The shooter hasn't been caught, but sheriff's spokeswoman Kristen Dark said in a statement that detectives "are following new leads in the case

" She declined to elaborate when later reached by phone.Theodore Shaughnessy was the owner of Gallerie Jewelers in Austin

The company had posted on its Facebook page in late April that, "We are happy to announce that Nicolas, Ted's son, will be carrying on his legacy here at Gallerie

"An obituary for the elder Shaughnessy published in the Austin American-Statesman said he was "a proud father to his son, Nicolas

"In the months before the shooting, Nicolas Shaughnessy approached multiple people asking if they were willing to be paid to kill someone, investigators allege in an arrest affidavit

He estimated that he'd receive some $8 million from the life insurance policies for his parents, from the sale of their home and sale of the jewelry store

Authorities say they found ammunition in the defendants' home that matched casings found at the crime scene

CBS affiliate KEYE obtained court documents which detail much of the evidence against Nicolas and Jaclyn

According to the affidavit, the killer entered the home through Nicolas's unlocked bedroom window after Nicolas allegedly deactivated the residential alarm system remotely

A neighbor in College Station told KEYE that Shaughnessy talked often of his family's wealth and that he wasn't really surprised when he heard what Shaughnessy is accused of orchestrating the alleged plot

The station also reports that, according to a new affidavit, when investigators spoke with an employee at the apartment complex where Nicolas and Jaclyn live in College Station, the employee said Nicolas contacted her two weeks before by social media asking if she were looking to make extra cash

When she inquired what he meant, Nicolas allegedly responded "Illegal activities" and "Anything from strippers to murder

"The employee reportedly said Nicolas told her he would pay her "$20,000 a head" with a $15,000 incentive

The woman told investigators he followed up that statement with skeleton emojis, at which point she stopped responding to him

According to the station, the affidavit states that detectives spoke to one of Nicolas' friends who Nicolas had claimed had used the window in his bedroom as an entrance and exit before

The friend said Nicolas has talked about faking his own death for the insurance money, and mentioned his and his parents' life insurance policies

The friend also said Nicolas told him he would get over $1 million upon his parents' death, and that Shaughnessy has repeatedly called him since his father's death, asking him what the detectives knew and what he was telling them

KEYE reports that investigators confirmed that Nicolas Shaughnessy was the sole beneficiary of a $2 million policy if his parents were dead

Detectives obtained a search warrant for Nicolas' and Jaclyn's apartment in College Station where a marriage certificate was found, indicating they were married in July of 2017, and that the friend was the officiant

Investigators also found a box of brass Sig .380 caliber bullets--the same brand and caliber found in the body of Theodore Shaughnessy

There were six rounds missing from the box.On a computer seized from the residence, investigators found a chat log between Nicolas and Jaclyn from February 23 and 24 discussing a payment of $50,000 for a "job

"Search warrants for the friend's cell phone and iPad turned up a conversation between him and Nicolas on January 30

Nicolas asked the friend if wanted to make $20,000. He later added the total would be $50,000, with "20 for each and 10 extra because 50 is a nice whole number

"During the search of the friend's iPad, investigators found a text conversation with Nicolas from August 2, 2017

Nicolas told the friend he needed more cash. The friend responded "u have questions or suggestions

" Nicolas respoded "Plastic gloves Ski masks."Investigators say the friend responded "no no no" and Nicolas answered back "Fine fine

Just walk in shoot a family steal all their s--t. No mask needed cuz they'll be dead

" Police believe these comments are an allusion to the shooting death on March 2, 2018

No one else has been charged in the case.KEYE reports that Perry Minton and Rick Flores, attorneys for Nicolas Shaughnessy, released the following statement Wednesday afternoon: "We have been working with the Shaughnessy family over the last several months as they mourn the loss of Ted

These allegations are not consistent in any way with the young man we have come to know

Nick has been living with his mother since this tragedy occurred. Ms. Shaughnessy stands firmly behind her son

We will review the evidence as it becomes available to us." 

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