Author Archives | webeditor

UH mask policy rescinded after Gov. Greg Abbott’s order

Face covering will no longer be required on the UH campus after Gov. Greg Abbott signed an order prohibiting government entities from mandating masks. | Juana Garcia/The Cougar

Face coverings will no longer be required on the UH campus after Gov. Greg Abbott signed an order prohibiting government entities from mandating masks. | Juana Garcia/The Cougar

UH’s COVID-19 policy that required students, faculty, staff and visitors to wear face coverings on campus has been rescinded, effective immediately, after Gov. Greg Abbott signed an order prohibiting government entities from mandating masks on Tuesday afternoon.

The mask policy was put into review last week after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new guidelines saying those who are fully vaccinated can go maskless in most situations.

Although the policy, which began more than a year ago in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, will no longer be enforced, UH is still encouraging mask-wearing, “especially for individuals who are not fully vaccinated,” said UH spokesperson Shawn Lindsey.

With cases dropping around the country, the University has already set plans for 80 percent of classes to be in person next fall and “for the UH community to return to normal during the next few months,” President Renu Khator said in a statement on May 5.

New COVID-19 cases within the UH community have also fallen drastically since the height of the pandemic.

An average of 0.71 new daily cases has been reported within the past seven days, compared to early January when the figure hovered above eight.

For more of The Cougar’s coronavirus coverage, click here.

news@thedailycougar.com


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Letter from the Editor: The Cougar welcomes new editor in chief

general breaking news uh

Outgoing editor in chief Jhair Romero. | Trevor Nolley/The Cougar

Outgoing editor in chief Jhair Romero. | Trevor Nolley/The Cougar

When I became editor in chief of The Cougar, just months after the coronavirus pandemic took hold, my goal for the newspaper was to meet the moment.

I knew our responsibility as the University’s student news organization was to keep our community informed of the crisis that was disrupting our lives.

A year later, I couldn’t be more proud of the work this organization has done to accomplish that goal. From our COVID-19 tracker to our coverage of life at UH during a public health crisis, The Cougar’s staff continuously put its best foot forward for the UH community.

I am confident The Cougar will continue to do the same under the leadership of incoming editor in chief Donna Keeya, who has proven to be an incredible on-campus leader and a star of student journalism at UH.

I cannot wait to see the amazing things she and this organization will accomplish as normalcy continues to creep back into our lives over the next year.

— Jhair Romero, outgoing editor in chief


Incoming editor in chief Donna Keeya. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

Incoming editor in chief Donna Keeya. | Kathryn Lenihan/The Cougar

As an organization, The Cougar is a safe space for students to gain skills and has been the starting point for many journalists’ careers. For myself and many others, The Cougar has become a safe haven to discover themselves and grow personally and professionally.

As I take on the editor in chief position, my two main goals are to continuously inform the UH community over important topics and practice servant leadership to help build up the next generation of student journalists.

Journalism is the history of today and as journalists, it is our responsibility to accurately capture it for generations to come. I’m confident in this upcoming editorial board’s ability to document history in the moment and produce content that’ll be referenced for years to come.

The Cougar has taught me so much about my craft and I’m very grateful to give back to others in the same way. I especially would like to thank McKenzie Misiaszek, Autumn Rendall, Michael Slaten and Jhair A. Romero for helping me get here.

Here’s to another year of storytelling.

— Donna Keeya, incoming editor in chief

editor@thedailycougar.com


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New SGA president vows to wow with her policies

SGA President Allison Lawrence took over Monday as the 56th Administration saw its first official day in office. | Corbin Ayres/The Cougar

With the shelves cleared and board erased, Allison Lawrence walked into her new office for the first time since she was elected student body president by more than twice the votes of her closest competitor.

Lawrence, a political science junior, was a CLASS senator before she was appointed chief of staff during the 55th Administration. She ran with the Students Unite party on a platform of pushing a green campus, increasing student wages and increasing the variety of health insurance the Student Health Center accepts.

“People who were in SGA at the time took me under their wing and were like, ‘Hey, you should apply and get appointed first and see how you like it,’ and so I did,” Lawrence said. “Then I became chief of staff, and now I’m president.”

Lawrence, a Houston native, wanted to be a meteorologist when she grew up. In high school, she participated in model United Nations and art.

“When I first joined SGA, it felt like I was the only woman in a leadership role and a lot of meetings. I remember being in meetings with Cameron (Barrett), Davis (Mendoza Darusman) and administrators, and I was the only girl there,” Lawrence said. “There were times where people would literally say, ‘Oh you bring the female perspective,’ ‘Oh you’re the woman in the room so you can tell us things from the woman’s perspective.’”

Her first step into politics happened her freshman year of college when she became an ambassador to the Women and Gender Resource Center and LGBTQ Resource Center and lobbied at the U.S. Capitol on behalf of UH.

“I love advocating, and I love policy, this just feels right,” Lawrence said. “And I feel excited and like I can apply myself.”

Executive positions in her administration are not yet filled but will be appointed at the next SGA Senate meeting, and she hopes her cabinet will be appointed.

We’ve been doing interviews since the election results (were announced),” Lawrence said. “We’ve been interviewing people for the past three weeks. I’m glad it’s over.

Lawrence and her vice president, Maysarah Kazia, knew each other for one year, officially, the night they became the president- and vice president-elects.

The duo is the first female-female ticket to be elected to SGA’s executive office since 1975.

“Regardless of the results, I am so honored to have met such a passionate, hard-working and humble person,” said Vi Pham, chief of staff. “(Allison) reminded us that fighting for better healthcare, sustainability and wages made our election struggles worth it.”

The two-woman team was elected under the same party banner and served under the former SGA President Cameron Barrett, who will now serve as a graduate senator at-large.

“I think (Allison) and Maysarah are set out to start a lot faster and get more work done,” Barrett said. “We did a lot of work in the 55th (Administration), but I think because they hit the ground running — because of the transitional support (they received) — they’ll get some more done.” 

Lawrence said she hopes this administration is transparent in its communication both internally and with the student body, and she hopes to have a term free from drama.

“We have a very ambitious agenda, but we will work on everything to our fullest capability,” Lawrence said. “We will push every initiative as hard as it can be pushed and push it as far as it can go. We will do everything that we can until 365 days later.”

news@thedailycougar.com


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Deer Park ITC fire causes complications for commuter students

The Deer Park fire’s smoke traveled all the way to Austin over the days it burned. | Corbin Ayres/The Cougar

When Houston residents looked to the sky on March 18, they were likely surprised to find a trail of black smoke mingling with the clouds.

According to a press release from the Intercontinental Terminals Company, a fire was reported March 17 at their Independence Parkway South terminal where petrochemical liquids, gases, fuels, oils and distillates are stored. After three days of burning the fire was extinguished, but it reignited at least once on March 20 and has since released numerous chemicals into the air and water.

“I’ve been primarily concerned with how this will affect my health going forward,” said biology and Spanish senior Kyle McDaniel via Twitter DM.

The chemicals released in the fire were naphtha, xylene, pyrolysis, gasoline and benzene, in some form. A more recent spill has caused similar chemicals to leak into the Houston Ship Channel. 

Many of these chemicals have harmful effects on the body if inhaled. Benzene is a known carcinogen and may be harmful to reproductive organs.

The incident has also left a number of students unable to drive to and from the University of Houston safely.

When I left church and headed for work, there was already a massive black plume billowing from a site close to the San Jacinto Monument,” McDaniels said. “At first I was a bit shocked but honestly, growing up in the area, these things aren’t that uncommon.”

McDaniels, a Deer Park local, lives less than two minutes from where the fire originated.

The Deer Park and Galena Park areas surrounding the ITC compound were put under orders to shelter in place as the events were unfolding.

I was fortunate to have not had classes during the shelter in place, so my class schedule was not affected,” McDaniels said.

Other students, however, would have to juggle a class schedule and emergency management.

Getting to class 

The University of Houston advised its students to “use (their) best judgment” via a Tweet made from the official University Twitter. 

Denny Wilson, a 22-year-old management information systems senior, tweeted the University asking how students were expected to get to their classes if there was an active shelter in place in their city. 

“The UH account responded back by telling students to use their best judgement,” Wilson said. “But by saying that, they’re telling students to put themselves at risk to attend class. In addition, the roads in my neighborhood were completely closed down, so had I tried to get to school, I wouldn’t have been able to.”

The shelter in place may have affected only a handful of students, but students should have the opportunity to attend class and learn, Wilson said. She would have to miss class and get notes from fellow classmates in order to not fall behind.

“(My professors) were understanding, but it is frustrating that I wasn’t able to go and learn myself,” Wilson said.

McDaniels, who was in Deer Park during the first round of shelter in place orders, recalls smelling benzene in parts of his house and having to seal open spaces underneath doors and windows with wet towels.

“(It) was surreal,” McDaniels said. “I ended up leaving my house around 10 a.m. while the (shelter in place) was still in effect in order to get to my internship. When I left, I took with me two changes of clothes, not knowing if I’d be allowed to return.”

Lingering smoke

The trail of smoke lingered in the Houston area after the fire was initially extinguished.

“The weather was perfect to help lift the plume to several thousand feet altitude, where it did not affect people at ground-level,” said Robert Talbot, director of the Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Science. “As long as the plume stayed aloft, it was not dangerous locally.”

The plume of smoke is expected to have very little to no effect on local climate, Talbot said.

Despite the altitude of the plume, students were advised by officials in their respective cities to shelter in place while the fire was burning.

Since the fire has been extinguished, a breach of the secondary containment wall has caused a release of product that has elevated volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the area. This has led to the Independence Parkway, the San Jacinto Monument, the Battleship Texas State Parks and the Lynchburg Ferry crossing to be temporarily closed.

The Houston Ship Channel has also been affected. Portions of the channel have been closed, and the U.S. Coast Guard was called in to assist in cleanup efforts after VOCs leaked into the water resulting in closures that are projected to cost the energy industry at least $1 billion, according to the Houston Chronicle.

news@thedailycougar.com


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BREAKING: A$AP Ferg to headline Frontier Fiesta

robbed

Darold D. Brown Ferguson, also known by his stage name A$AP Ferg, was announced to be this year’s headliner for Frontier Fiesta via posts from the organization’s social media.

Ferguson is a hip-hop artist widely known for hits like “Plain Jane” and “Work.”

“We are so excited to welcome A$AP Ferg as the Frontier Fiesta headliner this year,” said Ann Johnson, Director of Development for Frontier Fiesta.

After last year’s headliner cancelled last minute, students are wary of Frontier Fiesta and  future headliners.

“How can we believe Frontier Fiesta?” said Juan C. Martinez, a local, via Facebook comment on Frontier Fiesta’s page.

Students have also expressed their skepticism via other social platforms such as Twitter.

Despite the mixed reaction, students remain hopeful and have risen to A$AP Ferg’s defense.

The concert is free for all students, faculty and staff. A$AP Ferg’s performance will be held on the Bud Light Stage at 8:15 p.m. on March 23 and will be opened by Julian Divine.


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Graduation: A look at what it takes to apply

Students look forward to graduation from the moment they set foot on campus. | File photo/The Cougar

Classes may have just started, but seniors are already looking ahead to the end of the semester and what it brings: graduation.

Students may think about graduating and their life afterward, but not many know the process seniors go through to apply for graduation. As the deadline for Spring 2019 graduation approaches, it’s important to figure out what is necessary to graduate on time. 

“Degrees are not awarded automatically upon completion of scholastic requirements,” according to the University’s website. “To be considered a candidate for a degree, the student must submit an online application for graduation by logging in to myUH.”

Graduation dates change every semester and depend on the student’s college. Spring 2019 graduation dates range from May 8 to May 11 and will be held in different places, including the new Fertitta Center and Cullen Performance Hall.

Applications for graduation opened Nov. 2 and will close Feb. 22. If a student misses that deadline, they can file for application late through March 22.

“I know nothing about graduation right now, other than I have to pay,” said biology senior Kaisa Trimiar.

During the normal filing period, application costs $25. If students miss the deadline and must file for graduation late, the price doubles and they have to pay $50. If one misses the late application period, they cannot graduate and will have to wait for the next semester to apply.

If a student is graduating with multiple degrees, they will need to send an application to graduate for each of their majors and pay a separate fee for each.

“My one complaint about the graduation process is that you have to pay,” Trimiar said.

Students also need to purchase their cap and gown. There is no deadline for purchasing, but students need them for all commencement exercises. Caps and gowns are sold at the UH bookstore, but students sometimes rent or borrow their graduation wear.

Students should order their cap and gown as soon as they apply to graduate and confirm with their department they will be participating in the commencement ceremony,” said University Registrar Scott Sawyer.

Different colleges have different requirements to graduate. A student is classified as a senior when they hit 90 earned credits. Students can check their degree plans on the University’s website to get an idea of where they stand.

“I’ve got to go talk to an advisor. I have to find some time,” Trimiar said. “There’s so much to worry about with classes. I feel like the only people that do that have a cool, fun senior year.”

The best advice is to visit your advisor, Sawyer said.

Make an appointment with an advisor to identify any unexpected problems and answer concerns as it relates to graduation,” Sawyer said. “The advisor will go over the degree plan to identify any remaining classes the student has to complete.”

On the day of graduation, try to bring the least number of items as possible, Sawyer said. Guests will not be able to bring wrapped gifts into the ceremony, nor can anyone have purses that are not clear. Sawyer also suggests students eat before the ceremony and wear comfortable clothing since they will be standing for extended periods of time.

news@thedailycougar.com


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U.S. Citizenship Exam prep among week’s five events

The women’s basketball team will be playing SMU this Saturday in the new Fertitta Center.| Corbin Ayres/The Cougar

 

 

 

Wednesday: Farmers Market        

Butler Plaza

Noon – 4 p.m.

The first Farmers Market of the spring semester presents an opportunity for students to purchase local produce and other items from local vendors. Students can use their Cougar Cash to pay for the items. 

Wednesday: Learning Abroad Spring Fair

Student Center South Ballroom

11 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Students will have the opportunity to meet with faculty members who will answer questions about learning abroad programs.

Thursday: Free U.S. Citizenship Exam Prep Course

Honors College, M.D. Anderson Library, Room 212P

6 p.m. – 8 p.m.

If you are taking the U.S. Citizenship Exam and want a more structured study session, the Honors College and the Advancing Community Engagement and Service Institute are hosting a free eight-week course to prepare students for the exam.

Friday: UH STEM Career Fair

Student Center South, Houston Room

Noon – 4 p.m.

University Career Services is sponsoring a STEM career fair that is open to all current students and subscribed alumni. If you are interested, you must RSVP in Cougar Pathway. Professional dress is required.

Saturday: Women’s basketball vs. SMU

Fertitta Center

2 p.m. – 5 p.m.

Support the women’s basketball team as it takes on the SMU Mustangs at the Fertitta Center. Get your ticket online for free with your Cougar Card.

news@thedailycougar.com


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Staff Ed: Midterm elections matter more than you know

The Texas General Election has gained momentum in the media for the controversial race between Republican incumbent, Sen. Ted Cruz, and Democratic challenger, Rep. Beto O’Rourke. The outcome of this race has the potential to catalyze a significant political shift in Texas.

This midterm election, taking place Nov. 6, will not decide only the Texas Senate race, but also the outcome for 126 other positions in districts across the state. As an editorial board, we want to emphasize the importance of these smaller, yet influential positions as they relate to college students.

To a college student, political elections may seem as though they don’t have an impact on their day-to-day lives. Even local political decisions can appear like a concept far removed from their reality.

Elections, especially in local government, have a significant long-term impact on the lives of college students. From regulating the roads that students use to get to campus to allocating the funding that the University of Houston receives, many critical decisions are dependent on the results of each midterm election.

During this election, Harris County voters will be selecting judges for the county’s array of criminal and civil courts, in addition to making a decision for county judge — the person largely in charge of matters concerning flooding, county commissioners and district attorney.

The individuals voted into, or out of, office this fall will have the power to shape the issues that have the greatest potential to impact you: how the county prepares for severe weather, how we treat different types of criminal offenses, the future of the high school from which you may have just graduated.

Over the next two months, the Cougar will be researching and covering candidates for positions in Harris County and will be making endorsements on positions where the outcome has the power to impact the UH community.

Research such as this is vital to informed voting. Beginning research now will allow voters to make more informed decisions when they reach the polls.

We urge you to consider the causes you care about. Find candidates that share a common stance with you on these viewpoints. Look into what they want to do to bring positive change to these causes by visiting their websites, signing up for their mailing lists and going to their events. Gather as much relevant information as you can.

Then, consider the points of view you disagree with. Find the candidates who are hindering what you think is positive change. Write to them, petition them to change. If they refuse to, use your vote to aid in keeping them out.

The University of Houston has the potential to be one of the biggest influences in the upcoming election. If even a fraction of the 45,000 students decide that an issue matters to them, then every politician in a hundred-mile radius will pay attention.

Registering to vote is a guaranteed way to be a part of this influence. The University has a variety of resources for voter registration, both online and regularly at stations around campus. In getting registered and taking part, college students can make their voice be heard over the din in the political arena.

The last day to register to vote in Texas is Oct. 9. Until then, those wishing to register also have the option to do so at your county’s Voter Registrar’s office, many post offices and libraries and the Department of Public Safety. No matter how you obtain your application, make sure you leave enough time to mail it in.

There is just over a month to go until this critical election takes place. Get informed, get register to vote and get involved. Take advantage of the right to vote for who you think will have a positive change on the issues you care about.

This is not just a call to action to vote in the midterm election. This is a reminder that activists, politicians and marginalized people have fought for the better part of this nation’s history for the right of all people to be able to elect an individual to office. Join in making history by helping to shape the nation’s political sphere.

f there’s an issue of political race you feel is of particular importance to yourself or other UH students, please don’t hesitate in reaching out. We definitely will not be the only Houston media outlet covering the midterm election, but we hope to be the one most reflective of the needs and interests of our student body.

editor@thedailycougar.com


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A film named Harvey weathers a storm of controversy

Shortly after the one-year anniversary of Hurricane Harvey this upcoming September, the locally shot and produced fictional film, Harvey, will be released. The film’s exploitation of tragedy in the hopes of seeking Hollywood renown is at the expense of Houstonians and the hardships they faced during Harvey.

Inspired by the heroism displayed during Hurricane Harvey, the film hopes to shed light on those who worked to help others during the storm and to display the hardships displaced individuals faced. Despite the positive intentions of the film, it is too soon to be capitalizing on this sensitive tragedy.

It is inappropriate to market tragedies such as Harvey when individuals are still negatively impacted. The effected communities deserve a voice in having the story of the storm that irrevocably changed their lives told.

Inspiration for the film

In a recent cover of the upcoming film Harvey by ABC13 news, Rick Ferguson, executive director of the Houston Film Commission, and Harvey producer Nkem DenChukwu discuss where the inspiration for the film came from. The idea stems from a worry of whether thecity’s film business would rebound” after the damages incurred by the storm.

Ferguson and DenChukwu both believe that Houston’s landscape is the backbone of its appeal. The cityscape and architectural structures make for versatile filming locations, and with a disaster like Harvey, such appeal was at risk of being permanently compromised.

However, the storm didn’t just take a significant toll on Houston’s filming locations; it also caused significant damage to the greater Houston area, displacing numerous families with severe flooding.

The release of Harvey fails to display consideration for the continued impact of the storm.

Other coverage of the tragedy

Harvey is not the only film that was inspired by the heroism displayed during Harvey. Multiple films since the tragedy have been produced and hope to tell a similar story, including a project by the Insurance Council of Texas.

In telling these stories, filmmakers can forget that Harvey’s impact lasts longer than a film’s running time for many individuals impacted by the storm.

The film’s release shows that these fictional interpretations of real loss and struggle are coming too soon after the tragedy for families that have experienced significant loss.  A film like Harvey being released only a year after the initial damage may invoke trauma that has yet to be healed for many impacted by the storm.

In banking on this tragic event, the filmmakers turn the loss and struggle of a community into a profit. This shows that those who created the film are insensitive to the extent of the emotional trauma the storm caused to the community.

Hopes for Hollywood recognition

DenChukwu hopes the film’s debut will receive Hollywood recognition, but will it even survive in the local community? As families are continue to salvage what remains of their lives after the hurricane, seeing their struggles glorified on the big screen may just cause old trauma to resurface.

Although the film is meant more as a commemoration, it is bound to cause those impacted by the storm a modicum of distress.

Despite focusing on Houston’s grit, the film falls flat due to a lack of emotional forethought.

Binish Azher is a print journalism sophomore and can be reached at opinion@thedailycougar.com 

 


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A victim of her namesake, UH student survives Katrina and Harvey

Katrina C. Grace is well acquainted with the catastrophic connotations of her name. In 2005, she and her family lost everything to Hurricane Katrina. On the 12th anniversary of the wreckage, the Graces were dealt a haunting reminder by Hurricane Harvey. The family, like many victims, has not fully recovered.

“When I meet people and they make a joke about my name, about how much devastation I’ve caused, I have to stop for a second,” Grace said. “I have to stop and make a cognitive decision to not let it phase me. Like yeah, I totally flooded my house and ruined my own life. Funny.”

Hurricane Katrina destroyed more than 800,000 homes, killed at least 1,836 people and forced 1.5 million people to evacuate. Causing approximately $81 billion in property damages, it is the most costly hurricane to ever make landfall in the United States.

Despite this high cost, the financial impact is not nearly as damaging or as long-lasting as the emotional impact. Grace’s story makes it apparent that the emotional trauma that accompanies a natural disaster is one many storm survivors never recover from.

Grace is a first generation American and daughter to a single mother from Hong Kong. She is a graduate student in the College of Pharmacy at UH. 

Not just another evacuation

New Orleans is no stranger to hurricanes, nor is Grace a stranger to evacuating from them. Her childhood was regularly punctuated by trips to Houston when the storm watch decreed that the city was fated for disaster.

New Orleans has an approximately forty percent chance of experiencing landfall from a tropical storm or hurricane per year, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association.

This evacuation from the potential of disaster was her normal, a desensitizing phenomena that provided more of a small vacation than any indication that one day she wouldn’t have a home to come back to.

That day came in August 2005 when, at 14 years old, Grace unknowingly saw her childhood home intact for the last time. When Hurricane Katrina was forecast, the Graces packed up and traveled to Houston to ride out the storm. The prophetic warnings of the storm and mandatory evacuations made the situation seem more dire than usual.

Soon after Hurricane Katrina made landfall, it was clear to everyone that New Orleans was under major duress, politically, socially and physically. 

“At 14, you just don’t grasp how bad it really was,” Grace said.

Her mother enrolled the two siblings in school in Houston soon after their arrival. They had gone from evacuated residents to refugees of the disaster in a matter of hours. 

“We had evacuated to Houston, not because we had family here, but we knew people here. That’s just what you did during hurricanes, you evacuated,” Grace said. “Our host family had gone to our church and the first night, they had 16 kids and 12 adults living there.”

Houston was their new home, a decision made out of necessity, not purpose.

“My brother, Kenneth, he was a junior in high school and sixteen years old at the time. He just cried and cried for nights,” Grace said. “Dealing with a new school, SATs, college admissions — it was so much for a kid that had lost everything.”

“Evacuating to Houston right before the start of my junior year in high school, I found my life flipped upside down with that uncertainty,” said Kenneth Grace.

The aftermath and recovery

The wreckage from Katrina destroyed not only the furniture and fixtures, but also left the home itself inhabitable. |Courtesy of Katrina C. Grace.

The family’s one-story home was underwater, all of their possessions irreparably damaged by the floodwaters.

The cost of the damage incurred to their possessions was primarily composed of furniture and electronics, including the family’s four pianos.

The sentimental damage of the catastrophe hit Grace’s mother the hardest.

Carmen Yip, a professional piano teacher, watched everything she’d worked toward building in America drift away from her, along with her beloved instruments.

The grandest of the set was one that she had imported from her home in Hong Kong, the one she’d practiced her very first song on.

The grand piano that Carmen Yip had imported from Hong Kong lay unusable in their New Orleans home. |Courtesy of Katrina C. Grace

Despite being inundated, physically and emotionally, Yip stayed tirelessly optimistic and remains strongly tethered to her faith, which she thinks got her and her family out of both disasters.

“I am alive. I got out alive,” Yip said. “If that isn’t God, I don’t know what is.”

Despite her confidence that the family would bounce back, there were still several obstacles in their path.

Victims of natural disasters experience significant financial setback and FEMA aid rarely comes fast enough.

During recovery from Hurricane Katrina, FEMA attempted to hand out debit cards to expedite the process of awarding aid because the system of inspecting homes before giving aid was becoming inefficient.

The Graces had financial trouble relocating due to the nature of Yip’s job. Grace said she still doesn’t understand how her mother kept things so lighthearted around them while dealing with so much.

Finances were not the family’s only problem.

After Katrina, prejudice against Houston’s newly relocated residents afflicted the city, spreading the rampant stereotype that victims of Katrina were thieves. In the wake of the natural disaster, a new social disaster developed. Grace can recount many times in school when students avoided her, wouldn’t leave possessions near her or mocked her name.

Six relocated students were grouped together by the school district, unintentionally placing a target on the students. For Grace, it felt like they were treated like lowly criminals by most of the students and even a few staff.

“We all get hell for it, the Katrina kids. There was one African American girl and she got it worst, but we all paid,” Grace said. “It was dumb, like yes, a church gave me these clothes but we’re not going to steal your stuff.” 

Despite all these hindrances, the Graces recovered from Hurricane Katrina.

A bad anniversary gift

Twelve years later, on the anniversary of Katrina, Hurricane Harvey made landfall on their new home in Katy.

“Fast forward 12 years, my family has to relive this nightmare again. My first reaction was anger. Going through the two most damaging hurricanes in American history was something I couldn’t wrap my mind around,” Kenneth said.

Carmen Yip weathered the storm alone, with Grace at UH and her brother in college in New York. The family convinced themselves that this storm could not be nearly as bad as Katrina.

Grace was stranded in Calhoun Lofts with a friend of hers for six days. She had prepared for Harvey by stocking up on food and water. Despite this preparedness, the apartment began experiencing shortages a few days into the storm. “The Nook and Jimmy Johns started handing out food a few days in,” said Grace, which helped the two and other students stay fed.

For her mother, the situation was very different. She’d lost everything before and understood exactly what she wanted to save.

“When you’ve been through it once, not much can stop you,” Yip said.

When the water began seeping into the house, Yip immediately went to work padding the two pianos in the living room with any protective material she could find. As the water poured in, Yip attempted to scoop it out.

“When it started getting dark, she got terrified and gave up,” Grace said. “She cut the power to the house and decided she had to leave.”

The neighborhood had been closed off due to dangerous flood levels, but members of the Houston community didn’t let that stop them. Around 11:00 p.m. on the first night of Hurricane Harvey, a boat piloted by concerned citizens came through the area and rescued Yip from her second natural disaster.

In the aftermath of the storm, the Houston community came together to rebuild houses and people’s lives. The citizens of Houston saved Yip’s life and gave the Graces a sense of comfort and relief. “We will forever be grateful to this amazing city,” Kenneth said.

FEMA aid trickled in slowly. By the time FEMA arrived in the Graces’ neighborhood, aid was being distributed without inspection because “it was obvious what had happened here,” Grace said.

One of the few family photos Katrina has from her childhood was found during their first trip to their New Orleans home. |Courtesy of Katrina C. Grace

Grace and her family have tried their best to move on. After hurricanes Katrina and Harvey, Katrina Grace sought therapy to help her cope with the emotional trauma caused by the storms.

Grace recounted how counseling after both storms did help alleviate some of the tensions, but the emotional impact of the disasters never fully left her.

Grace doesn’t have many pictures from her childhood. Her memories and possessions floated away in the floodwaters as if they’d never existed. Her mother lost the pianos she had so desperately tried to save.

Despite all this, the Graces consider themselves blessed, but hope this is a trial they never face again.

news@thedailycougar.com


A victim of her namesake, UH student survives Katrina and Harvey” was originally posted on The Daily Cougar

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